Andrea Giganti

Andrea Giganti (1731–1787) was an Italian architect of the Sicilian Baroque era. He was born in Trapani in 1731.[1] In his youth, he studied architecture under Giovanni Biagio Amico (1684–1754). Around 1751, Giganti came under the patronage of Giuseppe Stella, Bishop of Mazara del Vallo, with whom he went to Palermo, where he studied for the priesthood and was ordained.

After ordination, he entered the household of the Sicilian aristocrat the Prince of Scordia, where he seems to have been employed as both confessor and private architect, working on the various houses owned by the Scordia family.

Giganti designed other Sicilian buildings in the baroque style, including: Villa Galetti at Bagheria,[1] Villa Ventimiglia, at Mezzo-Monreale, the church of S. Paolo dei Giardinieri,[1] and the dais and high altar at the church of San Salvatore in Palermo.

A trained engineer, Giganti was also responsible for a number of bridges. Towards the end of his life, he began to forsake the baroque style in favour of a more simple neoclassical style.[1]

Further reading

  • Giuseppe M. di. Ferro (1830). Biografia degli uomini illustri trapanesi dall'epoca normanna sino al corrente secolo [Biography of the Illustrious Men from Trapani from the Norman Era to the Current Century] (in Italian). Trapani: presso Mannone e Solina. p. 126. OCLC 79286738. Retrieved 1 May 2018. Digitized May 28, 2014 by Google Books. Original from The National Central Library of Florence.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Andrea Giganti entry (in Italian) in the Enciclopedia italiana, Accessed 1 May 2018

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