At Blessed Osanna's House

The House of the Blessed Osanna Andreasi, who lived from 17 January 1449 to 18 June 1505, is a place of devotion, art and memory.

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House (1475)Mantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

Simple but not small two-storey building, it stands in via Frattini in front of the Church of Sant'Egidio and leaning against one side of the imposing Palazzo Valenti Gonzaga. From this particular view, taken from the fifteenth-century portico that separates the Renaissance garden from a further green area, we admire the internal façade and, on the left, the side of the Palace. In the first twentieth-century renovation, some parts of the building were demolished where today is the Giardino dei Semplici, imagined as a Hortus Conclusus. Traces of mantegnesque frescoes still decorate the arches of the portico. In the external part of the House, managed by the Association for the Dominican Monuments, cultural meetings and conferences are often held during the year.

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House (1475)Mantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House

Osanna Andreasi was born in Carbonarola, in the district of Carbonara di Po, in 1449. Her destiny, however, led her to the Gonzaga court where, during her life, Ludovico, then Federico and finally Federico II, married to Isabelle d’Este, reigned. Osanna lived in her home in Mantua with her brothers and sisters, her parents and other relatives. Already at the age of fifteen she joined the Terziarie Secolari  of the Dominican Order. It is not clear why she formed a lasting and strong relationship with the Mantuan marquises, although according to some unverified information her mother was related to the Gonzaga. Although there is almost no record of significant events in her life, it is possible to say that the future Blessed managed her house with a spiritual authority that was evidently innate, though maintaining the simplicity and openness of a woman from a low social class. Some claim she was illiterate; however, about one hundred insighful letters of hers have survived, and a composition titled “‘Libello della vita sua propria e de’ doni spirituali da Dio a lei collate” (The story of her life and of the spiritual gifts conferred on her by God).

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House (1475)Mantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House

The charisma of Osanna led her to broaden her contacts outside the House, receiving people in search of a spiritual guide, bringing up the sons of the marquise Federico, praying for the birth of the future duke Federico II, son of Francesco. It seems she was able to form an immediate and empathic contact with those approaching her, regardless of their social class. Her letters to the marquise often contain intercessory prayers, and her whole life was inspired by charity. Some details of her life are more or less verifiable: premonitory dreams, intuitions about the future, an ongoing dialogue with the Lord, mystical ecstasy, small miracles, the presence of stigmata, her presence perceived as being powerful and good. Thanks to her frequentation of the court, Osanna also played a role in the political management of Mantua, influencing the society surrounding her. In 1501 she made full profession. She died only months later, as she had, it seems, predicted. Soon after the process of beatification started; it ended in 1694 at the request of Pope Innocent XII. Her body lies in the Duomo of Mantua, a statue of her can be seen on the facade.    

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House (1475)Mantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House

The coat of arms of the noble Andreasi family, as is visible in this capital dating to the 15th century, was a swan accompanied by a star. The family had a very long history: some speak of Longobard origins, others claim the family was originally from Hungary. It is said that in the 12th century the brothers Trumanno and Alberto served Frederick Barbarossa as mercenaries, and that they were given lands in the district of Mantua. A series of descendants followed and in the 15th century thirty-four families bore the same name. One of the most famous figures in this history is the secretary Marsilio Andreasi, who is represented in the Bridal Chamber of the Ducal Palace, a man who was close to the marquise Ludovico. However, here the interest must be focused on the ancestors of Osanna, originally from Carbonara, a small village near the river Po. Niccolò Cappa Andreasi, Osanna’s father, also from Carbonara, bought a house in Mantua in 1475; this is the house we can admire today. It is worth noting that Osanna’s branch of the family soon died out, while a different line thrived and in the course of the centuries gave birth to Luigia, born in 1761. She married Gian Battista Magnaguti. A series of inheritances meant the building was eventually owned by Alessandro Magnaguti, born in 1887, who renovated it in 1926. In 1966, a few months before dying, he donated the main floor to the Provincia Domenicana Utriusque Lombardiae. In 1991, the same Provincia Domenicana acquired the rest of the building.

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House, Season HallMantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House, Season Hall

In the second half of the 16th century the House of the Blessed, still owned by the Andreasi family, underwent some important changes. In particular, a large room was created on the ground floor, in correspondence to where originally the chamber of the Osanna was located. The room was decorated with frescoes in a late 15th century style, characterized by grotesques divided in sections by statues of cherubs who look like they are holding up the beams of the ceiling. Inside these grotesques we find interesting scenes depicting life in the fields, and the four seasons, which give the name to the room. The frescoes, although they are not of the highest quality, are however very interesting because they portray fantastical figures together with characters from everyday life, sometimes depicted in a theatrical attitude. At the centre of each section, in the lower part, there is always a scene inside a frame that is always different. It may be alluding to a certain month, in line with the overall plan of the room; the attribution however is not always certain, so the play of imagination prevails on the rigid allocation of the parts.      

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House, Season HallMantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House, Season Hall

In this frescoed section on the east wall of the room we see grotesques painted with swift strokes: angles with last judgement trumpets, a satyr holding a banner, the god Saturn intent on adjusting a clock, and a reference to autumn: two men fabricating two large barrels that will be soon filled with wine. Run down houses, city landscapes, fantastic animals, even two small smiling moons, a waning moon and a waxing moon. Imagination is given free rein, we could say, in a mix of colour and plaster.

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House, Season HallMantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House, Season Hall

The western side shows scenes relating to the coldest months of the year. On the right, an old man is leaning on his stick and is warming himself in front of a fire, while the bottom frame shows two people in front of a blazing altar. In the centre there is a man with a spade, while beneath him two oxen are ploughing led by a farmer, a large city is visible in the background. On the left, a man is preparing bundles of brushwood, next to him are two young women; beneath him we see figures who are pruning and gardening.  

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House, Mascheroni HallMantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

Blessed Osanna Andreasi House, Mascheroni's Hall

This small room on the ground floor, next to the Sala delle Stagioni, displays some remarkable decorative frescoes dating to the second half of the 15th century, so to the same years our Blessed lived. A series of columns, which imitate antique columns, with a curious enlargement at the bottom, seems to be supporting a series of slender festoons, under a frieze characterized by a dark background and a motif showing moustachioed masks, which alternate with amphorae surrounded by small eagles. The Corinthian capitals are golden, while the columns are fake black marble. On the whole the decoration constitutes a small pavilion.   

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House (1475)Mantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House

The small room on the mezzanine floor is a small chapel. Although almost all of the original decorations have been lost, still today it is one of the most suggestive rooms of the House, because it seems to recall and exalt the spirituality of the Blessed.

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House (1475)Mantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House

The small room on the mezzanine floor appears to be a small studio, a place for meditation and reflection. It is perhaps one of the most suggestive rooms in the House. The decoration was started in the second half of the 14th century and finished a few decades later. The prevailing material is wood, starting from the sophisticated doors, painted with floral motifs. From a pictorial point of view what most stands out are the decorations on the strip just below the low ceiling: parrots, monkeys, fantastic creatures adorning the strip, guard the amphorae, symbol of fertility and life. A very old motif, originally from the Middle East, can be seen on the beams of the ceiling: lions with couples of amphorae, this time stylized, further enliven the visual experience of the room.   

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House (1475)Mantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House

A sad monkey, a lively monkey: the expression “Simia Dei diabolous”, the devil is imitator of God, may be an ironic warning the scholar must keep in mind, he who thinks he is imitating God and who in fact is only mimicking him.

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House (1475)Mantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House

This room on the first floor, not a large one, gives onto the garden, and bears decorations that are perhaps the most interesting in the whole House. White bulb-shaped columns, enlivened by plant motifs, give a rhythm to the room, with golden capitals, similar to the ones in the small room on the ground floor. Above them a magnificent strip with a dark background, depicting sea horses and amphorae, from which a fantastical being emerges. We are obviously in the first decades of the 16th century. The capitals support garlands and festoons, on which signs reading Latin moral quotes are hung. For example, the one on the left of the image reads: “No man who lives a long life can be said to be happy”.  

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House (1475)Mantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House

Here is a detail of the decoration. The strip over the fake entablature and the frames formed of pearls and ovules display still today a excellent stylistic quality. Sea horses facing each other set the powerful pace of the succession of images, which also includes amphorae, from which, alternatively, a harpy emerges, that is, a couple of winged figures with the tail of a snake playing a bombard, a type of oboe that was used to accompany processions and dances. The period is that of the late Mantegna, before the arrival of Giulio Romano. The contrast between the bright surfaces and the black background, which further enhances them, is indeed beautiful.

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House (1475)Mantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House

The so called Room of the Grotesques, on the first floor, opens up on the opposite side of the garden, so giving onto the public street. Here many of the objects once belonging to the Blessed are kept, together with her funerary mask and the plaster mould of her face. Pictorially, the room stands out because of the late 15th century frescoes, similar to the ones that appear in the large Sala delle Stagioni on the ground floor. Here the stroke is even more naïf, which does not however diminish the spontaneous quality of the figures and the variety of the themes depicted. There is a large strip close to the ceiling where various motifs alternate, all inspired by a certain joyousness and playfulness. Imaginary pavilions, views of houses, animals, fauna, flowers and fruit, telamones, fantastic creatures, symbols out of context. In short, the evolution of the concept of grotesque beyond Mannerism, pointing to Baroque.     

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's HouseMantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

Blessed Osanna Andreasi's House

From right to lest: a woman sewing, two men sitting at a small table speaking amiably (one looks like a traveller intent on recounting his journeys), and a man wearing a hat with a feather watching the play of street acrobats, or of a group of boys. All this while a naked and puffed cherub walks on a roof making fun of the world, and his companion taking refuge in his mother’s lap, who is carrying her baby in her arms. These scenes of life resemble a fairy tale. They are memories of past times and of the joy that these rooms evidently housed.  

Credits: Story

Ideato e promosso da / Founded and Promoted by: Mattia Palazzi (Sindaco del Comune di Mantova) con Lorenza Baroncelli (Assessore alla rigenerazione urbana e del territorio, marketing urbano, progetti e relazioni internazionali del Comune di Mantova) Coordinamento Scientifico / Scientific Coordinator: Sebastiano Sali Curatore testi e immagini / Superintendent texts and images: Giovanni Pasetti Foto di / Photo by: Art Camera Redazione / Editor: Erica Beccalossi Assistente / Assistant: Annica Boselli

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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