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MILAN: LEONARDO 2.0

It’s the 500th anniversar­y of Leonardo da Vinci’s death this month. And in Milan, the city where he made his name, art, commerce and invention have undergone their own renaissanc­e. By LEE ANDERSON

- Duomo delights Crowds flock to Milan’s main piazza

LEE ANDERSON traces the creative legacy of the Renaissanc­e master 500 years after his death

Milan inspired the architect, inventor and engineer that was in Leonardo da Vinci. Though he painted masterpiec­es like The Last Supper and the Virgin of the Rocks during the 17 years he spent working for Ludovico Sforza, the city’s warlike duke, it was the interface between art and science, the creative and the technical, that drove the Renaissanc­e genius during his long sojourn in the northern Italian city.

Da Vinci became Sforza’s go-to producer of theatrical pageants, working across the board on texts, backdrops, direction and stage machinery. His notebooks from his time in Milan are full of designs for instrument­s of war, flying machines, hydraulic engineerin­g projects and possible solutions to artistic challenges – like how to cast a 75-tonne bronze equestrian monument in one piece.

In the year that marks the 500th anniversar­y of the Tuscan artist’s death, a series of exhibition­s and other initiative­s are rolling out citywide (see box on page 47). But there’s no need to delve into the past to celebrate the way Milan fed Da Vinci’s roving creativity. In this stimulatin­g city, innovation, a talent for design and an innate sense of taste and beauty have long gone hand in hand.

You only have to stand in the city’s civic heart, Piazza del Duomo, to feel the energy pulsing through its historical

layers. Dominating the square, the Duomo’s thousands of marble statues, spires and pinnacles give the exterior and roof of Milan’s cathedral a fairytale aspect.

Getting those statues up there required serious engineerin­g skill – as did the constructi­on of another Piazza del Duomo architectu­ral marvel, the Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II, inaugurate­d in 1878. One of the world’s first shopping malls, this elegant space with its airy, iron and glass roof was soon dubbed il salotto di Milano (‘Milan’s living room’). In early years, locals would gather by the gallery’s central crossing at dusk to admire the lighting of the gas lanterns, performed by an ingenious tiny train that ran on a track beneath the central octagon.

The Galleria is still a lively social and commercial hub where you’ll find two Milanese icons: the original Prada shop, which opened in 1913, and the Camparino bar – a mirror, marble and mahogany jewel from 1915 that stands at the gallery entrance, where it waylays home-bound Milanese bankers and La Scala-bound operagoers with its Negroni and Americano cocktails. In February 2018, Milanese superstar chef Carlo Cracco moved his restaurant Cracco to an opulent, multilevel space inside the Galleria. Come for experiment­s in food that are positively Da Vinci- esque – like the tagliatell­e ‘pasta’ made from marinated egg yolk.

Many of Milan’s 20th century landmarks dialogue with the language of the past: that’s a distinctiv­e Milanese touch. The overhangin­g top section of the Torre Velasca residentia­l and office tower, built by BBPR in the 1950s, nods to the buttressed upper floors of Lombardy’s medieval castles, while architect Gio Ponti’s slender Pirelli Tower with its innovative prism floorplan, inaugurate­d in 1960 as Italy’s tallest building, proved skyscraper­s didn’t need to be anonymous four-sided blocks. The Pirelli Tower’s height record was eclipsed when César Pelli’s 231-metre-tall Unicredit Tower opened in 2011, its LED- coated, illuminate­d spire echoing the Duomo’s Madonnina pinnacle. Also in the Porta Nuova business district stands the Bosco Verticale, a pair of residentia­l towers by architect Stefano Boeri that inventor and innovator Da Vinci would have loved: each one is, as the name suggests, a vertical forest, its exterior decked with a carbon dioxide- guzzling jungle of 20,000 plants, including no less than 900 trees.

Wander back towards the centre from Porta Nuova to appreciate some of the smaller but no less telling ways in which this restless city expresses its creativity. A courtyard and adjoining premises once occupied by a car repair shop were turned into Milan’s first concept store in the 1990s by Carla Sozzani, sister of the late

Vogue Italia director Franca. And 10 Corso Como is a stellar example of the genre: a design boutique, gallery, restaurant, cafe, bookshop and three-room hotel in which each space and function riffs off the others in an utterly convincing and original mix. In nearby Via Solferino, Dry is a tenebrous speakeasy out front and industrial- chic pizzeria behind. A florist that’s also a Parisian-style bistro; Princi, a humble bakery in Piazza XXV Aprile that architect and designer Claudio Silvestrin turned into a remarkable minimalist work of art – Milan is full of these little acts of invention that twist and challenge the norm.

This must be the only city in the world where a furniture fair is an excuse for a week-long party that attracts the same global glitterati and cultural mavens who descend on Basel, Miami Beach and Hong Kong for Art Basel. But the Salone del Mobile in April is no ordinary furniture fair. Hardly any of those movers and shakers bother to trek out to the trade show in Rho, northeast of the city. They stay in town for the fringe Fuorisalon­e events that take over shops, garages, deconsecra­ted churches and former industrial spaces like the Tadao Ando-designed Teatro Armani and Armani/ Silos in Zona Tortona – once a warehouse and factory belt, today a thriving district of start-ups and creative studios.

The repurposin­g of Milan’s industrial heritage also lies behind two of the city’s most exciting contempora­ry art spaces. At the Fondazione Prada in the city’s southern suburbs, Rem Koolhaas’ OMA architectu­re studio has transforme­d an abandoned distillery into an art campus that hosts exhibition­s, film screenings and events. Part of the foundation’s permanent collection is displayed in the Haunted House, a former brewing silo clad entirely in gold leaf, while the deliciousl­y retro Bar Luce, designed by film director Wes Anderson, harks whimsicall­y back to Italian seaside design of the 1960s. At the other end of the city, a decommissi­oned locomotive factory is now Hangar Bicocca, whose vast, echoing sheds play host to a series of exhibition­s alongside a stunning permanent work, The Seven Heavenly Palaces by German artist Anselm Kiefer.

The recently restored and relaunched Triennale Museum celebrates the city’s design history, but the most essential Milanese experience for fans of classic 20th century design lies inside a modest private apartment on Piazza Castello. Achille Castiglion­i was the Da Vinci of the modern Milanese design world, and his former studio and residence is now a house-museum, open for guided visits from Tuesday to Friday, often conducted in person by Castiglion­i’s daughter Giovanna. Here you can see the prototypes of playful designs like the Mezzadro and Sella stools for Zanotta – based on a tractor seat and a bicycle saddle respective­ly – or the original drawings Castiglion­i made for the iconic Arco lamp. Most delightful of all is the collection of found objects the designer used for inspiratio­n – like a rural milking stool, which he would show to his design students to teach them about the beauty of simplicity. Da Vinci would have fitted in just fine here – you can imagine him and Castiglion­i swapping ideas, telescopin­g 500 years into a lively chat on a sunny Milanese afternoon.

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 ??  ?? Milan’s creative legacy From the inspiratio­nal architectu­re of Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II (top left), to modern exhibition­s at Hangar Bicocca (bottom left) and master chefs like Carlo Cracco (above)
Milan’s creative legacy From the inspiratio­nal architectu­re of Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II (top left), to modern exhibition­s at Hangar Bicocca (bottom left) and master chefs like Carlo Cracco (above)
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