A supposedly haunted palazzo on Venice’s Grand Canal that was as soon as painted by Claude Monet and celebrated by the English artwork historian John Ruskin has returned to the market, after being cleaned as much as attraction to potential consumers.
In-built 1486 for Giovanni Dario, a patrician and former ambassador of the Venetian Republic, Ca’ Dario spans 5 flooring and boasts pillared marble bogs, an inner Moorish fountain, grand halls and inner decorations carved in Istrian limestone. Its most distinctive function is its façade, patterned with round designs in polychrome marble. The constructing, in the meantime, stands simply metres from the Trendy art-filled Peggy Guggenheim Assortment, one of many metropolis’s most visited sights.
Monet painted the palazzo throughout his first journey to Venice in 1908, depicting it with the identical hazy fluidity because the waters of the canal it overlooks. Ruskin sketched its façade in The Stones of Venice, his three-part research of Venetian structure revealed between 1851 and 1853, praising the design as “Renaissance engrafted on Byzantine”. The British-American author Henry James described the constructing in his 1909 travelogue Italian Hours as resembling a home of playing cards that “can be deadly to the touch”.
The lavish residence has been spruced up earlier than being put up on the market. Gardens have been tidied, as has the courtyard, and bushes and overgrown shrubs have been pruned, Arnaldo Fusello of Christie’s Worldwide Actual Property, which is overseeing the sale, instructed The Artwork Newspaper. The itemizing signifies that the value is obtainable on request. Fusello declined to reveal a determine however mentioned curiosity from potential consumers had been “very excessive”.
Even so, the palazzo’s eerie popularity could complicate the sale. The operatic tenor Mario Del Monaco reportedly deserted plans to purchase Ca’ Dario after having a critical automobile accident whereas on his technique to go to it in 1964—changing into satisfied the constructing was cursed. Within the Seventies, the then supervisor of The Who, Equipment Lambert, bought the property, although reportedly spoke of staying elsewhere to “escape the ghosts that haunted him” there. Raul Gardini, the industrialist who owned it within the Nineteen Eighties, turned embroiled in a corruption scandal and took his personal life in 1993. Later, in 2002, one other determine from The Who—John Entwistle, the band’s bassist—died of a coronary heart assault in a Nevada lodge only a week after reportedly renting the palace for a vacation.
Fusello mentioned those that had considered the property have been conscious of the tales of its allegedly cursed previous, however denied that it had put them off shopping for it, claiming the tales have been all false.
Ca’ Dario, owned by unnamed people since 2006, was briefly provided on the market two years in the past earlier than being withdrawn from the general public market. Italian media had reported an anticipated asking value of €18m, although Fusello says the determine was by no means official.
Since then, Fusello says, the property has obtained a “certificates of conformity”, confirming compliance with technical requirements and Italian regulation. The constructing has additionally undergone main restoration: the façade, for instance, was extensively conservd between 2011 and 2015, Mario Massimo Cherido, who led the venture, instructed The Artwork Newspaper. Iron rods stabilising the constructing have been changed, marble slabs and multicoloured discs have been eliminated, consolidated and cleaned, and a protecting coating was utilized to defend the façade from corrosive rain.
“Now it’s in fine condition,” Cherido says.







