The city`s churches are treasure troves Find out with Compagnia di

Press release
The city’s churches are treasure troves
Find out with Compagnia di San Paolo
The restoration site of the Church of Santa Chiara opens its doors to the public
From 30th September, the Church of Santa Chiara - after the restoration of the Cappella dei Mercanti
e Banchieri and the Church of SS. Trinità - opens the doors of its worksite to citizens (entrance in
piazzetta della Visitazione): with free guided tours citizens can get a privileged glimpse of the heritage
undergoing restoration.
The visits are part of the project promoted by the Compagnia di San Paolo to spread knowledge of the
religious architectural heritage of Turin and the awareness of how important sacred buildings and the
art works kept inside are within the cultural offer of the city .
Guided tours of the restoration site of the church of Santa Chiara will take place on Friday
afternoons (30th September, 7th and 14th October) at 4pm and 5pm and on the "open day":
Saturday, October 8th , from 10 to 6pm .
The tours, scheduled for groups of up to 12 participants, must be booked by email at
cantiere.santachiara@gmail.com, indicating the number of people, day and time preferred and
telephone number. The visit, lasting about 45 minutes, provides a historical introduction on the
ground and a subsequent climb up the scaffolding via a comfortable stairway for a close up look at the
work in progress.
Participants must wear trousers and flat, rubber-soled closed shoes. They will be asked to fill in a form
accepting regulations for a safe visit. On site they will be equipped with a safety helmet.
Information on the Church of Santa Chiara
The present church of Santa Chiara, previously part of the convent of the Poor Clares, lies on a much
older foundation: placed in the current area at the latest in the fifteenth century, behind the medieval
walls, with the church already on the corner of two streets, the monastery gradually expanded over
the centuries to incorporate the entire block at the end of the eighteenth century. Extensions
gradually cancelled older traces of buildings, including the early church, which between 1742 and 1746
was rebuilt from the ground up. Except for some amendments and additions, the eighteenth-century
church corresponds to the current one.
The project created by Bernardo Vittone (1705-1770) has nothing to envy the probably far more
modest building it replaced. It is one of the architect’s most important projects in Turin; we know from
drawings and engravings that he had prepared no fewer than three different variants for the church.
As is the norm for women's convent churches, Vittone’s building consists in two distinct parts: the
public church, an intimate space with a central plan, and the spacious chancel for cloistered nuns,
where the architect proved his expertise in creating, bright living spaces suitable for everyday life.
In actual fact the two spaces have different objectives and purposes. The public church did not need to
be large, or to host a whole community, as in the case of parish churches. Vittone thus gives it a
centralized form, with a strong vertical development and a dome set on four pierced pillars. Thanks to
this considerable vertical development the church picks up a light that is at times intense, which
spreads downward evenly and suffused through the numerous openings. Even the symbolic value of
this light is emphasized by a number of cartouches in stucco at the level of the dome, where with
emblems and Latin mottos the concept of claritas is developed: and so the brightness, fame, and name
of the saint to whom the church is dedicated ideally coincide.
But the church is only half the battle: two modern ports, replacing openings once protected by metal
grilles, provide access to the cloistered nuns chancel. Though the church was inaccessible to the nuns,
the chancel was a place of daily life for them, and Vittone makes it double in height, placing it among
lodges and elegant balconies, which turn it almost into a covered square.
The initiative is the corollary of the important restoration campaign of the old town churches largely
achieved thanks to the support of Compagnia di San Paolo, which since 2000 has invested around €20
million. These initiatives are part of the broader framework of setting up an urban cultural district that
can strengthen the dialogue between the system of museums, the places for the production of culture
and the most valuable religious architecture that host works of art of extraordinary value.
For information:
edificisacri.compagniadisanpaolo.it
Compagnia di San Paolo
Communication and Media
Daniela Gonella Tel. 011.5596982, e-mail: daniela.gonella@compagniadisanpaolo.it, Cell. 3475221195