Palazzo Moroni stands on Via Porta Dipinta(Upper Town) and features exceptionally well-preserved interiors and furnishings, as well as a rich art collection and an Italianate garden with extensive orangery. The magnificent building thus offers visitors not only art and history, but also a charming historic park in the heart of Bergamo Alta.
The Moroni family has owned and lived in the palace since 1636.
The original layout has been carefully maintained and preserved; the monumental Scalone leads from the entrance courtyard to the main floor, behind whose doors are halls and salons frescoed and furnished between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries.
In the larger rooms the evidence of Barbelli ‘s fresco mastery persists in all its beauty , and here is also preserved the extensive and varied Moroni Collection, where the famous portraits of Gian Gerolamo Grumelli(Il Cavaliere in Rosa) and Isotta Brembati, executed by the painter Giovanni Battista Moroni of Albino, stand out in addition to works by Bernardino Luini, Cesare Tallone.
Since its construction, the palace has overlooked a complex of Italianate gardens, articulated in a balcony and three terraces that run along the hillside of Sant’Eufemia.
The third and highest terracing gives access to the Count’s Pensatoio, a neo-medieval-style turret built in the nineteenth century on the remains of an older structure, formerly belonging to the Rocca civica, that encircles the top of the hill.
Beyond the actual gardens extend about two hectares of ortaglia, annexed to the property during the nineteenth century thanks to brothers Pietro and Alessandro Moroni, the latter a scholar of agronomy.
The area still contains vines raised on pergola, fruit trees and a roccolo, that is, a circle of hornbeam trees, whose intertwined branches served as nets to hunt live birds for food and play.
There is also no shortage of mulberry trees, one of the symbols of the family, enriched by the breeding of silkworms, which feed on the very leaves of this tree.
Thanks to the agreement between FAI – Fondo per l’Ambiente Italiano and the Palazzo Moroni Museum Foundation in December 2019, aimed at the restoration, management and enhancement of the splendid Bergamasque palace, Palazzo and Giardini Moroni are now regularly open to the public.