Exhibition Halls

The Art Museum of Fondazione Luigi Rovati, through two exhibition floors, takes the visitor from the world of Etruscan art to that of contemporary art.

The different areas of the exhibition design aim to create a narrative continuum in the dialogue through oppositions or contiguities between ancient and contemporary, from the underground floor to the Piano Nobile, and therefore to give specific suggestions to the visitor who, as an emotional experience, in addition to the artefacts and works, also visits the architectural spaces.

Hypogeum floor

In the Hypogeum floor, the stone architecture houses part of the museum's itinerary, moving inside the domes between the triangular crystal showcases displaying Etruscan artworks.

Piano Nobile

From the Hypogeum floor, the visit continues to the first floor, the Piano Nobile. From the wood panelling to the gilded doors, from the floors to the marble fireplaces, up to the tall 18th-century mirrors in the corridor, all the rooms designed by Filippo Perego have been recovered, restored and redesigned to create an avant-garde exhibition space. The in-depth study of chromatic impacts and details favours the dialogue between archaeology and contemporary art and offers the visitor visual and conceptual inspirations and emotions.