The idea of establishing a Diocesan Museum in Brescia is relatively recent.
The initiative was undertaken by Monsignor Angelo Pietrobelli in the second half of the seventies of the twentieth century; he identified the convent complex of San Giuseppe, once home to the Observant Franciscans, as the suitable location to house the first nucleus of works mostly coming from churches no longer in use and therefore difficult to access. In 1978, the bishop of Brescia Luigi Morstabilini canonically established the “Religious Foundation” called the “Diocesan Museum of Sacred Art.”
The museum was inaugurated on December 23 of the same year and was housed in the first two cloisters of the convent complex. On April 21, 1988, Bishop Bruno Foresti replaced the previous statute with a new one, which established that, in addition to the recovery and preservation of artworks and materials of the Diocese threatened by ruin and dispersion, the museum’s purposes also include restoration, cultural initiatives, and educational activities.
Meanwhile, the acquisition of the main cloister of the San Giuseppe complex, state property, was completed—a long and complex process that allowed, at the end of the eighties, to place the collections of the Diocesan Museum in a more suitable and prestigious location.
In 2007, Bishop Giulio Sanguineti provided the Diocesan Museum with a new statute while simultaneously starting the process for the legal recognition of the Canonical Foundation.
Visit info:
The museum is accessible via elevators and stairlifts for people with mobility difficulties.
Information about the Museum of Sacred Art of Ponte di Legno
Piazza Paolo VI, 1
25056 Ponte di Legno (Brescia)
036491223
pontedilegno@diocesi.brescia.it
Source: MIBACT

