There appear to be two prominent artists of the same name in Milan, overlapping somewhat, alive in the late 16th and early 17th century. The present Carlo Buzzi, whose name may also be written as Buti, Buzio, Butio, Albutio, or Albuzio, was an exponent of the
Milanese Baroque style of
Galeazzo Alessi and
Francesco Maria Richini, although he strongly supported the continuation of
Gothic forms at
Milan Cathedral, of which he was architect between 1638 and 1658, after the death of
Fabio Mangone. The late date for the earliest work on the building (1385) meant that Gothic design had continued into the
Renaissance, and controversy raged between ‘Classicists’ and ‘Goths’ over the correct way to finish it. Buzzi made several designs for the façade in a conservative Gothic style, based on the existing side elevations but incorporating the Renaissance window details already constructed. One of these projects was accepted, but a strongly argued preference expressed by
Gian Lorenzo Bernini (1656) for an alternative scheme by
Francesco Borromini in a Gothicized classical style brought work to a standstill. The façade was ultimately completed (1806–13) to one of Buzzi’s designs (slightly modified) on the orders of Napoleon. Buzzi worked extensively in and around Milan. His extant works include the octagonal nucleus (1641), later significantly altered, of the sanctuary of Santa Maria del Bosco,
Imbersago; a new campanile (1643) for
Santo Stefano Maggiore, Milan; the reconstruction (1645) of the
Palazzo delle Scuole Palatine,
Piazza Mercanti, with an ornate façade consisting of a rusticated upper storey resting on an arcade of paired columns in imitation of the nearby
Palazzo dei Giureconsulti (1558–68) by
Vincenzo Seregni; and the nave, campanile and façade of Sant'Ambrogio (1648; unfinished),
Merate, in severe Roman style. ==References==