Life Leopoldo Pollack was born in 1751. He was the son of a master mason in the Imperial Office of Works in Vienna. He was trained by Paul Ulrich Trientl before attending courses at the Vienna Academy under
Vinzenz Fischer. After arriving in Milan in 1775, he became a pupil of
Giuseppe Piermarini with whom he also collaborated. In 1776 he became a student at the
Brera Academy. Pollack was appointed Treasurer of State Buildings and assisted Piermarini both with his teaching duties and public building commissions. He taught perspective at the Accademia and in 1786 was made Professor of the Elements of Architecture. As state architect Pollack was mainly engaged in adapting the many religious buildings made redundant by the reforms of
Joseph II. The fine drawings Pollack made for these projects are proof of the enormous care he paid to the internal layouts. At Pavia he converted the hospital church into a ward for the sick (1782), while the convent of San Felice was adapted to serve as a
seminary (1790). He converted the monastic buildings of Santa Chiara (1787),
Lodi, San Quirico,
Cremona, and Santa Maria Maddalena (1788),
Mantua, into
orphanages. In 1796, when the French arrived in Milan, he was dismissed from the Accademia owing to his links with the Viennese court, lost his post as official architect and was briefly imprisoned. In 1803, however, he was appointed surveyor to the fabric of
Milan Cathedral. In 1805, as surveyor to the fabric of Milan Cathedral, Pollack began preparations for the construction of the façade, the design for which he had already completed in 1787. He sought to harmonize the existing 16th-century elements with the
Gothic character of the building and to simplify the composition by removing the
bell tower and the traditional entrance portico. After his death, the work was completed by
Carlo Amati and
Giuseppe Zanoia.
Early work Initially, Pollack’s professional activity was completely subordinated to that of Piermarini, with whom he collaborated on restructuring the church of the
Collegio Elvetico (1777) and the
Royal Palace of Milan (from 1776), and on building the Palazzo Greppi (1775) and
Palazzo Belgioioso (1776–8), all in Milan. In
Pavia he was responsible for the University buildings: the
anatomical theatre (1785), the theology portico (1785) and the physics theatre (1785–7) were all built to his designs. The physics theatre, completed in 1787, includes a series of
Ionic semi-columns and niches with statues of
Galileo Galilei and
Bonaventura Cavalieri. In
Monza Pollack collaborated on the construction of the
Villa Regio-Ducale (1776–80).
Mature work Subsequently, Pollack developed his career on an independent basis, and his architecture exhibited a more individual character. He grafted a taste for richer ornament on to Piermarini’s
rationalism, evolving a restrained pomp and developing motifs drawn from international Neoclassicism. At the same time, his continuing contacts with Vienna and
Budapest kept him in touch with the Baroque tradition. (1796) The remarkable décor of Pollack’s interiors was designed with exceptional attention to detail and an understanding of the function of the rooms. Villa and garden design appealed to him most, and he achieved his greatest success in these areas. The
Villa Belgiojoso (1790–96; now Villa Reale) is laid out like a Parisian hôtel, with a screen wall between low-rise side wings, which lead back to the main corps de logis. Clearly influenced by
Palladianism and French trends, it has a rusticated base, a
giant order of columns and is topped with a series of statues. The garden front displays the full pomp of French classicism in an elevation that recalls
Ange-Jacques Gabriel’s palaces (1753) on the
Place de la Concorde, Paris, although Pollack used
Ionic rather than
Corinthian columns. Pollack also designed the
English landscape garden behind the mansion. The garden was the first of its kind to be created in Milan, and it proved both popular and influential.
Later career Pollack’s stylistic idiosyncrasies became more accentuated in successive works, for example the Villa Mezzabarba (1791–6),
Casatisma, an adaptation of an earlier structure, the Villa Rocca Saporiti at Borgovico, near
Como, the Villa Casati (1790s) at
Muggiò, the Villa Pesenti–Agliardi (1798–1801) at Sombreno,
Bergamo, and the Villa Amalia (1801) at
Erba, which was built on an old
convent. When he was not constrained by pre-existing structures, as at Como and Muggiò, Pollack adopted a scheme in which the villa is dominated centrally by a domed, oval room that stands out on the exterior and is richly decorated with
stuccowork. The interiors give full expression to his decorative taste, and the English-style gardens are laid out with pleasant arbours,
artificial ruins, bridges, tempietti and
obelisks, alternating open areas with pools and fountains.
Theatre design Pollack was also successfully involved in theatre design. Early in his career he had collaborated in building the Teatro Patriottico (1798; later Teatro dei Filodrammatici), Milan, for which he also designed a façade. In his unexecuted plans for the Court Theatre at Vienna (1794), the
Teatro Grande (1805), Brescia, and above all the Teatro Sociale (1803), Bergamo, which was completed in 1815 by his son Giuseppe Pollack (1779–1857), he followed the lines established by Piermarini at the
Teatro alla Scala (1776–8), Milan: a horseshoe auditorium, a timber internal structure and ceiling, an
antechamber to each box, a spacious entrance lobby with an upper-level foyer and a
porte-cochère. == Gallery ==