An unforgettable promise of love? Followed by a unique wedding? Or a special anniversary to renew your vows?
Naturally, in Verona, a few meters from the Duomo, in the historic center of the world’s most famous city for love!
Palazzo Paletta Dai Prè is now used by the City Authority for marriage ceremonies, providing the bride and groom with a magnificent location in the city of Romeo and Juliet, surrounded by masterpieces by the most important of Verona’s seventeenth century artists.
Ask our wedding planners or follow our recommendations for your wedding ceremony and reception, from the choice of rings to the banquet, the catering, flower arrangements and photographic service.
Tell the best man and others close to you what you are looking for. Tell us your budget. Then, just relax and let the ceremony become the unforgettable event you have always wanted.
Room | mq | dimensions |
---|---|---|
Salone delle feste | 92mq | 12 x 7 x 9h |
Sala delle Armature | 46mq | 7,50 x 6 x 5h |
Sala Oro | 32mq | 6,50 x 5 x 5h |
Sala del Pecchio | 20mq | 4,50 x 4 x 4h |
Sala Felice dei fiori | 51mq | 8,40 x 6 x 4h |
In the main hall, two large wall paintings depict "The Sacrifice of Iphigenia" by PIETRO ROTARI and "Achilles dragging Hector's body" by CARLO SALIS, framed by painted architectural squares.
In the hall, the painted architecture includes a series of monochrome works depicting scenes from the Iliad and the Aeneid, by GIORGIO ANSELMI.
The ceiling of the hall is nine meters high and was painted by Anselmi in fresco, depicting the "Triumph of Juno and Athena".
In the Armor Room, the wall is decorated with tempera in trompe l' oeil from the first half of the nineteenth century.
The frescoed oval ceiling, by ANSELMI, depicts " Time and Vanity “.
The ceiling is decorated in a beautiful gold color.
During the renovation a ceiling fresco was discovered attributed to Domenico Pecchio and to Zelotti.
In this room, the oil painting on the ceiling depicting the allegory of Fortune or Spring dates back to the seventeenth century .
On the walls, the 8 still lifes on canvas – placed within late eighteenth century plaster - are a rare and perhaps unique feature of Veronese art, perhaps painted by Felice di Biagi aka Felice dei Fiori, active in Verona at the time and head of the genre specialists at the beginning of the eighteenth century, with numerous followers and imitators .