Silken Treasure
The Italian city of Como, celebrated for its silk and scenery, has inspired notables from Leonardo da Vinci and Giuseppe Verdi to Winston Churchill and George Clooney
- By Peter Ross Range
- Photographs by Scott S. Warren
- Smithsonian magazine, July 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
Both the city and lake of Como have been drawing visitors for centuries. Many who came were wealthy, which is reflected in the exceptional concentration of villas—palaces, really—that line the inverted Y-shaped lake. Arrayed against rising dark hills, the villas look like set pieces for a movie backdrop. (Indeed, many movies—including Casino Royale, Star Wars: Episode II Attack of the Clones and A Month by the Lake—have been filmed here.)
Notables, too, have been coming since Roman times. Both Plinys, Elder and Younger, were born here and Pliny the Younger built two country houses along the lake—one named Tragedy, the other Comedy. Leonardo da Vinci visited and was said to incorporate scenic elements from the area in some of his canvases. In 1568, Cardinal Tolomeo Gallio constructed what is probably the most famous building on the lake, now known as the Villa d'Este. The Renaissance-style palace, originally built right on the water's edge in the town of Cernobbio, was designed by a leading architect of the day. In 1815 the building passed into the hands of German Princess Caroline of Brunswick, the estranged wife of George IV, Prince of Wales. Caroline spent the next five years upgrading the house—adding a library and a theater and expanding the terraced hillside gardens—and putting on gala parties. In 1873 the estate became a hotel, eventually hosting such boldface names as Frank Sinatra and Ava Gardner, the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, Alfred Hitchcock and Mikhail Gorbachev. Today's guests—who pay $1,000 and up per night for accommodations—include movie stars, Russian oil magnates and American business leaders.
In the 19th century, a parade of writers—Stendhal, Wordsworth and Shelley among them—spread the word of Lake Como's charms. "I ask myself, Is this a dream? / Will it vanish into air? / Is there a land of such supreme and perfect beauty anywhere?" Longfellow wrote of the lake. Liszt, Bellini and Verdi composed music on its shores. After World War II, it was a destination of choice for both Winston Churchill, who painted from a villa in the village of Moltrasio, and Konrad Adenauer, the first postwar German chancellor, who summered in Menaggio.
Today a new generation of famous visitors is descending on Lake Como. The best known is the actor George Clooney, who in recent years has purchased two villas in Laglia, a lakeside village six miles north of Como. "People sometimes call us Lake Clooney," says Jean Govoni Salvadore, the longtime public relations director at the Villa d'Este. Others have apparently started calling Laglia, formerly a sleepy stop on the lake's ferry route, "Georgetown." At least that's what I was told by Sergio Tramalloni, a member of Como's very active seaplane club, as he flew me over the lake and pointed out Clooney's property.
Clooney's presence has reportedly attracted a stream of other celebrity visitors and would-be villa owners. Last year, Vanity Fair cited Italian newspaper reports that Tom Cruise, Bill Gates, Richard Branson and recently re-elected Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi had all either purchased or were shopping for Lake Como villas. The Comaschi watch all this with mixed feelings. They are happy to see fresh money reviving hotels and restoring stately properties. But they also know that gentrification and the influx of celebrities come at the cost of increased traffic and, now, dramatically inflated real estate prices.
While the arrival of Clooney and friends may have captured Como's headlines, silk makers and fashion houses still shape its spirit. Mantero, dapper in a pale-blue spread-collar shirt and handmade silk tie, leads me through the design ateliers and consulting rooms of his company's headquarters—a stately urban villa with dark wainscoting, broad hallways and coffered ceilings. In what looks like a professor's study, four people lean over a stack of large design albums. "That's Ferragamo on one side and our designers on the other," Mantero whispers. "They're planning some new scarves."
We walk across a glassed-in bridge from the villa to the design ateliers, where another team is gathered around a long table. This group is finalizing a design for dress material. In the main atelier—a huge room with light streaming in through high windows—I see a dozen or more designers working with pencil, pen, brush and computers. "All these people are artists," says Mantero. "Everything we do starts by hand. It would be far cheaper to do it all by computer, but that's not what our clients want. They want to know that every design is hand-done."
A woman named Donatella (she shyly declines to give her last name) painstakingly draws tiny butterflies, mosquitoes and whimsical flowers for a blue-and-gray scarf design ordered by Liberty of London. At another table, designer Mauro Landoni scans Donatella's drawings into a computer, creating files that will ultimately produce the porous screens that are used for printing on silk. Each will allow a single color to pass through onto bolts of off-white silk stretched out on printing tables that are nearly the length of a football field. The design of a single scarf may need as many as 30 to 35 screens. Landoni's computer scans will also create stencils for weaving dyed silk yarns into a desired design.
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Comments (5)
I bought a fine silk long sleeve blouse from Zara's in Edinburgh which featured digitally printed butterflies which were highly detailed and colourful. I would love to be able to purchase some of this material for an arts project, and thought I would try a long shot and see if anybody could help me source it? I can send a photo of the fabric if that would help.
Posted by Sylvia Woodford on August 29,2011 | 05:09 AM
I was so thrilled to discover the article "Silken Treasure" about the Lake Como region in the July issue of Smithsonian just before I left on on a Textile Study Tour to the Mediterranean in August 08. Lake Como and surrounding area was the last stop on the trip and I fell in love with the whole area. We stayed in Cernobbio and took the ferry taxi everywhere. I must go back for two days didn't put a dent in what there was to see much less to absorb this beautiful engaging place!
Posted by Karen Alexander on February 10,2009 | 03:07 AM
My daughter spent the summer in the town of Bellagio on Lake Como doing an internship with her college, Niagara University, from NY. She is a hospitality student. She worked at the Hotel DuLac, Hotel Bellagio and the Sporting Club. It was such a wonderful experience for her. My husband and I went to Bellagio to meet up with her and we thought Lake Como is one of the most beautiful sights we have ever seen.
Posted by Amy Prowak on September 4,2008 | 05:10 PM
I love living on Lake Como despite the fact that George Clooney still has not stopped by for an aperitivo. By the way, the name of the town he lives in is "Laglio" with an "o" rather than an "a" at the end.
Posted by Kate Manning on August 2,2008 | 10:12 AM
Lake Como, what divinity...it was the first Italian sight that met my eyes back in 1981, my first of many trips to Italy. We were met at the Milan airport and drove up to the Hotel in Bellagio right on the lake. I was so overwhelmed I wept. Our room overlooked the lake and it was terribly chilly at night that I slept with the featherbed mattress on top of me. We had dinner that night on the balcony of the hotel, my first taste of risotto with champagne. Flitting back and forth across the lake for days was an experience to remember and relish, Villa D'Este, Villa Carlotta, too gorgeous to describe. I went back to Como many times through the years, I plan to go back again because of your exquisite article. Do not know if it is affordable anymore. Yes, George Clooney is a man of taste and style, although I haven't seen any of his movies that excite me.
Posted by Francesca Capelouto on July 24,2008 | 04:59 PM