The Monastery of Saint Benedict, situated in via Crociferi, is one of the artistic symbols of Catania. It is commonly identifiable by the eighteenthcentury arch which spreads over the street and unites the Monastery’s main abbey to the little one, wherein today the MacS – Museum of Contemporary Art Sicily – has its place.
Along the centuries the Monastery holds a life of seclusion in it which has inspired famous national writers and movie directors. This place in fact and its street became the set both of the novel Storia di una capinera, written by the nationally eminent writer Giovanni Verga, and its homonymous movie directed by Franco Zeffirelli.
The Saint Benedict Church is part of a prestigious monumental complex and it is one of the most important Sicilian churches in baroque style as well as one of the most beautiful ones in Europe.
The church was amazingly frescoed just in three years, from 1726 to 1729, by a single painter named Giovanni Tuccari. Inside the church it’s likewise important to mention the altar (entirely realized in diaspro - a river stone - and preciously inlayed in pure gold and silver), the cantoria (a special elevated place where still nowadays it’s possible to listen to the harmonious choir of the nuns of seclusion) and the monumental Staircase of the Angels which brings to the main entrance of the church. As much striking as the rest are the grates, commonly named gelosie, which characterize the history of this place and the sacred intimacy of nuns.
Written by Luna meli - Last update: 04/08/2019