Puppet Museum

Museum · Bergamo

Puppet Museum

Museum · Bergamo

2

Via Torquato Tasso, 8, 24121 Bergamo BG, Italy

Photos

Puppet Museum by null
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by Max Cortesi (Atlas Obscura User)
Puppet Museum by null
Puppet Museum by null
Puppet Museum by null
Puppet Museum by null
Puppet Museum by null
Puppet Museum by null
Puppet Museum by null
Puppet Museum by null
Puppet Museum by null
Puppet Museum by null
Puppet Museum by null
Puppet Museum by null
Puppet Museum by null
Puppet Museum by null
Puppet Museum by null
Puppet Museum by null
Puppet Museum by null
Puppet Museum by null
Puppet Museum by null

Highlights

Museum of puppets showcasing Bergamo's tradition and craftsmanship  

Placeholder
Placeholder
Placeholder

Via Torquato Tasso, 8, 24121 Bergamo BG, Italy Get directions

museo.fondazioneravasio.it
@museodelburattino

Information

Static Map

Via Torquato Tasso, 8, 24121 Bergamo BG, Italy Get directions

+39 035 225291
museo.fondazioneravasio.it
@museodelburattino

Features

Last updated

Oct 4, 2025

Powered By

You might also like

Terms of Use • Privacy Policy • Cookie Policy
 © 2025 Postcard Technologies, Inc.
@atlasobscura

These 11 Puppet Palaces Around the World Will Thrill and Terrify You

"Benedetto Ravasio (1915-1990) was arguably the most famous and best puppet-master of the province of Bergamo. In the late 1940s, he and his wife, Giuseppina Cazzaniga, decided to commit themselves to the art of puppeteering, which occupied them until his death. In 1993, the Benedetto Ravasio Foundation was set up, and Museo del Burattino was eventually opened in 2019. Benedetto was instrumental in breathing life into Ol Giopì, a mask traditional to Bergamo. The earliest evidence of Ol Giopì is a 14th-century painting recently discovered in a local church. His main characteristic is three goiters, which he flaunts as if they were jewels. Crafty and rough around the edges, Ol Giopì is a porter and a farmer by trade, professions that he does not practice, preferring occasional less tiring earnings. He always carries a stick that he often uses to beat reason into people, always however for the benefit of the oppressed and undefended, making him a fundamentally good-hearted character. Surrounding Ol Giopì is a panoply of characters, all colorfully named in the Bergamo dialect. Accordingly, Ol Giopì’s parents were Bortolo Söcalonga and Maria Scatoléra, and he has two brothers, Giacomì and Pisanbraga.  His wife is Margì and their son is Bortolì.  Each one of them exhibits specific characteristics that endure through the stories. On display at the museum are more than 120 puppets, including several versions of Ol Giopì and his immediate family, and dozens of other characters, such as merchants, thieves, magistrates, policemen, and so on.  All of these are so-called hand puppets, a type of puppet that is worn as a glove and animated through the movement of hands and fingers. Ol Giopì and his universe are the centerpiece of the museum, but there is also a section showing rod puppets and marionettes, and another section showing how a puppet is designed, carved, primed, and painted. At the time of writing, there was also a temporary exhibit of marionettes from China. Pictures of Benedetto Ravasio in action help understand the setting in which he operated." - ATLAS_OBSCURA

https://www.atlasobscura.com/lists/creepy-puppets-dolls
View Postcard for Puppet Museum
@atlasobscura

Our Favorite New Places of 2021

"Benedetto Ravasio (1915-1990) was arguably the most famous and best puppet-master of the province of Bergamo. In the late 1940s, he and his wife, Giuseppina Cazzaniga, decided to commit themselves to the art of puppeteering, which occupied them until his death. In 1993, the Benedetto Ravasio Foundation was set up, and Museo del Burattino was eventually opened in 2019. Benedetto was instrumental in breathing life into Ol Giopì, a mask traditional to Bergamo. The earliest evidence of Ol Giopì is a 14th-century painting recently discovered in a local church. His main characteristic is three goiters, which he flaunts as if they were jewels. Crafty and rough around the edges, Ol Giopì is a porter and a farmer by trade, professions that he does not practice, preferring occasional less tiring earnings. He always carries a stick that he often uses to beat reason into people, always however for the benefit of the oppressed and undefended, making him a fundamentally good-hearted character. Surrounding Ol Giopì is a panoply of characters, all colorfully named in the Bergamo dialect. Accordingly, Ol Giopì’s parents were Bortolo Söcalonga and Maria Scatoléra, and he has two brothers, Giacomì and Pisanbraga.  His wife is Margì and their son is Bortolì.  Each one of them exhibits specific characteristics that endure through the stories. On display at the museum are more than 120 puppets, including several versions of Ol Giopì and his immediate family, and dozens of other characters, such as merchants, thieves, magistrates, policemen, and so on.  All of these are so-called hand puppets, a type of puppet that is worn as a glove and animated through the movement of hands and fingers. Ol Giopì and his universe are the centerpiece of the museum, but there is also a section showing rod puppets and marionettes, and another section showing how a puppet is designed, carved, primed, and painted. At the time of writing, there was also a temporary exhibit of marionettes from China. Pictures of Benedetto Ravasio in action help understand the setting in which he operated." - ATLAS_OBSCURA

https://www.atlasobscura.com/lists/favorite-places-2021
View Postcard for Puppet Museum

Annely Kasela

Google
Absolutely brilliant museum that tells the story of Bergamo's and Italy's puppet culture and history. There's so many hand puppets and marionettes on display and the explanations are both in Italian and English. Absolutely worth a visit!

Yana Rzhepakovsky

Google
Museum closed till july 30, 2025

Gabriela Simona Trusca

Google
i saw a midget and i tought it was a puppet but i was wrong💀

Andrea Carrara

Google
Da piccoli nella bergamasca chi non ha assistito ad uno spettacolo di burattini o non ha avuto tra i suoi giocattoli dei burattini ? Ecco il motivo per cui suggerirei una visita al museo dei burattini. Il museo ha sede fin dalla sua inaugurazione, avvenuta il 5 luglio 2019, all’ultimo piano del Palazzo della Provincia (spazio Viterbi) ed è nato per volere della Fondazione Benedetto Ravasio, che dal 1993 si impegna a tenere viva la memoria e la visione del grande burattinaio bergamasco cui è intitolata. La struttura espone circa 120 teste di legno di burattini, tutti pezzi significativi della produzione storica bergamasca che vengono proposti, spiegati e “reinventati” per tramandare alle nuove generazioni una parte importante del patrimonio culturale di Bergamo. Insieme al Fondo Ravasio sono attualmente esposti artefatti dalle collezioni private Angelini, Cortesi, Losa, Milesi, Scuri. La Fondazione cura anche proposte didattiche mirate per gli istituti scolastici e numerosi eventi annuali. Nel 2020 è stato pubblicato il catalogo dei pezzi esposti, ricco di testi critici e illustrazioni.

Cristian Savoldelli

Google
Il museo del burattino di Bergamo è una vera e propria perla della città, un luogo magico dove si può ammirare la storia e la tradizione del teatro di figura bergamasco. Il museo ospita una collezione di oltre 120 burattini, tutti realizzati con maestria e originalità da famosi burattinai locali, come Benedetto Ravasio, il fondatore della Fondazione che gestisce il museo. Ogni burattino ha una sua personalità, una sua voce, una sua storia da raccontare. Il museo offre anche una ricca programmazione di eventi, spettacoli, mostre, convegni e laboratori, per avvicinare il pubblico di tutte le età a questa forma d'arte antica e sempre attuale. Il museo del burattino di Bergamo è un'esperienza unica, divertente e istruttiva, che consiglio vivamente a chiunque visiti la città. È un museo che fa sognare, ridere e riflettere, che fa onore alla cultura e alla creatività bergamasca.

Magdalena Kowalska

Google
Lalki niewątpliwie ciekawe, ale muzeum maleńkie zaledwie kilka małych sal na 4 piętrze, chwilka oglądania. Jak na liczbę eksponatów cenę 5 euro trudno uznać za atrakcyjną.

Mery CHT

Google
Bellissimo e interessante museo dei burattini che racchiude la grande maestria dei burattinai della bergamasca e burattini , marionette di varia provenienza. Facile da trovare, si trova al 4 piano del palazzo della provincia a Bergamo, si viene accolti da un signore gentile desideroso di esternare il sapere di questa tradizione che pian piano di sta riscoprendo. Bellissimo portare i bambini a conoscere l' intrattenimento del passato, davvero bello .

Maria Vania Cavalli

Google
Ho visitato questo museo di sabato mattina. È stato allestito in un contesto architettonico bellissimo (travature di legno a vista). L'allestimento è curato dal punto di vista sia della illuminazione che dei panel contenutistici a guidare il percorso (sintetici ma esaurienti senza essere noiosi). Viene così valorizzato un patrimonio di arte, tradizioni, cultura popolare e mestieri che giravano intorno a "baracca e burattini" e che sarebbe un vero peccato perdere o disperdere. La fantasia è un bene da coltivare in grandi e piccini! E personalmente ho passato un paio d'ore fantastiche in tutti i sensi. Abbiamo anche avuto la fortuna di una guida d'eccezione: il sig. Pinuccio Rigamonti, che ci ha spiegato ogni cosa e rivelato tanti aneddoti con passione! Grazie mille, ritorneremo e vi seguiremo nelle vostre iniziative itineranti!