Agnelli's mother was Margaret Clarke (1898–1955), of Peoria, Illinois, United States, and Rockford, Illinois,[14] the heiress of a well-known family of whiskey producers;[15] she hung her mother's portraits in roomscapes of wicker furniture and sprigged cotton.[16] She had two brothers: DonCarlo Caracciolo (1925–2008), who inherited their father's titles in 1965 and founded the Gruppo Editoriale L'Espresso and newspaper La Repubblica,[17] and was known as "a prince among newspaper editors",[18] or as "the editor prince", a reference to his aristocratic birth and elegant manner;[19] and DonNicola Caracciolo (1931–2020), the holder of both titles since 2008, as 10th Prince of Castagneto, 5th Duke of Melito, and hereditary Patrician of Naples.[20][21] They grew up in Rome and Turkey, and spoke Italian, French, and English.[22]
Family
She was married in Osthoffen to Gianni Agnelli, the Fiat tycoon who was widely referred to as "the uncrowned king of Italy",[23] on 19 November 1953; they would remain married until his death on 24 January 2003.[24] In their 50-year marriage,[25] they had two children and eight grandchildren:[26][27]
Countess Margherita Agnelli de Pahlen (born 26 October 1955); married first in 1975 (divorcing in 1981) to Alain Elkann (born 23 March 1950) and second in 1991 to a Russian nobleman, Count Sergei de Pahlen (born in 1944)
John Philip Jacob Elkann (born 1 April 1976), married on 4 September 2004 Italian noblewoman Donna Lavinia Ida Borromeo Arese Taverna (born 10 March 1977)
Leone Mosé Elkann (born 27 August 2006)
Oceano Noah Elkann (born 11 November 2007)
Vita Talita Elkann (born 23 January 2012)
Lapo Edovard Elkann (born 7 October 1977), married on 7 October 2021 to Portuguese rally racer Joana Lemos (born 24 April 1973)
Don Giacomo Gaetani dell'Aquila d'Aragona (born 15 August 2009)
Don Pietro Gaetani dell'Aquila d'Aragona (born 31 October 2012)
Donna Marella Gaetani dell'Aquila d'Aragona (born 27 May 2014)
Countess Maria de Pahlen (born in 1983)
Count Pierre de Pahlen (born in 1986)
Countess Sophie de Pahlen (born in 1988)
Countess Anna de Pahlen (born in 1988)
Countess Tatiana de Pahlen (born in 1990)
Into the 2020s, the de Pahlens remain involved in a dispute with the Elkanns over Agnelli's inheritance.[28][29]
Career
After Agnelli obtained her diploma in Switzerland,[30] she was educated in Paris, where she attended the Académie des Beaux-Arts and then the Académie Julian in Paris.[31] As part of her varied career, which included photography,[32] design, and art collection,[33] as well as a modeling career,[34] Agnelli began her photography career as an assistant to Erwin Blumenfeld in New York City,[35][36] where she lived on Park Avenue on the Upper East Side.[37] When she returned to Italy, Agnelli was also an occasional editor and photographic contributor to Vogue and Condé Nast, among other magazines.[38] In 1973, she created a textile line for Abraham-Zumsteg, for which she was awarded the Resources Council's Roscoe (the design trade's equivalent of the Oscar) in 1977.[39][40][41] This was followed by work for the Ratti in Como, Steiner factories in France, and for Martex and numerous others for Marshall Field's in the United States.[42] She specialized in furnishing fabrics.[43]
An avid gardener,[44][45] Agnelli authored a number of books on the subject,[46] also providing many of the photographs.[47] Two of her books are about the Agnelli Gardens at Villar Perosa, such as The Agnelli Gardens at Villar Perosa: Two Centuries of a Family Retreat (1998), and the Garden of Ninfa, such as Il giardino di Ninfa (1999).[48] Into the 21st century, she oversaw the opening of the Renzo Piano-designed art gallery Pinacoteca Giovanni e Marella Agnelli, built on the roof of the former Lingotto Fiat factory in Turin.[49] The Agnelli collection includes Picasso, Renoir, Canaletto, Matisse, and Canova masterpieces, and opened in 2002.[50][51] The gallery also puts on temporary modern art exhibitions.[52][53] She commissioned art from the likes of Andy Warhol and Richard Avedon.[54]
In 1970, Agnelli founded the National Commission of United World Colleges. She was a member of the International Board of Trustees of the Salk Institute for Biological Studies in San Diego, California, and of the International Council of the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Among others, she was also vice-president of the Council of Palazzo Grassi in Venice, as well as president of I 200 del Fai in Milan and of the Association of Turin Friends of Contemporary Art in Turin.[55][56]
The Swans
The reserved, patrician tastemaker, and socialite Agnelli was known for her inclusion in Truman Capote's the Swans, a circle of wealthy, stylish, and well-married women friends whose company he adored because, in his words, they "had created themselves, as he had done", and "had stories to tell".[57] According to Capote, Agnelli was "the European swan numero uno", one of the youngest in a group that included Babe Paley, Gloria Guinness, C. Z. Guest, Slim Keith, Pamela Harriman, Lee Radziwill, and Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. In her autobiography, Washington Post publisher and Capote friend Katharine Graham recounted that the author once told her that if Paley and Agnelli were "both in Tiffany's window, Marella would be more expensive."[58] Agnelli herself was nicknamed the Swan by Richard Avedon for a 1949 photograph that appeared on Vogue;[59] Agnelli was among the notable photos Avedon took.[60] Her other nickname, the Last Swan, was coined by Capote.[61]
Death
After a long illness,[62] Agnelli died at the age of 91 on 23 February 2019 at her home in Turin;[63][64][65] the announcement was made by her family.[66] Days prior to her death, Agnelli's health deteriored,[67] and the cause of death was ruled to be from complications of Parkinson's disease; she had been in a condition of invalidity for several years, and in her last months she was artificially fed.[68] The funeral was held in a strictly private form on 25 February 2019 in the church of San Pietro in Vincoli at Villar Perosa. At the end of the ritual, her body was buried in the family chapel in the city cemetery.[69][70] Among others, she was mourned by association football club Juventus, which is owned by the Agnelli family.[71]
Agnelli, Marella; Bright, Robert Emmett; Forquet, Federico; Pietromarchi, Luca (24 September 1987). Gardens of the Italian Villas. New York: Rizzoli USA. ISBN978-0-8478-0825-0.
Agnelli, Marella; Caracciolo, Marella; Pietromarchi, Giuppi (1997). Ninfa ieri e oggi (in Italian). Turin: Allemandi. ISBN88-422-0718-7.
Agnelli, Marella (30 September 1998). Giardino segreto (in Italian). Milano: Rizzoli. ISBN88-17-67997-6.
Agnelli, Marella; Caracciolo, Marella; Pejrone, Paolo (15 October 1998). The Agnelli Gardens at Villar Perosa: Two Centuries of a Family Retreat. New York: Harry Abrams. ISBN978-0-8109-1979-2.
Agnelli, Marella (2000). Il giardino di Ninfa (in Italian). Turin: Allemandi. ISBN88-422-0542-7.
Agnelli, Marella; Caracciolo Chia, Marella (14 October 2014). Marella Agnelli: The Last Swan. New York: Rizzoli USA. ISBN978-0-8478-4321-3.
Agnelli, Marella; Caracciolo Chia, Marella (15 October 2014). Ho coltivato il mio giardino (in Italian). Milan: Piccola Biblioteca Adelphi. ISBN978-8-8459-2943-4.
Agnelli, Marella (2015). La Signora Gocà (in Italian). Milano: Piccola Biblioteca Adelphi. ISBN978-8-8459-3040-9.
^Clarke, Gerald (1988). Capote: A Biography. New York: Simon & Schuster. pp. 274–275. ISBN978-0-6712-2811-8.
^Graham, Katharine (29 March 2018). Personal History. Women in History. London: Hachette UK. p. 393. ISBN978-1-4746-1026-1. Retrieved 16 February 2023 – via Google Books.
^Moncalvo, Gigi (2009). I lupi & gli Agnelli: ombre e misteri della famiglia più potente d'Italia (in Italian). Florence: Vallecchi. p. 25. ISBN978-88-8427-159-4.