In the heart of the modern village of Macerata Feltria, among quiet streets and ancient houses, rises the Church of San Michele Arcangelo, built in the second half of the 19th century to replace the old parish church at the Castello, which was no longer adequate for the growing community on the plain below.
The interior, intimate yet solemn, houses at the center of the presbytery the refined depiction of the Crucifix (1396), an unpublished work by Olivuccio di Ciccarello da Camerino, previously attributed to a non-existent painter once called Carlo da Camerino. A recent discovery has restored the artwork to its true author, giving due dignity to his art and to the local heritage.
The building also preserves some liturgical furnishings originally belonging to the nearby Church of San Francesco, including altarpieces and other sacred objects—witnesses of a continuity of devotion and precious art across the centuries.
Mu.Mont invites you to cross the threshold of the Church of San Michele with a slower step— to embrace quiet, breathe in history, and listen to an art that speaks of faith, memory, and rebirth. An intimate place, where the gaze meets the essential and silence becomes a companion to contemplation.