
Called Galleria Deloitte, the new exhibition space opened in May inside a deconsecrated church in downtown Milan. This project is part of the larger Deloitte Campus, which also includes the Solaria Space technology innovation center: Deloitte’s new hub entirely dedicated to Generative Artificial Intelligence.
The church in question is San Paolo Converso, located between Corso Italia and Piazza Sant’Eufemia, which after a redevelopment has become an avant-garde gallery where the sacred merges with art and technology.
Deloitte Gallery, Milan’s new gallery.
The historic 17th-century church of San Paolo Converso in the heart of Milan has lived many lives: from place of worship to warehouse, from recording studio to experimental art space. Today it is reborn as Deloitte Gallery, a cultural center that hosts exhibitions, events and meetings, thanks to an intervention that has respected its architectural identity while projecting it into the present.
Inauguratingthe new course of Galleria Deloitte is “Liturgica,” an installation signed by visual artist Giuseppe Lo Schiavo. Created with the support of artificial intelligence, the work brings symbols of the sacred world and digital languages into dialogue, opening a current reflection on the relationship between technology, art and spirituality.
More than just a gallery, the Deloitte Gallery presents itself as a cultural laboratory open to the city, where art, technology and thought dialogue together. The goal is clear: to create a bridge between culture, innovation and business, fostering dialogue between worlds that are only seemingly distant.
The church’s interior retains intact Baroque frescoes and architecture, offering a powerful visual contrast to contemporary installations for an immersive experience.
The gallery will host events, exhibitions and interdisciplinary meetings, also accessible to the public, outside the institutional circuits. In a time when artificial intelligence is redefining the role of creativity, Deloitte chooses to breathe life back into a sacred place by transforming it into a space of confrontation, beauty and innovation.
The church is easily accessible by public transportation: the nearest subway stop is Missori (Line M3)