San Filippo Neri is a late Baroque-style Roman Catholic church located on Corso Umberto in central Lodi, region of Lombardy, Italy.
The church, dedicated to St Phillip Neri, was designed by the brothers Pietro Giacomo, Michele, and Domenico Sartorio[1] and built during 1740-1745.
The scenes depict the Glory of St Phillip, a Holy Trinity, and the Crucifixion at the apse.
[3] The Rococo facade, designed by Antonio Veneroni, is narrow but adventurously scenographic: it rises at the end of a street, convex, with a bust of St Phillip inside an oval niche above the portal, and an Immaculate Conception in an oval supported by scrolls above the upper central window.
Alongside is the former convent, now converted in the Civic Museum and Biblioteca Laudense, built by the Fillipini, and open to the public in 1792.