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Museums
- BRANCACCI CHAPEL (Cappella Brancacci, Chiesa
del Carmine, Piazza del Carmine)
Open: 10:00-17:00; 13:00-17:00 on holidays
Closed: Tuesday
Admission: £ 6000; reduced £ 4500 (under
25 years of age) and £ 1800 (students)
Tel. 055/2382195
The Brancacci Chapel is one of the most important masterpieces
of the sacred art that fills the city. It is located
in the right transept of the church of Santa Maria del
Carmine, but the entrance is found in the adjacent convent
that surrounds the cloister. The patrons from the middle
of the 1300's to 1780 were the Brancacci family, and
it was originally decorated according to the wishes
of Felice Brancacci, a Florentine politician and enemy
of the Medici, who called upon the artists Masaccio
and Masolino. In 1480, many years after Masaccio's death,
the decorations of the chapel were completed by Filippino
Lippi. The three artists painted stories of Peter and
the salvation of mankind realized by Christ's self-sacrifice.
After the political fall of the Brancacci, the Carmelites
dedicated the chapel to the Madonna del Popolo from
the sacred image of the Madonna, still visible today
on the altar, attributed to Coppo di Marcovaldo and
the Master of S. Agata.
- Museo Marino Marini (Piazza San Pancrazio)
Open: 10:00- 17:00
Closed: Tuesday
Admission: £ 8000; reduced £ 4000
Tel. 055/219432
The Marino Marini Museum is dedicated to modern art.
Possibly unique in its kind in a city as rich in art
as Florence, this museum is an example of the excellent
results of what we can define an experiment in modern
architecture: the exhibit space, in fact, was excavated
from the ancient foundations of the 14th Century church
of San Pancrazio. This church, with noble families like
the Rucellai as patrons, underwent continual works of
renovation and restoration starting in the 1400's until
1808 when nothing more could be done in terms of recovery.
From that date it was destined for diverse functions:
first it was the Prefect's headquarters and then, after
1883 and the auction of its furnishings, was destined
to be the property of Royal Tabacco Manufacturing, and
was seriously delapidated both inside and out. After
the fire of 1921 it was well restored and used as a
storeroom of the nearby barracks. Only in the early
1970's was the recovery of this precious property begun
on a project of the architects Lorenzo Papi and Bruno
Sacchi who, instead of a simple restoration, wanted
to make a museum out of it. Since 1988 it has displayed
works by Marino Marini, the artist from Pistoia from
whom it now takes its name.
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THE GREAT HOME COMINGS OF THE UFFIZI (Uffizi Gallery
- Loggiato degli Uffizi, 6)
Open: 8:15 am - 6:30 pm
Closed: Mondays
Admission: L. 15.000
Fresh from its restoration the beauty of the Annunciation
by Simone Martini and by his brother-in-law Lippo Memmi
has returned since April 9 to shine again in the Uffizi
Gallery. It consists in a great altarpiece (three meters
times two), a masterpiece by the artist, almost an artistic
testament, conceived for the cathedral of Siena. The
art work, signed and dated 1333, was worked on for three
years before Martini left for Avignone where the maestro
died in 1344. The Annunciation, currently exposed in
hall 38, at the exit from the gallery, with the photographic
documentation of the various phases of the restoration,
will return to hall 3 dedicated to the 14th century
Siena. The restoration, which lasted 9 months, has brought
back to life the polished and vivid colours of the Triptych
as well as the brightness of the gold and was accomplished
by Alfio Del Serra and financed by the Fondazione Cassa
di risparmio di Pistoia and Pescia chaired by Ivano
Paci.
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PITTI: MUSEUM OF MUSEUMS
Inside it many museums find their home: the Silver Museum,
the Palatina Gallery, the real Apartments, the Modern
Art Gallery, the Carriage Museum, the Porcelain Museum
and the open-air museum of the Boboli Gardens. It was
built around the middle of the XV century by the Florentine
banker Luca di Buonaccorso Pitti who gave the commission
to Filippo Brunelleschi. The project was then realized
by his pupil Luca Fancelli. Originally the palace was
of a cubic shape, composed of three doors and 7 windows,
corresponding to the Renaissance ideal of symmetric
harmony.
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MUSEO NAZIONALE DEL BARGELLO
Museum: 8:30-14:00 daily
Closed on the 2nd and 4th Monday AND 1st and 3rd Sunday
of each month. Location: Via del Proconsolo, Phone:
055-238 8606 This building was the first monumental
public building of the council, which was the seat of
the Podestà, (the chief magistrate) and in the
sixteenth century became a prison (from which it acquired
its current name, from the chief of police, the bargello,
which means "sbirro"), and in 1865 a superb
collection of sculpture from the Florentine Renaissance
and an assembly of small renaissance bronzes was installed,
including works of art by Michelangelo, Donatello, Cellini
and Gianbologna.
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