The Cappella della Madonna di Vitaleta on the road from Pienza to San Quirico d'Orcia

In 2001 I came to live in Italy. I had some fun, wrote a journal and this is the blog of my story...

"Tuscany is a state of grace. The countryside is so lovingly designed that the eye sweeps the mountains and valleys without stumbling over a single stone. The lilt of the rolling green hills, the upsurging cypresses, the terraces sculptured by generations that have handled the rocks with skillful tenderness, the fields geometrically juxtaposed as though drawn by a draughtsman for beauty as well as productivity; the battlements of castles on the hills, their tall towers standing grey-blue and golden tan among the forest of trees, the air of such clarity that every sod of earth stands out in such dazzling detail. The fields ripening with barley and oats, beans and beets. The grape-heavy vines espaliered between the horizontal branches of silver-green olive trees, composing orchards of webbed design, rich in intimation of wine, olive oil and lacy-leaf poetry. Tuscany untied the knots in a man's intestines, wiped out the ills of the world. Italy is the garden of Europe, Tuscany is the garden of Italy, Florence is the flower of Tuscany." Irving Stone from my favourite book " The Agony and the Ecstacy" A fictional biography of Michelangelo



4. Santa Maria Novella

Annette and I have been here for three weeks now and have both found some work, even though for English teachers November isn’t the best time to come, as courses started at the beginning of October.

When we were on holiday in Florence two years ago we visited the famous Uffizi art gallery, saw Michelangelo’s David and also the Bargello. However, Florence probably has more art galleries, churches containing works of art and museums than many larger cities in the world. Actually UNESCO says that 60% of the world’s most important works of art are to be found in Italy and approximately half of these are in Florence. So there should be plenty more to see...

It’s a Wednesday afternoon and I am in town with a couple of hours to kill after an interview and so decide to check out the church of Santa Maria Novella. This is the church where the first attacks were made on Galileo that led to his eventual indictment.

Visitors who arrive in Florence at the station usually walk straight past this ‘masterpiece of Rennaissance architecture’, as you can only see this rather dull brick back of it from the main ‘Piazza Stazione’. You have to make the short walk around the corner to ‘Piazza Santa Maria Novella’ to witness 'Rennaissance man' Leon Battista Alberti’s crowning glory, the facade of Santa Maria Novella.




However that’s not all there is! Inside is a veritable treasure trove of interesting works of art, much more interesting infact, than the inside of the more famous main Cathedral, ‘Santa Maria del Fiore’ and with no queues!

Built between 1246 and 1360 on a 9th century oratory, Alberti’s genius was to add the frieze of squares, the s-shaped volutes at either side (a new element never before seen, even in antiquity!) and the Dominican solar emblem at the top. All bringing the facade to a harmonious completion.




Inside there are many masterpieces, including some famous frescoes that a young Michelangelo worked on with his teacher, Ghilandaio.
But Massaccio’s ‘Trinity’ is perhaps the most interesting and fascinating piece. Painted between 1425 and 1428 and only discovered in 1861 after being covered up by a Vasari altar! It’s the earliest surviving painting that shows such a detailed understanding of perspective, something that had been lost for nearly a thousand years. Massaccio, with the help of Brunelleschi had rediscovered one of the lost arts and gave the Rennaissance an invaluable tool to continue its developement.




My favourite part though is the inscription above the skeleton which
reads:




"I was what you are and what I am you will be"

A sobering thought indeed! and interesting way to spend a Friday afternoon!


(Original journal entry 28/11/01)

2 comments:

Unknown said...

Lee it looks and sounds a great place to live

Lee said...

Thanks for your comment Joe, it means a lot... And I haven't got started yet!!!