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



15. Pitti Palace




I always think it kind of amusing when I here somebody say they can 'do' Florence in a day! Ok so one only has so much time for holidays and there are so many other places to visit, but Florence in one day?  When I was here on holiday for two weeks, apart from everything else, I only visited 3 of the 70 museums in Florence! (and that's without counting special and temporary exhibitions)

However now that I'm living here, I have the opportunity to see some of the things that only residents, students or those holiday makers who stay in Florence for longer than a day, ever get to see...

After 18 consecutive days of sun in Tuscany to start the year, a 5 day trip to drizzly England for my Nan's funeral, it's time to recover with some art of the heavyweight variety!
Here, at the one time residence of the Medici, Napoleon and King of Italy... The Pitti Palace.

The brainchild of merchant banker Luca Pitti who in true 'keeping up with the Jones's fashion', wanted a palace to rival that of his sworn enemies the Medici family and their Palazzo Medici. Pitti died before it was finished and ironically the Pitti Palace was bought by Eleonora Toledo, wife of Cosimo I de' Medici and eventually came to be in possession of the Medici familly! Today the Pitti palace is the largest museum complex in Florence with 7 museums (containing 140 rooms which are open to the public) plus the Boboli gardens, the largest garden in the city. 





We visited Boboli last June in sweltering heat and I've walked past this enormous palace on many ocassions, but today I have about 4 hours free between lessons and the temptation to look inside is too much! Once through the imposing exterior it's into the colossal 'Ammananti' courtyard with no less than 4 enormous statues of Hercules. Here a copy of the Lyssipus bronze, but with the transposed head of Emperor Commodus!








Today I'm only visiting the Palatine Gallery as it houses works by some of my favourite artists, Caravaggio, Canova, Titian and  Raphael. The Palatine gallery is separated into about 30 rooms, named after Greek Mythological characters and there are around 5oo Renaissance paintings and some sculptures.

There are no less than 13 paintings by Titian here, his  young Englishman, or 'the man with blue-green eyes' and 'La Bella'  (above) were both mesmerising in their beauty.  
Raphael is well represented here with 11 paintings. This portrait being probably the most interesting piece in the museum. Nowhere near as famous as Leonardo's Mona Lisa, but many think, showing a striking similarity. Nothing prepares you for seeing the luxurious colours and soft beauty Raphael embues in this ideal portrait of womanhood, the identity of whom, like the Mona Lisa, remains a mystery. One is drawn to the warmth and love of this painting and cetainly you are able to get a lot closer to it than the Mona Lisa! 
My favourite piece here was Canova's gorgeous sculpture of Venus, called 'the Venus Italica' looking rather shy as she seeks to cover her nudity. You can see the Greek influence of this neo-Classical sculpture and in fact it was originally comissioned to replace the Medici Venus stolen by Napoleon and taken to the Louvre, but since replaced in the Uffizi. "When I saw this divine work of Canova," wrote the poet Ugo Foscolo in 1811, "I sighed with a thousand desires, for really, if the Medici Venus is a most beautiful goddess, this is a most beautiful woman."  My thoughts exactly! I definitely want to check out more of his work in the future.





  
A final piece was this dark 'Sleeping Cupid' by Caravaggio, I saw a Caravaggio exhibition in London a few years ago and this is his first piece I've seen in Italy. Painted in Malta towards the end of his life, with its plump, life like flesh, laying aside his bow and arrow he displays an abandonment of worldly possessions. Worth staying more than a day in Florence? I think so!



(Original journal entry 30/1/02)



No comments: