
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.



(Original journal entry 30/1/02)
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