Palazzo Vecchio and the Cathedral
Monday, December 30, 2019
This was a truly
remarkable day, and I’ve managed to pare my photos down to 24 for this post. Apologies for so many.
We started with a short
walk to the Palazzo Vecchio:
The entrance has the copy
of Michelangelo’s David on the left and Bartolommeo Bandinelli's Hercules and Cacus on the right.
The courtyard is magnificent:
The building has three
parts, the oldest being a medieval castle dating from 1299. The great hall was added in the 15th
century and Cosimo de Medici (1389-1464) added the palatial third part. It was in front of this building that Savonarola
was executed in 1492 after the death of Lorenzo the Magnificent. We had a wonderful guide who abbreviated a
lot of history for us. In any case, the
Medici family ruled Florence for 300 years, and was responsible for much of
what we saw.
The enormous great hall
has huge frescos, and a ceiling with many panels. In the very middle is a portrait of Cosimo de
Medici as some sort of a god figure (maybe Jupiter or Jesus):
Almost all of the magnificent
frescos were done by Giorgio Vasari; here’s a sample from the guest apartments:
And a detail:
The audience chamber was
meant to impress the visitor:
The ceiling is incredible:
Of course, the Duke had a
gold crown:
After seeing the Palazzo
Vecchio we were taken to a workshop for a lesson in fresco creation.
We then each were given a panel with fresh plaster,
and brushes and jars of paints. The
paints are all created in the same way: a material of color is ground into a
fine powder and stirred into water as a suspension. Very little of it dissolves. The brush is used to bring the colored
suspension to the wet plaster; when it dries, the result is a hard piece of
art. We very quickly learned that there
is no repair of mistakes. A mistake
ruins the work. Victor’s effort is not on
display, but Joyce did an admirable job:
After lunch we had another
docent-led tour of the cathedral, the baptistry and the museum. The exterior of the cathedral is breathtaking,
with Brunelleschi’s dome the capstone:
The cathedral took 80
years to build, from 1225-1305, and the façade was never finished. Its formal name is Santa Maria del Fiore, (Saint
Mary of the Flowers) and our guide related the parallels between flowers and
Mary’s womb. There are many such
references throughout the cathedral. The
new façade was added slowly, from the 16th to the 19th
century. On the inside above the main
entrance is an unusual 24-hour clock.
The new day begins at sunset, and we had a discussion of how and why
that tradition began. With no firm
answer, possibilities included references to the Hebrew calendar, as the new
day begins at sunset in it.
The interior of Brunelleschi’s
dome has a phenomenal series of frescos on the theme of the Last Judgment done
by the same Georgio Vasari who did the frescos in the Palazzo Vecchio.
Here is Hell:
And here, Chronos with a
broken hourglass (which has a long explanation):
The treasures of the
cathedral and the baptistry have all been moved to the cathedral museum, and
that was our final stop. The collection
defies description. It’s overwhelming. Our docent led us to some of the most
important treasures and spoke to us with great detail and wonderful
explanations. For an art novice like me,
she was perfect. A sampling: the
Ghiberti Door of Paradise:
A panel with multiple
Genesis stories in it:
A Pisano door:
Arnolfo DiCambio is
represented by this pre-Renaissance Madonna created between 1300 and 1305:
Quite unusually, this
expressionless face has blue glass eyes:
There is an overwhelming
Donatello Mary Magdalene as a Penitent made of wood:
And finally, a very poorly
displayed (backlit) Michelangelo Pieta with four characters: the dead Christ, Mary, Mary Magdalene, and
Nicodemus as a Michelangelo self-portrait.
This piece was originally intended by Michelangelo for his own
gravesite.
After our formal tour
there was time for us to explore more of this important museum, and I’ll show just
one more wonderful Pisano piece, God creating Eve:
At the end of one floor is
an exhibit on the architecture and the building of the dome. Not only did Brunelleschi design the dome, he
designed the tools and mechanical devices used to build it. We didn’t have time to linger over that
display.
We had a lovely dinner,
and will get to bed early for we have an early start tomorrow. More then.
Hello Victor and Joyce. What a treat to read your blog comments and to see your photographs of these amazing places and treasures. Thank you for taking the time to share all this with us!
ReplyDeleteRegards,
Lee
Thanks so much, Lee. It's been a great trip so far.
DeleteHow were you able to get such excellent shots of Vasari's painting's on the dome interior? It's very high and, when I was there a couple of years ago, you had to look through a scuzzy plastic suicide prevention barrier.
ReplyDeleteNo plastic, Bruce, and a telephoto lens with image stabilization. You really cannot see any detail without some sort of magnification.
DeleteMarvelous photos and explanations--so much art history in one city! I remember looking at the doors of the Baptistry years ago and feeling overwhelmed by the richness of the imagery and the complex decisions behind these images that are at once sculptures and sort-of two-dimensional. One could spend hours and hours with them. Great that you're getting some background info along the way. (I know Vasari as somebody who wrote short lives of the great painters of his day. Utterly forgot that he was commissioned to do paintings for major buildings in Florence!)
ReplyDeleteThe people Road Scholar has lecturing and leading us are outstanding! For an art novice, I'm learning so much.
DeleteYou've brought information I didn't know (as you do often do, Ralph). Wikipedia says "most famous today for his Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors, and Architects, considered the ideological foundation of art-historical writing. He was also the first to use the term "Renaissance" in print." His frescos are wonderful, but he is more well known as a writer? Wow!
DeleteFabulous...wow.
ReplyDeleteHow wonderful all of this great art, overwhelming really. How did all this creativity and craftsmanship come to one place and within a narrow span of time?
ReplyDeleteOur lecture on the Medici family may give some of the answers on 12/31.
Delete