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Here are some articles that you might find useful during your stay in Florence. Feel free to also ask your guides about any of the attractions of Florence during your tour. |
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> July, 2020 |
The Galleria
dell’Accademia,
David’s museum |
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The Museum of the musical instruments (Museo
degli strumenti musicali) is part of the
Galleria dell’Accademia since 2001 and there you
can find musical instruments made by Antonio
Stradivari, Bartolomeo Cristofori and Niccolò
Amati. In 2016 this museum had 1.461.185
visitors.
Today the Galleria dell’Accademia is the fourth
museum of Italy per number of visitors. The history of the Galleria
dell’Accademia (Gallery of the Academy)
Founded in 1784 by the Great Duke of Tuscany Pietro
Leopoldo, the Galleria dell’Accademia
was born as a place for the students of the
nearby Academy of Fine Arts. Here they could
find a gallery with original works and copies
that could be used as models.
The first intention was to create a museum
dedicated to Michelangelo with original drawings
and sculptures, in order to celebrate the fourth
centenary of his birth. The Galleria
dell’Accademia containing 7 Michelangelo’s
sculptures, is the first museum of the world per
number of his works.
The most famous is the David, originally
situated in Piazza della Signoria (today there
is a replica). This sculpture was moved to the
Galleria dell’Accademia for reasons of
conservation: its outdoor location was dangerous
for the statue, especially because of the
weather conditions.
In the Galleria dell’Accademia you can find
other Michelangelo’s works, including the
unfinished Prisoners, made for the tomb of Pope
Julius II and a St. Matthew statue.
In 1939 a Pietà attributed to Michelangelo was
found in the Barberini chapel in Palestrina, and
joined the Galleria dell’Accademia’s collection;
today the experts consider this attribution to
be dubious.
Among the Florentine paintings from the 13th to
the 16th century that you can find at the
Galleria dell’Accademia there are works by
Sandro Botticelli, Paolo Uccello, Andrea del
Sarto, Domenico Ghirlandaio, Filippino Lippi,
Perugino, Pontormo and Bronzino.
At the Galleria dell’Accademia you can also
admire the original full-size plaster model of
the High Renaissance Giambologna’s Rape of the
Sabine Woman (whose original is at the Loggia
dei Lanzi).
The Galleria dell’Accademia houses also the
collection of beautiful Russian icons, collected
by the Grand Dukes of the House of Lorraine, of
which Pietro Leopoldo was one. Michelangelo’s David
Considered a masterpiece of Renaissance, the
David is a marble statue created by the Tuscan
artist Michelangelo between 1501 and 1504. It is
5.17 meter tall (17 feet) and it represents a
standing male nude, the Biblical hero David, one
of the most represented subject in the
Florentine art.
This statue was originally commissioned as part
of a series of statues that represented
prophets, to put along the roof-line of the
Florence Cathedral.
The David was instead placed outside of the Old
Palace, the seat of the Florentine’s government
in Piazza della Signoria; it was unveiled the
8th September (the Nativity of the Blessed
Virgin Mary) of 1504.
Michelangelo’s David replaced Donatello’s Judith
and Holofernes a bronze statue that represented
the theme of heroic resistence. It took 4 days
to move the statue from Michelangelo’s workshop.
This statue, because of the nature of the hero
it represented, soon came to symbolize the
Republic of Florence because it was seen as the
symbol of the defense of civil liberties. At
that time Florence was an independent city-state
threatened by the hegemony of the Medici and by
the rival states.
In 1873 the statue was removed from the Piazza
della Signoria and displayed in the
Galleria dell’Accademia, the replica was placed
in 1910.
In 1991 Piero Cannata attacked the statue with a
hammer and he damaged the toes of the left foot.
If you want to know more about the Galleria
dell’Accademia museum and the Michelangelo’s
David, join one of the tours offered by the Free
Tour Florence – Another Florence.
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