Florence
Artworks
Birth of Venus
Sandro Botticelli (Firenze 1445 – 1510)
Annunciation
Leonardo da Vinci (Vinci 1452 – Amboise 1519)
Amor Vincit Omnia
Orazio Riminaldi (Pisa 1593-1630)
Young Bacchus
Giovanni Mannozzi, known as Giovanni da San Giovanni (San Giovanni Valdarno 1592 – Florence 1636) (attr.)
Solaria at Giubbe Rosse
Baccio Maria Bacci (Firenze 1888 – 1974)
Prie-dieu of the Electress Palatine
Giovanni Battista Foggini (Firenze 1652-1725) e Galleria dei Lavori
Birthing tray. Birth of St John the Baptist (back), coats of arms for the union of Girolamo della Casa and Lisabetta Tornaquinci (front)
Jacopo Carucci, known as Pontormo (Pontorme, Empoli, 1494 – Florence, 1552)
Adoration of the Magi
Domenico Ghirlandaio (Florence 1449 - 1494)
Allori Loggia
Alessandro Allori (Firenze 1535-1607)
Grand Gala Berlin carriage of Grand Duke of Tuscany Ferdinand III
Ditta Francesco Busi e Alessandro Dani
News
Florence and the Middle East. A Cultural Arabesque
What is widely known in the Western world as Arabesque refers of an artistic representation of the interminable order and unison of nature that leads to infinity. Epigraphic, geometric and floral figures are meticulously brought together to form a pattern that repeats itself seemingly endlessly. If we dare to look close enough, the notion of an unbreakable continuity will appear almost naturally in the designs of many of the art pieces elaborated in the islamic art
The new rooms dedicated to Andrea del Sarto and the early 16th-century painters
More than 20 paintings outline the development of the Tuscan School which paved the way for the 'modern mannerism' and the most mature phase of the Renaissance
The Newsletter of the Uffizi Galleries
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