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The Uffizi building that is
now seat of the Gallery was built in the mid-sixteenth
century by the architect Giorgio Vasari (1511-1574) in a period
when Cosimo I de’ Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany, was bureaucratically
consolidating this recently acquired position. The building was
meant in fact to house the offices of the magistrates (Uffici =
offices). From the beginning however, the Medici set aside some
of the rooms on the third floor to house the finest works from their
collection. Two centuries later, thanks to the generosity of the
last heir of the family, Anna Maria Luisa, their collection became
permanent public property. 
The museum now comprises the rooms on the third floor of the building,
that display in chronological order paintings ranging from the 13th
to the 18th centuries. The most precious and famous group of paintings
of the Uffizi are however represented by the works
of the Italian Renaissance artists, although several sections of
the museum are devoted to the works of foreign artists (German,
Flemish, Dutch and French).
In addition to paintings, the Uffizi exhibits a
fine collection of Roman sculptures (portraits, emperors and divinities)
that are displayed in the corridors decorated with frescoed and
sculptured ceilings of the 16th and 17th centuries. On the ground
floor it is still possible to admire the remains of the ancient
Romanesque church of San Piero Scheraggio, which was partially destroyed
by Vasari to build the Uffizi. The second floor
houses the Prints and Drawings Department, which comprises one of
the most important collections in the world that was started by
a Medici, the Cardinal Leopoldo, during the 17th century.
If
we follow the natural layout of the rooms, we enter the large rooms
that display the great altarpieces of Cimabue, Giotto, Duccio di
Buoninsegna, the first remarkable examples of western painting,
followed by the remarkable works of 14th century Siennese artists,
such as Simone Martini and the brothers Piero and Ambrogio Lorenzetti
and the pupils of Giotto. The following rooms display some fine
examples of the International Gothic style: the Adoration of the
Magi by Gentile da Fabriano and another one by Lorenzo Monaco, before
actually reaching the most important rooms of the museum that are
dedicated to the early Renaissance. These rooms exhibit works by
Masaccio, Paolo Uccello, Domenico Veneziano, Piero della Francesca,
Beato Angelico, followed by the elegant Madonnas of Filippo Lippi,
by the precious panels of the brothers Piero and Antonio del Pollaiolo
to end with the mythological allegories and religious paintings
of Sandro Botticelli. Of this artist, the museum preserves perhaps
the finest collection of works, comprising the Birth of Venus, the
Primavera, the Magnificat and Pomegranate Madonnas. It is then the
turn of Perugino, Signorelli, Piero di Cosimo and Leonardo da Vinci;
the latter is represented both with the painting the Baptism of
Christ painted together with Verrocchio, the large Adoration of
the Magi and his early work the Annunciation. The following rooms
(from n. 18 to n. 23) are the oldest of the museum; it is well worth
stopping to admire the Tribuna that originally contained the most
precious works and objects. Today it displays also a series of portraits
of the Medici family by Agnolo Bronzino, in addition to the oldest
sculpture piece of the museum, the Medici Venus. The following rooms,
originally used as armouries, offer again more paintings by Renaissance
artists, both Italian – with works by Bellini, Giorgione,
Mantegna and Correggio – and foreign artists with paintings
by Dürer, Cranach, Memling. Continuing along the rooms on the
western side of the Gallery, it is possible to admire more 16th
century masterpieces, starting from the "Tondo Doni" by
Michelangelo, the Madonna
of the goldfinch by Raphael and the Venus of Urbino and Flora by
Titian. Even the section dedicated to Mannerism is lavish and comprises
works by Pontormo, Rosso Fiorentino, Bronzino down to Parmigianino
(Madonna with the long neck) and famous Venetian artists such as
Sebastiano del Piombo, Veronese, Tintoretto, and Lombard ones like
Savoldo and Moroni. Until not so long ago the visit to the gallery
ended with some 17th century works by famous Italian (Caravaggio,
Carracci) and Dutch (Rembrandt) artists. The museum has recently
restored the last rooms of this section after the explosion of 1993,
also in view of the enlargement of the lower floors of the building
that were occupied by the State Archive until not so long ago. The
project for the “New Uffizi gallery”, which
is already underway, will significantly alter the original layout
of the museum, doubl ing the exhibition rooms. Thanks to this new
arrangement it will be possible to distribute more evenly works
that are now concentrated in a few rooms, exhibit paintings that
are now stored in the gallery's warehouses or include whole collections
that had to be displayed elsewhere, like the Contini Bonacossi collection
(see below), due to lack of space. It is too early to foresee the
exact layout of the new gallery, although it is certain that the
collections will be arranged in chronological order and by schools.
The eastern section of the ground floor will be instead used to
welcome visitors and to house the bookshop, with new rooms designed
to offer a more comfortable and tidier approach to the large number
of tourist that visit the Uffizi all the year round.
The visit to the Gallery could ideally end with
another section: that is the famous Vasari Corridor, built by Vasari
in 1565. The Corridor joins the Uffizi to Palazzo Vecchio, crosses
the river Arno above Ponte Vecchio and is connected with Palazzo
Pitti and the Boboli Gardens. Recently restored after the explosion
of the bomb, the corridor now displays over seven hundred works
comprising mainly the important group of Self-portraits (from Andrea
del Sarto to Marc Chagall). At present the corridor can be visited
only by groups and by reserving the visit ahead.
In 1998 the Gallery has also acquired the Contini
Bonacossi collection, with temporary entrance from Via Lambertesca.
The collection had been formerly displayed in the Palazzina della
Meridiana of Palazzo Pitti due to lack of space. The collection
comprises thirty-five paintings, twelve sculptures, eleven large
coats of arms by Della Robbia, in addition to a remarkable group
of ancient furniture pieces and majolicas, which were originally
part of perhaps the most prestigious collection ever gathered, belonging
to Alessandro Contini Bonacossi. The most important pieces are now
property of the State, after long and complex hereditary negotiations
with the heirs. Its acquisition significantly enriches the patrimony
of the Uffizi. Among its pieces we find works attributed to Cimabue
and Duccio, in addition to large wooden panels by Sassetta and Giovanni
del Biondo, a fresco by Andrea del Castagno and a superb group of
paintings of Venetian artists (Veronese, Giambellino, Tintoretto,
Cima da Conegliano). One of the most precious pieces is the San
Lorenzo, an early work by Gian Lorenzo Bernini.
Links:
Uffizi
Gallery
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