Santa Croce, part 2, June 2020

Following the recent reopening of this Fransciscan basilica this week, I continue (see Part 1 here) with my  visit of the church following the quarantine.

fullsizeoutput_3415

Below is a plan of the church.  My tour is coming from West to East along the north side of the basilica.

fullsizeoutput_34b6

 

Below,  I pick up my tour from the almost at the crossing. The first work on this tour today is Desiderio da Settignano’s tomb for Carlo Marsuppini. Santa Croce is rich in artworks and this is one of the best. Try as I might, these pictures do not do the tomb justice.

fullsizeoutput_3434

fullsizeoutput_342a

 

fullsizeoutput_342b

 

fullsizeoutput_3430

 

fullsizeoutput_3431

 

fullsizeoutput_3438

 

fullsizeoutput_343b

 

fullsizeoutput_3444

 

fullsizeoutput_3445

 

Gm6dleT5QSeMLqfCkTsxig

 

5rZ5wdNQSIOwerjMCqkmTw

 

c4WWPA%JQTGVZkth5mHcpg

 

YfgzpDlUTtCvIw2wOAO7gQ

 

Moving on to the next tomb on this side aisle, we have the monument to Raffaello Morghen, by Odoardo Fantacchiotti (1809-1877). Morghen was a celebrated engraver of Leonardo’s Last Supper in Pinacoteca Repossi. Morghen died in Florence in 1833.

fullsizeoutput_344a

 

fullsizeoutput_344e

 

6xOeiYPgReGZoXZiR1rCpg

 

fullsizeoutput_3451

Next is a plaque honoring Raphael.  It commemorates the 500th anniversary of his death.  His tomb in in the Pantheon in Rome.

fullsizeoutput_33c4

 

There is more to come.  Watch this space.

Taking longer to do less

Sometimes I like to talk honestly about my life here in Italy.  It is a privilege to live in Florence and I wouldn’t trade it for anything.  But, it has its downs as well as its ups.

Recently,  I’ve had a small issue with my cellphone carrier.  It is hard, in Italian, to have a phone call about serious issues with critical information, so I decided to go to the Fastweb office in person.  I had another thing to do in the center on Saturday, so after that and before 12:00 noon, I went to the Fastweb office to take care of business.  It was closed.  I had to wait until Monday morning to find it open.

So, I showed up bright and early at Fastweb on Monday and waited for my turn to be let into the store, what with the Covid 19 rules, and was able to quickly and pretty easily get the information I needed to solve the overall issue I had with my phone service.

Then, I innocently inquired what the balance was on my account that lets me make phone calls and use data.  I like to keep a good balance in there, because you never know, right?  I found out that I had less than 3 euro on balance.

I asked if I could pay to bring my balance up and the kind clerk said of course.  He handed me off to a newer employee to finish this minor procedure.  I told her I wanted to put 100 Euro on the account and she got out 2 plastic cards, each worth 50 Euro, to refresh my balance.  She did a bunch of procedures with the 2 cards, scraping off the “skin” over the codes and processed them, and I received 2 dings from my phone that my Fastweb account had been recharged for 100 Euro in 2 blocks of 50 Euro.

Good enough.  All this time I had my credit card lying on the top of her desk for her to charge the payment(s).  At this point, she began to process my card.  It was denied.  She called her colleague over, he tried, it was denied.  So, they are in a pickle.  They gave me the credit but didn’t have a way to charge me.

I expected the to tell me that my credit card was faulty, but they didn’t.  Then it came out that they had just received a new credit card processor machine and there were problems with it.  For the next 1.5 hours, they attempted to call their headquarters and get the thing worked out.  They kept me there because they needed my actual card.  Finally, 2 hours after I walked in, I told them I had to leave. I happened to have 50 Euro with me in cash, which I left with them, and promised to return tomorrow (since I had appointments all day today) to either bring them another 50 Euro or better, have them try again to run my credit card.  BTW, they tried their own credit cards to see if it truly was their new machine, and it was.

My life in Italy.  It takes longer to do less. :-))

Postscript, a few days later.  I went back to the store. The credit card machine still wasn’t working.  How can they do business like this?  A major cellphone carrier in the 21st century.  It amazes me.

The cantorie in the museum of the Florence cathedral

For me the highlight of the opera’s collection are the 2 exquisite cantorie by Donatello and Luca della Robbia.  Originally a part of the duomo, these beauties are preserved in the museum where they are exhibited up high as they would have appeared in the cathedral.  I am in their thrall.

 

fullsizeoutput_326d

 

 

First up, the Donatello:

fullsizeoutput_31e6

 

fullsizeoutput_31eb

 

fullsizeoutput_3267

 

fullsizeoutput_3249

 

fullsizeoutput_324b

 

 

Now, moving across the room to the Luca della Robbia masterwork:

fullsizeoutput_31ed

 

fullsizeoutput_31e9

 

fullsizeoutput_31e7

 

fullsizeoutput_325c

 

fullsizeoutput_3258

 

fullsizeoutput_324e

 

fullsizeoutput_3248

 

fullsizeoutput_3268

 

fullsizeoutput_3266

 

fullsizeoutput_323d

 

fullsizeoutput_324f

Museum of the Florence cathedral, part 3

The extraordinary riches in this museum require many posts!  Here is part 3 of my recent visit.

 

img_5708

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The next 2 labels deal with the custom of collecting relics some of the ones preserved in Florence:

 

 

Now on to the amazing bell tower in the duomo complex.

 

 

 

 

 

For more of these relief sculptures that form the program on the bell tower, see my earlier post:https://laurettadimmick.com/2020/05/25/charmed-by-the-late-medieval-carvings-at-the-museo-dellopera-di-duomo-firenze/