A fancy hotel in Florence, with splendid views

A couple of months ago, on a splendid Sunday afternoon, one of Florence’s fanciest hotels (owned by the Ferragamo company) held an open house.  I took advantage of the occasion and took a tour.  My blog isn’t meant as a travel how-to, so I don’t typically recommend hotels or restaurants, etc..

But I got some interesting images from this fine hotel and their art collection, and want to share them with my readers. Here we go:

 

LzpCiCI6RIyCE7beVvWJAg

 

Lz6733+EQZCxtoa732xCDg

 

9STh00rjQIOU0iG+ZF8rvg

 

sgHDHghdSLyXpSDr1xKCJg

 

3V+5JTj+V32OpgLvoJg

 

3cGQh+C2Sw6MesptaB%aGw

 

NS3swGHAQOy+RQZNc0lYJQ

 

9Nr25RXIToG7jGAeLvEzKw

 

QHjFyhG+RcaSSAcJJLt+DQ

 

Qke0QFeWSRuQXXZ%ONKzzA

 

oXQPtDzbTvCtCrDxF5Q

 

KKCQuwejRXuVj7c13088lg

 

D72kvQyBSwSPFYNjzsIijQ

 

6JhxIcjmSAyKRF05mCYzvg

 

6BXGJRmFR4WnSNqMGaxL9Q

 

q34snvO5R9O3ff9UjvU54w

 

6PB8sSyS5BC3vt9SJgQ

 

QwjcJLnfSQ6%olC68MF5AA

 

z0%FtEPOQsSJSqkS+UOGDg

 

++e7zxbUS1Gd586cDf0d2g

 

uK1I8fzRT4qDSTOxGNtyjQ

 

Yo2UxifFTtqs7WKRr4JlOA

 

Gv0aSxJVS2Cm59TWVLZ0XQ

 

K79qPRFgQrioRY2tkJOyww

 

KXqaNRGaTIyf+zXoESLvrA

 

lmJmQq4TRSG%n1N5e6cCyg

 

jYzHYf3jRqyIp637Sngt5A

 

WasSyDuJR9OPjuZfwIVjZA

 

ci2tjNAkSoyCJG5ph1fNzQ

 

p5CFDnIGRHGyBxj%qnZstQ

 

LyDvDOPNRWiEwRp5fQRFoA

 

u7e6y3zeRhyG84INUUWFhQ

 

T0jEFZExRjyk6d1OxxoWxw

 

dx%dizScRmibCR6Ep6m4Rg

 

m3q7AI15TPq%E%SJzTxRdA

 

BC0+tjRZTY6PEz3ueOrpcA

 

VcTyquQvQ8ujkO2lAUONXw

 

LNZxDlAYQam2Z2c+a4DcsA

 

OGtBBL7WR7Or3%Jet0VZ6g

 

02H5eBTtQhC702kJi6RiMQ

 

wqbvzivLS7Gi66rOHyCJAw

 

5KYpm2J8T9SEE75q25ztZA

 

wGRrMZrJQ72IXt3KE0yj2w

 

N7JUskGYT1uTgONBWKQ+Ww

 

 

 

lt6k3aQURae6OLqRfxPf8g

 

2eajbmfdTnSyl%XzF3j4Rw

 

bhLtzKIRSuqGklrpCWuv7Q

 

TXMhyLP2QSK83K2nUSN%7g

 

OQxwlcFFSQG30M2TFkEqGA

 

GxXIhl1TQMip0KaUnHOaSw

 

qhGzXGWpSz2V6eElcc9m9Q

 

dBMWa+CaTgWpFaTAMgI1ZA

 

jnYgOMjJSdyfpUrBqckKLA

 

BLqop32zR2mECpKbe9nOyw

 

%u+pAcezQy2+T9qWx0v9zQ

 

kWML97WmTS2KRuiCdESyRw

 

BMnt6M9%QQCoS4Z8UefEsA

 

Leonardo’s Last Supper, Milan

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Dear Fellow Former Met Girl,

So, I think you will enjoy this. I had a ticket to visit the Last Supper for 15 minutes on Wednesday at 5 pm. That’s how they do it nowadays. You buy your ticket online if you want to be sure to get in. No more dropping by anything interesting in Italy anymore; sure, you can try, but you will most likely be disappointed.

My visits to the Scrovegni Chapel were 20 minutes long. Didn’t realize I was spoiled with that!

Anyhoo, I have a new iPhone and it has a mind of its own. Typically when I take a video, the light doesn’t come on. So, I was making a video of the last supper when I heard this screeching coming from somewhere in the refectory. I knew right away somebody had made a faux-pas.

I kept filming until I realized, when 2 Italian matrons were bum-rushing me, that the faux pas was mine. My camera light was on and that was a huge no- no.

I turned off my camera and apologized profusely, explaining that I didn’t know the light was on. Finally they stood down, but only after telling me I had to delete the video. I promised to do so and acted like I was.

But, I kept it and here it is for all the world to enjoy!

This is how a former Met girl goes to Milan. Just like a bronze foundry in Brooklyn!

xx, L

 

 

 

Pietro Tacca’s fountains in Piazza della Santa Annunziata, Florence

Here’s an eerie image taken in Florence on a stormy day.

I love this sculpture and its matching partner created by Pietro Tacca (1577-1640) and now installed in this major piazza in the center of Florence.

Tacca was born in Carrara; he joined Giambologna’s Florentine atelier in 1592. Tacca took over the workshop of his master upon the elder sculptor’s death in 1608. He finished a number of Giambologna’s incomplete projects and succeeded him almost immediately as the court sculptor to the Medici Grand Dukes of Tuscany.

These bronze fountains were originally destined for Livorno. Fortunately for Florence, they were installed here instead.  Created in the Mannerist style, Tacca was inspired by Flemish goldsmith’s work, from which he borrowed the grotesque masks and shellwork textures.

 

 

 

 

 

In the center of this grand piazza stands this equestrian statue:

Screen Shot 2019-11-17 at 20.06.37

It is Giambologna’s equestrian bronze of Ferdinando I de’ Medici (Grand Duke of Tuscany), which was completed by his student and assistant, Tacca.

Tacca also contributed the bas-relief panels on the base for Giambologna’s equestrian statue of Cosimo de’ Medici in the Piazza della Signoria.

Milan, random beauty shots, December 2019

I got to enjoy a few days in Milan this week and here are some random pictures of things that caught my eye.  Some are just fun, some are quite lovely!

 

Milan has a lot of stunning architecture:

 

 

 

Italy has an endless kaleidoscope of decorative iron work:

 

I was happy to learn that Santa really exists!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Aww….Merry Christmas!

 

 

 

Hello, Leo!  Everyone is celebrating the 500th anniversary of your death this year! Gone but not forgotten.

 

In Milan, college graduates wear the corona too. Auguri, young scholar!

 

 

Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II, you are ever so lovely:

 

 

 

 

 

My vote for prettiest antique bakery goes to Pasticceria Marchesi, founded in 1824. I love anything from this shop (and I think there is a little something something from here under my tree at home?).

 

 

 

 

Piazza del Duomo:

 

 

 

Other places:

 

 

 

 

T’is the season:

 

 

 

From the grand train station, one of the most impressive in the world:

The church and convent della Calza, with a Last Supper by Franciabigio

Just inside the ancient gate of Porta Romano, lies a simple church and attached convent (in Italy, convent can mean monastery or convent or both) dating to the 13th century. An almost unknown (relatively speaking, at least, to the hordes of tourists who descend on Florence every year) masterpiece of  Renaissance paintings is housed here: a beautiful cenacolo, or a painting of The Last Supper. Florence is so fortunately rich in these frescoed depictions of that fateful dinner.

Screen Shot 2019-11-09 at 16.54.42

fullsizeoutput_1fb0

fullsizeoutput_1fae

fullsizeoutput_1fb4

The church dedicated to San Giovanni Battista, in Piazza della Calza, was founded as a hospital in 1362.  There were once many oratories, hospitals and shelters for pilgrims and travelers along the present via Senese and via Romana. These were major roads leading to Florence.

At the end of the 14th century, the convent was established by the Gerosolimitan nuns. They commissioned Franciabigio to paint The Last Supper in 1514 in their refectory. Unfortunately, the sisters soon had to leave the hospital, during the 1529 siege of Florence.

The nuns were replaced in 1531 by Jesuati friars (not Jesuits) who changed the dedication of the church from Hospital of Saint John the Baptist  to San Giusto. They  used the hospital as a charity for children, an ecclesiastic boarding-house, and eventually as a seminary. The church and the convent became known by the name “della calza” (sock) which was a name derived from the long white hoods that the monks wore over their left shoulders. The hood was shaped like a sock and the name stuck.

The picture below is not authentically one of the della calza habits, but it shows the shape of the hood and how it was worn.

Screen Shot 2019-11-09 at 17.43.26

From this nickname of “the sock” came the name of the church, the convent, and even the square.

Screen Shot 2019-11-09 at 16.36.20

The true hidden gem kept inside is the Cenacolo by Franciabigio, still preserved in the ancient refectory.

fullsizeoutput_1f92fullsizeoutput_1f98

Mother Superior Antonia de’ Medici entrusted Francesco di Cristofano, called Franciabigio (1482-1525), to portray a specific scene, during the Last Supper, just after Christ says: “Truly, I tell you, one of you will betray me.”

Franciabigio thus knowing, deep sadness in the countenance of Christ. Judas, the only figure on the outer side of the table, reacts strongly to the words of Jesus: his sudden movement causes his wooden stool to tip over. All around the table, the expressions of the Apostles register various states of confusion.

img_1640

fullsizeoutput_1f78

fullsizeoutput_1f7c

fullsizeoutput_1f80

One can notice each reaction and recognize each Apostle because the artist added their names, painted along the strip which runs above their heads. The painter added here the date A(nno) S(alutis) MDXIIII (A.D. 1514) and his signature, through a twisted shortened monogram (FRAC).

img_1647

On the painted floor, you can even distinguish the name of the Mother Superior Antonia (SVORA AN), marked on the lower left side, under the table, between the second and third Apostle.

Franciabigio carefully fashioned magnificient details; along the fine linen tablecloth you see ceramic jugs, breadrolls, glasses with red wine, and sliced watermelon. Some of the jugs feature the typical Medici coat-of-arms (the one with the red spheres) referring to Mother Superior Antonia and the Red Cross of the Order of Knights of Malta to whom the nuns originally belonged.

Giorgio Vasari describes (Lives of the Most Excellent Painters, Sculptors and Architects) how Franciabigio “was very keen on studies of perspective” and human anatomy. We see that throughout and especially in the accurate position of the wooden shutters painted along the wall.

img_1639

 

img_1638

 

img_1637

A fascinating contrast is given by the dark green wall and the light of the crystal clear sky in the background, where the painter depicted the old Florentine town walls (the destroyed gate of San Pier Gattolino).

For the Jubilee in 2000, the fresco was restored.

Just a quick word about the Church of San Giovanni Battista della Calza:

Screen Shot 2019-11-09 at 16.36.20

My quick walk through the church introduced me to this arresting sculpture near the entrance to the small church.

I was alone in the church and had free rein to poke around.  In a small room off the church itself I noticed an amazing della Robbia fountain.  You never know what treasures you will happen upon in this fascinating city.

And, finally, I can’t leave this post without mentioning that, depict the austerity of this church, some major paintings were once a part of the church.  They are now in the Uffizi:

Screen Shot 2019-11-09 at 16.38.52