Countdown to wisteria splendor!

The wisteria in Italy is magnificent.  I may not be able to view it in my favorite places this spring, because of the La Quarentena.  However, I got a sneak preview on my way to the market recently.  Crossing over the Mugnone river near my home, is a lovely little pedestrian bridge that somebody beautifully planned.  It has an arbor above and a gorgeous wisteria vine covering it.

Here’s the overpass and you can see that the wisteria is getting ready to burst into bloom!

ZAeE6sM5QeOi7t7MjcmuOw

Here are close ups of the racemes in their current state of growth.  I hope I’ll have the chance to see it in bloom in a couple of weeks.

9%uYGWv1SNG%tXQtPj9TKw

 

ZAp7BqB1Qoa%hm5QZSkKdQ

 

CF9mhwZ0R%SQ3T4LQip%ug

 

6XcPNGkIRD6vzOoRFqv0VQ

 

EnElKS13SS+E5M295xBZvg

 

fT%sgGpxSK+3iyUxJBlpdA

 

rR+4V10OQISpOvSbvdLJ7A

 

BB5PG2oDTYONSFn8pp08EA

The Bardini Garden in Florence’s Oltrarno

It’s winter, but I’m thinking about one of my favorite gardens in my favorite season: the Bardini in spring. Fortunately, I have my pictures of the garden from last spring.

First the facts, then, the flowers.  Keep scrolling down for the pretty pictures.

IMG_1678

 

IMG_1679

 

IMG_1680

 

IMG_1681

 

IMG_1682

 

IMG_1683

 

IMG_1684

 

IMG_1685

 

IMG_1686

 

IMG_1687

 

IMG_1688

 

IMG_1689

 

IMG_1690

 

IMG_1691

 

IMG_1692

 

 

IMG_1693

 

IMG_1821

 

IMG_1726IMG_1727 2

IMG_1728 2IMG_1726 2IMG_1729 2

 

 

IMG_1822

 

IMG_1823

 

IMG_1814IMG_1817IMG_1816IMG_1815

 

IMG_1779

 

IMG_1778

 

IMG_1777

 

IMG_1776

 

IMG_1775

 

IMG_1774

 

IMG_1773

 

IMG_1772

 

IMG_1771

 

IMG_1769

 

IMG_1770

 

IMG_1768

 

IMG_1767

 

IMG_1765

 

IMG_1766

 

IMG_1764

 

IMG_1763

 

IMG_1762

 

IMG_1761

 

IMG_1760

 

IMG_1759

 

IMG_1758

 

IMG_1755

 

IMG_1756

 

IMG_1754

 

IMG_1753

 

IMG_1752

 

IMG_1751

 

Villa Demidoff and Giambologna’s Il Gigante

As I sit in Denver on a very cold February morning, my mind wanders back to Tuscany and warm weather.  I’m almost always behind in my posts and so I take this moment to post about Villa Demidoff.

In 1568, Francesco I de’ Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany, purchased a great estate in the hills outside of Florence and commissioned the famous architect, Buontalenti, to build a splendid villa as a residence for Bianca Cappello.  Bianca was the Grand Duke’s Venetian mistress.  The villa was built between 1569 and 1581, set inside a forest of fir trees.

IMG_1657

While very little of Buontalenti’s villa survives, at least we still have this fabulous and very large statue of Il Gigante, set facing a pond filled with water lilies.

The lilies are absolutely gorgeous in late August. I had never seen anything as magnificent as the first time I saw this lake of waterlilies in bloom!  And, the statue ain’t bad either.

 

IMG_1638

IMG_1641

IMG_1648

IMG_1651

IMG_1617

IMG_1620

 

OK, ripping my eyes away from the pink flowers, I walked around towards the back of the statue:

IMG_1670

 

IMG_1684

IMG_1682

IMG_1673

 

Giambologna was the creator of this amazing sculpture:

IMG_1640

 

IMG_1647

 

IMG_1697

 

Il Gigante, also known as “the Colossus of the Apennines,” is an astounding work of art. Giambologna designed the lower part as a hexagon-shaped cave from which one can access, through a ladder, to the compartment in the upper part of the body and into the head. The cavity is filled with light that enters from the eye holes in the head.

The exterior of the statue is covered with sponges and limestone pieces, over which water pours into the pool below.

We know that originally, behind the statue, there was the large labyrinth made from laurel bushes. At the front of the giant was a large lawn, adorned with 26 ancient sculptures at the sides.

Later, many of the antique statues were transferred to the Boboli Gardens, and the park became a hunting reserve. As a part of the Pratolino estate, it was abandoned until 1819, when the Grand Duke Ferdinando III of Lorena changed the splendid Italian garden in the English garden, by the Bohemian engineer Joseph Fritsch. The part was increased from 20 to 78 hectares.

 

The park, which had been owned by Leopoldo II since 1837, was sold upon his death to Paul Demidoff, who redeveloped the property. Demidoff’s last descendant bequeathed the property to Florence’s provincial authorities.

And I feel better already.  I can feel my cold, clenched muscles relax under the spell of the Tuscan sunshine. Soon I will be there again.