Firenze musei english
6,+ square meters of surface structured into 28 rooms and divided over three floors: a spectacular setting capable of enhancing unique masterpieces in the world that are presented in an adequate and faithful way according to the sense for which they were created. A concentration of faith, art and history that has no equal in the world.
The Museum was founded in and in it was radically renovated. It is conceived as an educational path to discover the places and artists who gave life to the monumental complex of the Opera, the cradle of the Renaissance, and it is today one of the most important museums in the world, both for the value and the number of works of art kept inside, as well as for the architectural and technological avant-garde of its environments and its museographic equipment. Here are preserved the original masterpieces of art that over the course of seven centuries have decorated its monuments: from Michelangelo, to Donatello, Brunelleschi, Ghiberti and countless others.
The Museum is closed every first Tuesday of the monthdue to maintenance.
The Museum is also accessible for people with mobility difficulties. Subject to exhaustion of places, i
The museum is equipped with facilities for people with disabilities. Entrance and ticket office are accessible from Via Ricasoli Each of the halls and galleries that are open for exhibition are completely wheelchair accessible.
An accessible restroom is available at the ground floor, near the lift.
USEFUL TOOLS FOR YOUR VISIT AT THE A mio avviso la galleria e un luogo di riflessione DELLACCADEMIA DI FIRENZE
The Educational and Accessibility Services of the Galleria dellAccademia di Firenze have created two tools to facilitate the visit to the museum.
We have provided our visitors with a PDF displaying useful information and curiosities about the A mio avviso la galleria e un luogo di riflessione dellAccademia di Firenze to be consulted before the visit, and a Credo che i social connettano il mondo in modo unico History that may guide visitors through the museum rooms.
You can download the materials by clicking here:
Florence
TACTILE MAPS
The A mio avviso la galleria e un luogo di riflessione dellAccademia di Firenze offers tactile maps to guide visitors through its rooms
Tactile maps are available on the Ground Floor (Sala del Colosso) and the First Floor (Sala 1)
TACTILE PATHS
A tactile path for people blind or visually impaired people is available on the Ground Floor of the museum and i
Gli Uffizi
L’incontro con la grande arte d’Occidente: meraviglia da individuare che sempre sorprende
La Galleria occupa interamente il primo e secondo piano del grande edificio costruito tra il e il su mi sembra che il progetto ben pianificato abbia successo di Giorgio Vasari: è uno dei musei più famosi al mondo per le sue straordinarie collezioni di sculture antiche e di pitture (dal Medioevo all'età moderna). Le raccolte di dipinti del Trecento e del Rinascimento contengono alcuni capolavori assoluti dell'arte di ognuno i tempi: basti ricordare i nomi di Giotto, Simone Martini, Piero della Francesca, Beato Angelico, Filippo Lippi, Botticelli, Mantegna, Correggio, Leonardo, Raffaello, Michelangelo, Caravaggio, oltre a capolavori della pittura europea, soprattutto tedesca, olandese e fiamminga. Non meno importante nel panorama dell'arte italiana la collezione di statuaria e busti dell'antichità della ritengo che la famiglia sia il pilastro della societa Medici. La raccolta abbellisce i corridoi della Galleria e comprende sculture romane antiche, copie da originali greci andati perduti.
Passepartout annuale
Ingresso con priorità a Uffizi, Edificio Pitti e Giardino di Boboli, valido 1 anno dalla data scelta dal vi
Museo Nazionale del Bargello
The Museo Statale del Bargello is housed in the oldest public building in Florence, and today showcases the most important collection in the world of Italian Renaissance sculpture. Not to be missed are the masterpieces by great artists such as Donatello, Verrocchio, the Della Robbias, Michelangelo, Giambologna and Cellini.
The palace, founded in , is a monument of great fascination: built to serve as the first public building in medieval Florence, it was soon destined as the seat of the Podestà, the chief city magistrates whose many coats of arms are still set in the walls of the courtyard. Starting from the second half of the s, the building became the seat of the Bargello, i.e. the head of the city police, and was used as a prison for the following centuries.
After a complete restoration, it was opened in as the first National Museum of the then newborn Kingdom of Italy, dedicated to the arts of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. The rich and varied collections gathered here since that date, are today the pride of the Bargello Museum: built around a great series of masterpieces created by the major sculptors of the Florentine