It represents the latest Florentine example of a public collection formed between the seventeenth and the eightteenth centuries. The museum is full of masterpieces such as the Adoration of the Child. Mehr erfahren.
Stefano Bardini (1836-1922) was an excellent connoisseur of art and an artful and unconventional antiques dealer. Bardini donated his private collection to Florence Mehr erfahren.
The Alinari National Museum of Photography, linked to the historic and internationally famous Florentine studio, is housed in a 15th century building known as “delle Leopoldine”. Mehr erfahren.
The museum is situated in the old refectory of the convent, erected by Augustinian hermit friars next to the church of Santo Spirito. Mehr erfahren.
The museum collects the finest porcelain in Europe bought by Peter Leopold and Ferdinand III, together with porcelain from stately homes of Parma, Piacenza and Sala Baganza Mehr erfahren.
The museum exhibits the two marble masterpieces of Michelangelo’s early youth (Madonna of the Stairs and Battle of Centaurs) and the art collections of his family. Mehr erfahren.
With roughly six thousand pieces, including ancient and modern clothes, accessories and theatrical costumes, you can consider it the only museum of history of fashion in Italy Mehr erfahren.
The museum collects works in polychrome marble and semiprecious stones, paintings on stones, oil paintings and stone work tools. Mehr erfahren.
The Fondazione Palazzo Strozzi offers a full programme of internationallevel exhibitions and cultural events within the setting of this architectural masterpiece of the Florentine Renaissance. Mehr erfahren.
The Museum of the Argenti houses the treasure of the Medici Family: the stone vases of Lorenzo the Magnificent, the cameos and carvings of Cosimo I Mehr erfahren.
The collection includes 35 paintings, with important works by Andrea del Castagno, Giovanni Bellini, Savoldo, 12 sculptures, among which the Bernini’s San Lorenzo stands out. Mehr erfahren.
The refectory of the All Saints Monastery is famous for the great fresco painted in 1488 by Domenico Ghirlandaio. Mehr erfahren.
The refectory has a beautiful fresco by Perugino depicting the Last Supper, accompanied in a recent layout (2006) by other Tuscan and Italian artists influenced by Pietro Perugino. Mehr erfahren.
The Museum takes its name from one of the masterpieces of the Renaissance painting, the grandiose Last Supper fresco painted in the refectory by Andrea del Sarto. Mehr erfahren.