Friday, February 6, 2009
Firenze Day 4!
Thursday, February 5, 2009
Firenze - The David and So Much More...
Today, we all refueled with breakfast at the hotel. Coffee, cornetti, and the Italian version of cocoa crisps were consumed with fervor before we all met up to start our third day in Florence. Our first stop was the Palazzo Medici Riccardi (The Medici Palace) which at one point had been the site of the Medici Bank. The Palazzo houses the Cappella dei Magi which contains beautiful frescos by Benozzo Gozzilo painted around 1460. The frescos themselves primarily depict members of the Medici family, demonstrating their power and wealth and Cosimo Di'Medici's projection of the Medici's continued fortune into the future. This chapel was also used as a political tool when the Medici were entertaining dignitaries; the frescos also depicted close friends of the Medici which would not only demonstrate loyalties, but also strong alliances.
After the Palazzo Medici Riccardi the group headed over to San Marco Church where we ran into a cute little nonna who talked our Professor's ear off in Italian. Nonna shared with us that her husband was supposedly somehow related to Dante, and that she married said husband in that very church at the age of 18. Who would of thought that we'd run into such a chatty Italian in Florence? Shortly after our encounter with the little Italian, we went next door to the Museo Di San Marco which contained the living quarters of the Florentine Dominican Monks including Girolamo Savonarola's cell. Each cell contained frescos painted by artist Fra Angelico; the paintings differed from cell to cell but all portrayed various biblical scenes such as the annunciation, resurrection, crucifixion or the crowning of Mary. One of the most impressive cells was that of Savonarola's, where contained in glass was the hair shirt he would have worn as a means of mortifying the flesh.
Lunch was a nice reprieve from all the pavement we had been pounding. With full bellies and rested feet, we all met up in front of the Accademia for our afternoon meeting with David. David is a handsome fellow standing at about 17 ft.; he is beautifully carved from marble by the master sculptor Michelangelo. As we entered the Accademia, we were surrounded by various works. I was blind to everything in front of me, my mind preoccupied with what I was about to see. We entered the corridor and to the right, another corridor lined with Michelangelo's Slaves led us to his masterpiece the David. In pictures his grandeur is dwarfed, to truly appreciate his size you must stand at his feet. It is impossible to communicate here, what it was to see the original work. To know that Michelangelo carved such smooth contours from a block of marble with such a small tool as the chisel is to be left awe inspired to say the least.
Wednesday, February 4, 2009
Firenze - Heather Kraft
Today was our second day in Florence. After a torrential downpour during our initial tour of the city even today’s gray weather was lovely in contrast. Our first stop today was a building that had once been a great mansion. The inside was left decorated as it had been and was filled with many common household trinkets of the time.
Luckily, we had a reservation which allowed us to go a floor above those with the regular tour passes. Here we observed a bedroom that was decorated with scenes of courtly love. Items varied in the other rooms. There was a grand fire place in one room. Another held a great dining table. A third showed examples of lace and the instruments with which fabric was made.
After this we moved on towards Piazza Vecchio. There we briefly discussed the bronze version of David we were about to see, created by Donatello. It was an odd sensation to receive a lecture standing in the middle of Florence, surrounded by famous statues with the tower of the Signoria above our heads. It was also in this place that Savonarola was burned.
After this lecture we moved on towards the Bargello. Tucked away in this building are many pieces of amazing art. Earlier in the week we discussed the competition between Ghiberti and Brunelleschi for the baptistery doors. In the Bargello we were allowed to closely examine these competition panels, which featured the sacrifice of Isaac by Abraham. Finally we moved on towards Donatello’s David. Behind the statue towered a replica. The contrast was helpful because the replica was gilded as the original piece would have been.
After the Bargello we took a quick lunch break. Marco took a group of us to a panini place which he, our resident panino expert, claimed was the best panino he had had in Italy. I can’t disagree with him. One of the best parts of the sandwich was not their taste or warmth but their names! I chose the Savonarola, while Richelle chose the Brunelleschi and Jess, the Botticelli. All of the sandwiches were named after people who had been influential in Florentine history and who we had studied over the past week.
The lunch break was a nice chance to recoup but from there we went to the Uffizi, an art museum comparable to the Louvre. Here we took an epic walk through the museum. We began by analyzing religious art, especially some altar pieces by Giatto. Lisa wanted us to note their size, which was much larger than most of us assumed. Then we moved on to the Botticelli room. Here we stood in awe in front of many Botticelli pieces including two of his famous pieces, The Birth of Venus and Primavera. From there, we moved on to a move of Leonardo Da Vinci. One of the pieces we saw was a collaboration in which his master let Da Vinci draw an angel. It is said that Da Vinci’s angel was so beautiful, the master put down his own brush for the rest of his life. Then we were dismissed but highly encouraged to check out the rest of the first floor, in which every wall held at least 4 pieces of art. Many were covered in jewels of paintings, surrounding lovely statues. On our way towards the exit, we discovered the Caravaggio exhibit and saw the famous picture of Judith. Then, we exited the museum into a lovely Florence day.
Marco and I decided to work on our quests and ventured over to the nearby Orsamichele church in an effort to distinguish the gothic and renaissance touches on two statues put into the niches. Finding all we could, we discovered Perche No? and Grom on our way back but only tried the first. Then we made our way back to the hotel. From there, we all labored on our Quests, explored the city and had wonderful dinners, excited for the next day. Some others ended their day with a riveting venture to go purse shopping!
Tuesday, February 3, 2009
By Richelle Mehlhaff
We arrived at the train station early, only to see our train get delayed by 1 hour! After a long wait and a 2 hour journey, we finally arrived in Florence, exhausted, and dragged our bags to the hotel.
Our hotel was located in a street used for the leather market of Florence, where venders sell leather purses, belts, and journals (etc.) in all shapes and colors.
After a lunch break we visited the Duomo of Florence, which has an incredible dome built by Brunelleschi and a separate octagonal Baptistry that display a copy of the bronze doors by Ghiberti.
The interior of the baptistery was covered in gold mosaics, with a famous Last Judgement scene of the the damned which inspired Dante’s depiction of the devil in The Divine Comedy.
From the Baptistry we walked to the Santa Croce church, patroned by Pazzi family (rivals to the Medici family). The church was beautiful, and has several famous funerary monuments. The tomb of Michelangelo, Galileo Galilei, Ghiberti, Machievelli, and an empty tomb for Dante, whose body is actually buried in Ravenna since his family was exiled from Florence when he was a boy.
We had a group dinner on Tuesday night, which was delicious! At the Trattoria ZaZa, a really fun, but cramped restaurant that had specialties like wild boar. YUM!
CIAO!
Monday, February 2, 2009
February 2, 2009
After a break for lunch, we had class with Mary where we finished up our previous discussion about Cosimo de' Medici and began talking about Lauro Martines' book April Blood about the Pazzi Conspiracy to kill Lorenzo and Guiliano de' Medici. This book is full of Renaissance gore and is quite a page turner. We finished with some slides of artwork featuring the Medici. Afterwards we all rushed home to pack for our trip tomorrow and to get some sleep.