Gianni Cipriano Photography | Archive

  • Archive
    • All Galleries
    • Search
    • Cart
    • Lightbox
    • Client Area
  • Featured
  • About
  • Contact
  • Instagram
  • PORTFOLIO
    • Google+
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • More
x
Image 1 of 1
Less

CIPG_20180603_NYT-Uffizi_M3_5077.jpg

Add to Lightbox Download
twitterlinkedinfacebook

FLORENCE, ITALY - 3 JUNE 2018: "Portrait of a Young Man with an Apple" (1504-1505 ca) and "Portrait of Pope Julius II" (1511-1512 ca) by Raphael are seen here at the Uffizi before being relocated at Palazzo Pitti, in Florence, Italy, on June 3rd 2018.

As of Monday June 4th 2018, Room 41 or the “Raphael and Michelangelo room” of the Uffizi is part of the rearrangement of the museum's collection that has
been defining Uffizi Director Eike Schmidt’s grander vision for the Florentine museum.
Next month, the museum’s Leonardo three paintings will be installed in a
nearby room. Together, these artists capture “a magic moment in the
first decade of the 16th century when Florence was the cultural and
artistic center of the world,” Mr. Schmidt said. Room 41 hosts, among other paintings, the dual portraits of Agnolo Doni and his wife Maddalena Strozzi painted by Raphael round 1504-1505, and the “Holy Family”, that Michelangelo painted for the Doni couple a year later, known as the
Doni Tondo.

Copyright
©2018 Gianni Cipriano
Image Size
5634x3756 / 15.6MB
Keywords
art, culture, firenze, florence, galleria, gallery, italia, italy, masterpiece, museum, painter, painting, palazzo, pitti, renaissance, rinascimento, uffizi
Contained in galleries
20180603_NYT_Uffizi
FLORENCE, ITALY - 3 JUNE 2018: "Portrait of a Young Man with an Apple" (1504-1505 ca) and "Portrait of Pope Julius II" (1511-1512 ca) by Raphael are seen here at the Uffizi before being relocated at Palazzo Pitti, in Florence, Italy, on June 3rd 2018.<br />
<br />
As of Monday June 4th 2018, Room 41 or the “Raphael and Michelangelo room” of the Uffizi is part of the rearrangement of the museum's collection that has<br />
been defining Uffizi Director Eike Schmidt’s grander vision for the Florentine museum.<br />
Next month, the museum’s Leonardo three paintings will be installed in a<br />
nearby room. Together, these artists capture “a magic moment in the<br />
first decade of the 16th century when Florence was the cultural and<br />
artistic center of the world,” Mr. Schmidt said. Room 41 hosts, among other paintings, the dual portraits of Agnolo Doni and his wife Maddalena Strozzi painted by Raphael round 1504-1505, and the “Holy Family”, that Michelangelo painted for the Doni couple a year later, known as the<br />
Doni Tondo.