Visiting the museum of the Casa Buonarroti arouses, first of all, the emotion of admiration for several early works by Michelangelo contained within its walls. These works include the Madonna of the Stairs and the Battle of the Centaurs. For those who pass through the main entrance of the lovely 17th century building located at Via Ghibellina 70, Florence, it is even more interesting to relate the Michelangelo masterpieces housed there with the long story of the Buonarroti family. The family did all it could to enlarge the dwelling and make it more attractive, while preserving a precious cultural inheritance and assembling a precious art collection at the same time.
Not only do the well-known masterworks by Michelangelo kept in the Casa Buonarroti come from the family patrimony; the same is also true of paintings, sculptures, majolicas and the archaeological sections arranged on the museum's two floors. Thus, the significance of the Casa Buonarroti does not limit itself to the exaltation of an extraordinary personage such as Michelangelo, even if the existing documentation on him has been enriched by gifts added to the family inheritance and by pieces on loan from Florentine museums. The idea of creating a magnificent building decorated by renowned artists in the name of family honor, above all that of its illustrious ancestors, was conceived in 1612 by Michelangelo Buonarroti the Younger, that exceptional man of letters and cultural promoter, who achieved his dream with a thirty-year time span. The Casa Buonarroti has remained unchanged down three centuries of vicissitudes, with moments of decline alternating with moments of rebirth.
It is the same now as it was then, a model residence among the many lost in Florence, one that exudes a secret and peculiar fascination bound up with the family history.Even the fact that the Casa Buonarroti belonged to a family both exceedingly conscious of their own story, and claiming more than one distinguished member, makes for a monument and museum that really is one-of-a-kind.
Via Ghibellina 70 - Tel. 055 241752
Opening Hours:
Weekdays: 10-17; Sundays and holidays: 10-17; Closed: Tuesdays.
The ticket offices close 30 minutes before the museum closing time (40 minutes for Campanile, Cupola, Museo dell’Opera del Duomo, 60 minutes for Certosa and Museo Stibbert ).
Entrance: € 6,50 - Combined ticket S. Croce – Casa Buonarroti:
€ 8,00 - Valid 1 day

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