by Valentina Di Liscia
During a restoration of the Uffizi Gallery in Florence, a team of construction workers happened upon an astounding discovery: a pair of frescoes — works painted quickly in watercolor on wet plaster — dating back as early as the 1600s. The paintings, depicting members of the wealthy banking Medici family, are thought to have been covered up in the 18th or 19th century, their existence hidden and unknown until now.
It’s fitting that the portraits would turn up
at the Uffizi: the Italian Renaissance art museum was originally built as an
office building for Florence’s magistrates and operated as a storage facility
for the Medici’s extensive art collection.
The larger and more impressive of the two
frescoes, attributed to the circle of Italian Mannerist painter Bernardino
Poccetti, is a life-sized portrait of Cosimo II de Medici, the fourth duke of
Tuscany and a patron of Galileo. At his feet are two women sitting beside a lion
and a wolf, allegories of the cities of Florence and Siena.
“It was normal to have paintings of rulers
over the doors in government offices and this one shows the young Cosimo
showing off Florence’s conquest of Siena,” Uffizi director Eike Schmidt told the
Times.
The second, smaller fresco is a tondo portrait
of Cosimo’s father and predecessor, Duke Ferdinando I de Medici. Both paintings
were likely plastered over when the rooms changed use. In another room, the
team found several 18th century paintings featuring plant motifs on the walls
and on the vault of the ceiling.
The Uffizi’s restoration, completed during the
museum’s six-month closure due to the COVID-19 pandemic, promises more than
newly-unearthed treasures. The ambitious project will add over 21,000 square
feet of space, freeing up 43 rooms on the ground floor and in the basement.
When it reopens in May, visitors will also be able to visit the Medici family’s
16th-century horse stables under the museum grounds.
The frescoes will be on view to the public in
the west wing of the Uffizi Gallery starting May 4.
https://hyperallergic.com/640961/lost-medici-frescoes-uncovered-construction-workers/?utm_campaign=daily&utm_content=20210428&utm_medium=email&utm_source=newsletter
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