When Italians elsewhere in this country hear that we live part-time in Fidenza, they often mishear (not surprising, given our non-native accents) and think we've said "Firenze." And they nod and smile; of course, where else would people from glamorous California want to be when they're in Italy? And when we correct them and say, more clearly, "No, no, Fidenza," their smiles often fade. "Fidenza? But why?" is a not untypical response.
Firenze--Florence to us English-speakers--is indeed an extraordinary city, picturesque beyond all reason, jammed with masterpieces by da Vinci, Michelangelo, Botticelli, and other household names, with stunning landmarks like the Ponte Vecchio and the famous Brunelleschi dome on every side. But the last time we visited, during a September some years ago, we swore we'd never return. The city was jammed with tourists and people trying to sell them David mugs and Botticelli scarves. We struggled along narrow streets on the city's pitifully narrow sidewalks, barely wide enough for single file, while cars, trucks, and buses ground by inches from our elbows. The lines to see the famous attractions were long, the restaurants mostly overpriced and underwhelming.
In every one of these respects Fidenza is the exact opposite of Firenze, which is one reason we love it. Thank god we have no attractions noteworthy enough for thousands of people to line up for.
However, having mellowed somewhat with age, and realizing that Florence is only a couple of hours away by train, we decided it was time to give the birthplace of the Renaissance another chance. So last week we met up there with our friend Valerie for a mid-week excursion of a couple of days.
Probably COVID gets much of the credit for how much we enjoyed Florence this time around. The city was hardly deserted, but the line for the Uffizi was only minutes long, rather than hours, and many other things we wanted to see had no lines at all. Moreover, most of the tourists seemed to be Italian or French. If they were saying the kinds of idiotic things that tourists are often guilty of, we were spared understanding them, and hopefully they couldn't understand the stupidities we were uttering either.
My responsibilities as a blogger didn't occur to me until several days after we got back, so if you're hoping for photos of gorgeous Florentine scenery you will have to go elsewhere. But I'll do my best with the few photos I randomly took.
The first nice thing about the trip was that we could make the 125-mile trip by train. A "fast regional" train took about an hour and ten minutes to get us from Fidenza to the Bologna station. There we caught a high-speed train that covered an equal distance twice as fast.
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The "Red Arrow" train arrives in Bologna |
Whenever I take a train here I'm surprised by how lackadaiscal they are about checking tickets. Going back and forth to Parma, I've hardly ever had anyone ask to see if I've actually paid for the trip. Even on these more expensive trains (our round-trip tickets were about $70 each) we saw a conductor only on the Bologna-to-Firenze stretch. I gather the fines for traveling without a ticket are stiff, but I wonder how many people less risk-averse than we are just take their chances.
We stayed in a nice three-star hotel (the Hotel Alba Palace) that Danny found on the internet. It was just ten minutes by foot from the Firenze train station and not much more to places we wanted to visit. Our first stop after we arrived and dropped off our bags was the Uffizi, which none of us had been to in decades because of the lines and crowds. We hadn't bothered to reserve tickets, since we'd heard there weren't many tourists, but we only had to wait about 15 minutes to get in. Once admitted, however, we were sent through a nearly endless labyrinth of windowless corridors and myriad flights of stairs--temporary measures put up, I assume, for anti-COVID traffic control--before we finally emerged into the museum proper. We didn't have it all to ourselves by any means, but we also didn't have to elbow dozens of people aside to see the pictures and read the labels. So I shouldn't complain. But the density of masterpieces was its own kind of oppressive. Room after room after room of exquisite things...it was exhausting. Even the ceilings were astounding.
Danny's bad hip had gotten too much of a workout, so he left early to go back to the hotel and give it a rest. Valerie and I soldiered on, but I took photos of a few pictures to make Danny feel bad about what he was missing, including a very nice Michelangelo:
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Unfortunately there was no explanation of who the little whackamoles on the frame are. |
Valerie and I stopped for a snack at the rooftop cafe, which had a view of the Palazzo Vecchio and the rest of the cityscape to which my photo does absolutely no justice.
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Those white things are folded-up umbrellas. |
The next morning we visited the San Marco monastery, which all three of us had been to fairly recently but were still happy to see again. It was a Dominican monastery lucky enough to have Fra Angelico as one of its inmates, and this awesomely productive monk painted scenes from Christ's Passion in each of the dozens of cells where his fellow inmates lived.
Compared to other Florentine museums the San Marco is not terribly popular. Nor is it awash in gilding and marble, like the many palazzi that now house the city's various treasures. So when you walk the halls and peer into the cells where the monks lived and prayed beneath Fra Angelico's frescos, you can still imagine their life of silent contemplation of suffering and redemption. To me the little windows in each cell, with their crude wooden covers, evoked that asceticism.
The Medici also commissioned Fra Angelico to make a graphic-novel version of the life of Christ in a series of small, brilliantly detailed panels that originally decorated a big trunk that held hundreds of silver ex voto offerings from the devout. (More images and interesting details are available at this site: http://www.travelingintuscany.com/art/fraangelico/armadiodegliargenti.htm.) Here are some of the panels, now on display at the San Marco.Breathtaking paintings created to glorify a chest stuffed with silver seems very on brand for Florence.
From the San Marco we moved on to the Opificio delle Pietre Dure, a recommendation of Pam's. It's a small museum filled with examples of the Florentine art of mosaic using marble and semi-precious stones. This is the kitschier side of the Renaissance, but the workmanship is astonishing and the exhibits showing how it's done made for a pleasant hour.
That afternoon Valerie and I were heading to the Medici Chapels when we happened on the Medici-Riccardi Palace, a hulking edifice that our all-knowing friend Dana had said was worth a visit. Here the wealth, pomp, and power of Florence, and the Medici family in particular, were on display, culminating in a huge reception hall whose ceiling was frescoed in typical style with dozens of figures in colorful robes posturing gracefully and swirling up toward the heavens. Except this ceiling portrayed not the Virgin Mary's leap into the sky nor Jesus' resurrection, but the apotheosis of the Medici family as the sum of human virtues. The shamelessness of this has its own charm, I guess, and the paintings are wonderful. It's the Renaissance version of our current billionaire assholes sending themselves into space. At least the Medici and the allied Riccardi family left behind lovely things to look at.
And some not so special things, too. Not every painter in Renaissance Florence was a genius, as witness this item from the palazzo's horde. (What's with those noses?) I photographed it for my dog-loving children.
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Is there a relevant Bible verse? |
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Apologies to whoever on the Internet I stole this from. |
2 comments:
What, you went to Florence and didn't go to Vivoli's? :) Thanks as always for a fabulous vicarious tour!
You could give Rick Steves a run for his money; I laugh out loud at least once per blog post. And many this time: Frau Angelico as an "inmate" at the monastery and creator of graphic novels; the Virgin Mary's leap into the sky as a "Renaissance version of our current billionaire assholes sending themselves into space;" Michelangelo's stuck-on-tumor-like-titties; and two pounds of "spa steak." I didn't need to consume an excess of food to make my stomach ache from laughter. ;-)
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