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Casa Buonarroti: the museum house of Michelangelo
On February 9, 1858, Michelangelo Buonarroti’s house,
located at number 70 of Via Ghibellina, became a museum.
Since he was young, Michelangelo had dreamed of
creating a patrician house to leave as inheritance to his descendants, a dream
that he never managed to realize during his lifetime.
It was his grandson, Michelangelo Buonarroti the
Younger, who built this house between 1612 and 1643, based on Michelangelo’s
drawings.
For the decorations, he turned to some of the greatest
artists active in Florence at the time: Pietro da Cortona, Francesco Furini,
Artemisia Gentileschi, Empoli al Passignano, Giovanni da San Giovanni and
Jacopo Vignali.
In 1799, the palace was confiscated and assigned to
the Ospedale di Santa Maria Nuova,
but thirteen years later, Cosimo Buonarroti regained its possession and had it
restored. Having no heirs, Cosimo left the house to the city of Florence
through a will drawn up on February 9, 1858, a few days before his death.
Today Casa
Buonarroti is a house museum, containing drawings, sketches, models,
paintings, sculptures by Michelangelo and works by artists who were inspired by
the master.
Among the most important works are the Madonna della
Scala and the Battle of the Centaurs.
The house museum is on the corner of Via Buonarroti,
once called "Via dei Marmi Sudici" (roughly tranlated as Dirty Marbles
Street), because of the blocks of marble left in the street gathering dust,
waiting to be used by the artist for his works.
An interesting place to visit for all lovers of art
and the genius of Michelangelo.