Santissima Annunziata

A treasure trove of Renaissance architecture and Mannerist art, and final resting place of several late Renaissance masters

*Chiesa della SS. Annunziata
Piazza SS. Annunziata
tel. +39-055-266-181

annunziata.xoom.it
Open daily 7:30am–12:30pm and 4–6:30pm
Free


Tours of SS. Annunziata
• Context: Brunelleschi Seminar (just the Piazza)

Sights nearby
* San Marco [museum/church]
*** Accademia [museum]
*** Duomo group [church/museum]
* Palazzo Medici-Riccardi [palace/museum]

Where to eat nearby
La Mescita [light meal]
* Da Mario [meal]
* Trattoria Za-Za [meal]
* Da Nerbone [light meal]
*** Carabé [gelato]

Hotels nearby
Reid Recommends Hotel Loggiato dei Serviti [moderate]
Residence Hilda [premier]
Hotel First of Florence [moderate]
Reid Recommends Hotel Morandi alla Crocetta [moderate]
Firenzesuite [moderate]
Hotel La Venere [cheap]
» More hotels near SS. Annunziata

ReidsItaly.com Florence Map

» View ENLARGED MAP with all listings

TOURS FROM OUR TRUSTED PARTNERS that include Florence

Intrepid Travel
Intrepid Travel 2011 Italy trips
Best of ItalyPartner (15 days)
Italy ExperiencePartner (15 days)
Classic ItalyPartner (21 days)
Italy Family AdventurePartner (14 days)
Highlights of ItalyPartner (8 days)
Tuscan ExpressPartner (7 days)

Gap Adventures
G Adventures 2011 Italy trips
• Ultimate ItalyPartner (13 days)
• Italy Culture and History Explored (9 days)
• The Taste of TuscanyPartner (8 days)
• Venice to Rome AdventurePartner (8 days)
• Italy Family AdventurePartner (10 days)

iExplore
iExplore Italy trips 2011
• Italy Experience (9 days)
• Italy in Style (9 days)
• Magical Tuscany & Portofino Peninsula (10 days)
• Tuscan Delights (8 days)
• Splendors of Italy & Southern France (16 days)

The facade and portico of the church of SS. Annunziata in Florence
The facade and portico of the church of SS. Annunziata in Florence. (Photo by Gryffindor)
Hardly anyone ever visits SS. Annunziata, and I can never figure out why.

Founded in 1250, this church near the northern edge of the tourist center, anchoring a lovely square lined by loggias, was rebuilt in 1444-81 by Michelozzo and completed by Leon Battista Alberti, two of the greatest architects of the Renaissance.

It was decorated by some of the most important artists of the High Renaissance—especially its Mannerist offshoot (artists who were inspired by the twisting figures and offbeat pastel palette pioneered by Michelangelo).

It also serves as the burial place for many noted Renaissance artists—none of the über-famous early ones, but a whole passel of later second tier greats, including the painters Andrea del Sarto, Pontormo, and Franciabigio and the sculptors Giambologna, Cellini, and Baldinelli.

The Entrance: Chiostro dei Voti

Andrea del Sarto's Birth of the Virgin in the church of SS. Annunziata in Florence
Andrea del Sarto's Birth of the Virgin in SS. Annunziata's Chiostro dei Voti.
The great art starts even before you get inside, with frescoes (somewhat damaged by the elements; now covered by a skylight) on the walls of the entrance cloister by those Mannerists.

Walking counterclockwise and starting on the right, the first image is Rosso Fiorentino's Assumption, a Visitation by Pontormo, and a Marriage of the Virgin by Franciabigio.

Beyond the marble Madonna and Child (perhaps by Michelozzo himself) are two corner frescoes by Andrea del Sarto: a masterful Birth of the Virgin and a damaged Arrival of the Magi (del Sarto stuck self-portrait in the right corner of that one; he's the dude in the blue hat who is looking out at you).

To the left of the door, the fresco parade picks up again with a ruinous Nativity by Alesso Baldovinetti. The rest of the frescoes tell the life of the obscure San Filippo Benizzi, starting with one by Cosimo Rosselli, but all the rest are by Andrea del Sarto.

The church interior

Every Florentine bride's first stop
Look to the left as you enter Santissima Annunziata for a canopied tabernacle by Michelozzo that is completely slathered in ex votos, candles, and hanging lamps by Florentines keen on venerating the tiny painting of Annunciation inside.

This was supposedly painted in the 1300s by Brother Bartolomeo, a simple monk who just couldn't get the Virgin Mary's face right, so he left it blank and lay down for a nap. Upon awakening, he found that an angel had snuck in and painted the face for him.

The mountain of flowers in front of the famous tabernacle? Florentine brides traditionally visit this shrine immediately after their weddings to leave the bridal bouquets at the foot of the miraculous Madonna. This will ensure a good marriage.

The Michelozzo tabernacle for teh holy Annunciation painting in Santissima Annunziata church in Florence

The inside of SS Annunziata is dark and somber, and overly baroque, but still pretty cool.

Along the left side of the church are a series of fine chapels, the first two with frescoes by Andrea del Castagno, then a chapel with some Alessandro Allori copies of Michelangelo's Sistine Last Judgment (though adopted by and trained by Bronzino—and a great defender of Bronzino's legacy—Allori always also had a soft spot for that earlier Florentine master, Michelangelo), and in the fourth chapel is an Assumption by early Renaissance master (and Raphael teacher) Perugino.

Cross the church to the right transept. There's a processional cross by Castagno again, and a small chapel in which the sculptor Bandinelli is buried, decorated with his carving of Nicodemus (actually a self-portrait) helping lower Christ off the cross. Up above is the second oldest church organ in Italy, designed by Domenico di Lorenzo da Lucca in 1509–21.

The Tribune

The decahedronal Tribune is a trip, a masterful piece of architecture by that cross-generational tag-team of Michelozzo and Alberti that took its inspiration from Classical models of rotundas and triumphal arches.

It is ringed by eight round chapels (and a square one at the back); the most interested are those along the left side, starting with the first chapel and Alessandro Allori (the Birth of Mary) and his son, Cristofano Allori (four Miracles of Beato Manetti, one of the church's founders). Third chapel on the left has a Madonna and Saints by Perugino; the next a Resurrection by Bronzino.

The square chapel at the very back of the Tribune was designed by the late Renaissance sculptor Giambologna to serve as his own tomb. He did the bronze Crucifix and the panels; his students did the other statues. The lovely Gothic Madonna altarpiece is by Bernardo Daddi.

As you exit the Tribune, look to the outside base of the triumphal arch for the simple burial slab of the artist Andrea del Sarto (it's right below the statue of St. Peter).

(This isn't always open, but: as you exit the Tribune, turn right to head into the left transept, then right again to enter the Sacristy, designed largely by Michelozzo—who also did the terracotta statue of John the Baptists in the chapel at the far end.)

The Cloister of the Dead and Chapel of St. Luke

Il Chiostro dei Morti nella chiesa di SS. Annunziata a Firenze
The Chiostro dei Morti (Photo by Sailko)
In the left transept, on the south wall, above a door, is a beautiful lunette painting by Andrea del Sarto of the Madonna del Sacco (a version of the Rest on the Flight from Egypt in which Joseph is leaning on the titular sack).

Through the door beneath it you can enter the Chiostro dei Morti, lined by funerary slabs and still more late Renaissance/early baroque frescoes wedged up in the lunettes.

Off the north side of the cloister is the Cappella San Luca, or Chapel of St. Luke, Evangelist and supposed artist and therefore the patron saint of painters—which probably explains why so many of them are buried under it, including Pontormo, Cellini, and Franciabigio. (The chapel holds a special mass for artists on St. Luke's Day, October 18.)

The chapel itself contains a Crucifix carved by Antonio da Sangallo as you enter, a Trinity by Alessandro Allori, a detached frescoes of the Madonna and Saints by Pontormo, an Allegory of Architecture by Santi di Tito, and a ceiling fresco of The Vision of St. Bernard by Luca Giordano.

On the altar is a painting by Giorgio Vasari of St. Luke Painting the Madonna that is amazingly self-aggrandizing, even for a genius self-promoter like Vasari, in which Vasari painted his own self-portrait as the face of St. Luke.

Tips

Related pages


   ShareThis



Search ReidsItaly.com

This material was last updated January 2011. All information was accurate at the time.

about | contact | faq

» THE REIDSITALY.COM DIFFERENCE «

Copyright © 2008–2012 by Reid Bramblett. Author: Reid Bramblett



Google