- Loggia dei Lanzi
The Loggia dei Lanzi, also called the Loggia della Signoria, is a building on a corner of the
Piazza della Signoria inFlorence ,Italy , adjoining the Uffizi Gallery. It consists of wide arches open to the street, three bays wide and one bay deep. The arches rest on clustered pilasters with Corinthian capitals. The wide arches appealed so much to the Florentines, thatMichelangelo even proposed that they should be continued all around the Piazza della Signoria.Sometimes erroneously referred to as "
Loggia dell' Orcagna"cite book | first=Guido | last=Zucconi | year= 1995| title=Florence: An Architectural Guide | publisher=Arsenale Editrice srl | location=San Giovanni Lupatoto, Vr, Italy | id=ISBN 88-7743-147-4] because it was once thought to be designed by that artist, it was built between1376 and1382 byBenci di Cione andSimone di Francesco Talenti [cite book | year=2007 | title=loggia | publisher=Encyclopædia Britannica] , possibly following a design byJacopo di Sione , to house the assemblies of the people and hold public ceremonies, such as the swearing into office of the Gonfaloniers and the Priors. Simone Talenti is also well-known from his contributions to the churchesOrsanmichele and San Carlo.The vivacious construction of the Loggia is in stark contrast with the severe architecture of the Palazzo Vecchio. It is effectively a marvellous open-air sculpture gallery of antique and
Renaissance art .On the façade of the Loggia, below the
parapet , aretrefoil s with allegorical figures of the four cardinal virtues (Fortitude, Temperance, Justice and Prudence) byAgnolo Gaddi . [cite book | year=2007 | title=Gaddi, Agnolo | publisher=Encyclopædia Britannica] Their blue enamelled background is the work of Leonardo, a monk, while the golden stars were painted by Lorenzo de' Bicci. The vault, composed of semi-circles, was done by the FlorentineAntonio de' Pucci . On the steps of the Loggia are two Marzoccos, marble statues of lions, heraldic symbols of Florence; that on the right is from Roman times and the one on the left was sculpted byFlaminio Vacca in 1598. It was originally placed in the Villa Medici in Rome, but found its final place in the Loggia in 1789.Underneath the bay on the far left is the
bronze statue of "Perseus" byBenvenuto Cellini cite book | year=2007 | title=Florence | publisher=Encyclopædia Britannica] . It shows the mythical Greek hero holding his sword in his right hand and holding up triumphantly theMedusa 's decapitated head in his left. The well-proportioned muscular body of Perseus stands poised on the right leg. Perseus is subdued, holding back his emotions. Blood is gushing from the head and the neck of the dead Medusa. The richly decorated marble pedestal, equally by Cellini, shows four graceful bronze statuettes of Jupiter, Mercurius,Minerva andDanaë . The bas-relief on the pedestal, representing "Perseus freeing Andromeda", is a copy of the one inBargello .Benvenuto Cellini worked almost ten years on this bronze (1545-1554). His wax design was immediately approved by
Cosimo I de' Medici . He met numerous difficulties which, according to his autobiography, almost brought him to the brink of death. The casting of this bronze statue was several times unsuccessful. When attempting again, the melting furnace got overheated, spoiling the casting of the bronze. Cellini gave orders to feed the furnace with his household furniture and finally with about 200 pewter dishes and plates, and his pots and pans. This caused the bronze to flow again. After the bronze had cooled, the statue was miraculously finished, except for three toes on the right foot. These were added later.On the far right is the manneristic celebrated group "Rape of the Sabine Women" by the Flemish artist Jean de Boulogne, better known as
Giambologna . [cite book | year=2007 | title=Giambologna | publisher=Encyclopædia Britannica] This impressive work was made from one imperfect block of white marble, the largest block ever transported to Florence. The original is now in the Galleria dell' Academia. [ [http://www.friendsofflorence.org/English/Friends/press.htm Copy of the rape of the Sabine Woman] ] Giambologna wanted to create a composition with the "figura serpentina", an upward snakelike spiral movement to be examined from all sides. This is the first group representing more than a single figure in European sculptural history to be conceived without a dominant viewpoint. It can be equally admired from all sides. The marble pedestal, also by Giambologna, represents bronze bas-reliefs with the same theme. This marble and bronze group is in the Loggia since 1583.Nearby is Giambologna's less celebrated
marble sculpture "Hercules beating the Centaur Nessus" (1599) and placed here in 1841 from the Canto de' Carnesecchi. It was sculpted from one solid block of white marble with the help of Pietro FrancavillaThe group "
Menelaus supporting the body of Patroclus ", discovered inRome stood originally at the southern end of thePonte Vecchio . There is another version of this much-restored Roman marble in thePalazzo Pitti . It is an ancient Roman sculpture from the Flavian era, copied from a Hellenistic Pergamene original of the mid third century BC. This marble group was discovered in Rome. It has undergone restorations by Ludovico Salvetti, to a model byPietro Tacca (1640) and by Stefano Ricci (about 1830).The group "The Rape of Polyxena", is a fine diagonal sculpture by
Pio Fedi from 1865.On the back of the Loggia are five marble female statues (three are identified as Matidia, Marciana and Agrippina Minor) [ [http://books.google.be/books?id=yfmN96E_VHgC&pg=PA114&lpg=PA114&dq=%22Loggia+dei+Lanzi%22+Thusneldo&source=web&ots=Wa2VYpnG5z&sig=odw4M3DvMTkSgK90ThtdpWkxv_w&hl=nl&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=5&ct=result#PPA1,M1 Giovanna Giusti Galardi, The Statues of the Loggia Della Signoria in Florence] ] ,
Sabine s and a statue of a barbarian prisoner Thusnelda from Roman times from the era ofTrajan toHadrian . They were discovered in Rome in 1541. The statues had been in the Medici villa at Rome since 1584 and were brought here by Pietro Leopoldo in 1789. They all have significant, modern restorations.At the side of the Loggia, there is a Latin inscription from 1750 commemorating the change of the Florentine calendar in 1749 to bring it into line with the Roman calendar. The Florentine calendar began on 25 March instead of 1 January. Other inscription from 1893 records the Florentines who distinguished themselves during the annexation of
Milan (1865),Venice (1866) and Rome (1871) to the kingdom of Italy.The name "Loggia dei Lanzi" dates back to the reign of Grand Duke Cosimo I, when it was used to house his formidable
landsknecht s (In Italian: "Lanzichenecchi", corrupted to "Lanzi"), or German mercenary pikemen. After the construction of the Uffizi at the rear of the Loggia, the Loggia's roof was modified byBernardo Buontalenti and became a terrace from which theMedici princes could watch ceremonies in the piazza.The
Feldherrnhalle inMunich , the site of a failed coup by the fledgling Nazi party in 1923, was modelled after the Loggia dei Lanzi.Trefoils of Loggia dei Lanzi
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External links
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