Rainy Florence with Nana
So, Internet's on the fritz. Again. We're back at the bar with the free internet, sitting with potato chips and wine. This means NO TIME. So, fast post!
I went to the airport to get Nana on April 3. She didn't get off the plane I was expecting her to. Luckily, a nice woman adopted me and took me to the Air France counter, where I learned Nana would be coming in three hours. So I prepared to wait.
And the power went out.
Several times. By the time Nana arrived, sans luggage, it seemed like they had the power figured out. I got Nana home and we fed her lasagna.
Husbear says this is a gross picture. I don't agree.
The next day dawned rainy.
See?
We looked around and got rained on some more.
We were thinking "museum", but we didn't know which one - see, the lines for the Uffizi and the Accademia have been so long, that we went and bought tickets for later in the week, and we didn't want to buy more.
So we looked at the Duomo.
I was excited to see that the copies of Ghiberti's doors had finally been uncovered, on the Baptistery. They've been under wraps since we got here! My Old Testament knowledge came in handy, but I wasn't able to figure out what all the scenes were. Beautiful to look at, though!
We went into the Duomo and looked around a bit, and then Nana wanted to see the remains of the church that was replaced by the Duomo. They're right underneath, in a small museum that's usually totally empty. The signage is horrible, so it's hard to tell what you're looking at, but there are little maps talking about the remaining pavement. Some of it's pre-Roman, though the part in this picture was probably the original mosaic floor of Santa Reparata. We think.
Here's some spurs they found under the church. Still with little bits of fabric remaining!
There were lots of tombstones around. Dates were hard to come by, though we did find a couple that were from the mid 1100s.
Having wandered the full underground area, we left the Duomo and went around to the back. That's where you can find the Museo dell'Opera del Duomo, the museum that holds all of the church's original artwork. It's really interesting, and usually there's nobody there.
It has one of Michelangelo's last sculptures, a Pieta' that was supposed to decorate his tomb. That's a self-portrait as Nicodemus.
The museum also contains an extravagantly spooky Donatello. It's Mary Magdalene, clothed in her hair. Cloaked in crazy, I think.
Though I have to say my favorite things there were in the room of panels. Who they're by escapes me at the moment, and since I'm running low on time I'll just have to make my apologies... but they run through a history of Man, starting with the Old Testament and ending with allegories of the Renaissance creation of sculpture, architecture, et cetera.
Here's Gd creating woman from man's rib. Nana didn't see the woman right away, and turning to me said "but Eve has a penis!" Then she saw what she was missing...
My personal favorite was this one, the creation of wine. Or perhaps the creation of overindulgence?
(Correction - thanks, Tom! This is actually drunk Noah exposing himself, a story taken straight out of Genesis. Oh, that crazy dog. Look for another fresco of naked Noah exposing himself in San Gimignano, if the pictures we took in the church came out OK.)
Creepiest artifact? Brunelleschi's death mask. He designed the Duomo's dome, so his death mask shares room with a bunch of old tools. Dignified, I suppose?
The museum is proudest of the original panels Ghiberti created for the Baptistry. There are eight of them on display right now - they rotate in and out of the museum, since they're in almost constant restoration. Apparently, there are caustic compounds between the bronze plating and the wood that's backing the scenes. I imagine this is a sticky problem.
After all this art, it was time for gelato! So, we went to Grom - just a block or so away. Their April flavor is white chocolate, by the way. Nana got dark chocolate and pistacchio. And liked them - a lot.
Dinner was good - a solid place called Pane e Vino near our house, on Via dell'Agnolo. It's cheap and dependable. Nana got to have a really good Tuscan vegetable soup that made her very happy.
And then we went by Santa Croce again on the way home. Oh well, you have to walk home some way, right?
Day One. Mama Bear arrives Thursday, and pending Interet, I hope to have wrestled this dang blog up to date! Look for more posts. Hopefully. Pray to the Internet gods for us!































































































































































