Sculptural masterpieces in the city’s oldest building
Originally built in the mid-13th century as a palace for the local chief magistrate, the Bargello - Florence’s oldest building - has since been used variously as police headquarters, a prison and a barracks. But today it’s one of the country’s most important art galleries, displaying its largest collection of Gothic and Renaissance sculptures.
Across three levels you can find a plethora of Michelangelo masterpieces - including ‘Brutus’, ‘David-Apollo’, ‘Bacchus’ and ‘Madonna and Child’ - as well as highly regarded statues and sculptures by other Renaissance masters, such as Donatello’s ‘David’, Giambologna’s ‘Mercurio’, Jacopo Sansovino’s ‘Bacco’ and Vincenzo Gemito’s ‘Pescatore’.
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