uffoons, Villains and Players at the Medici Court (Buffoni, Villani e Giocatori alla Corte dei Medici) Exhibit
The first temporary
exhibition we encountered during our tour of the Palazzo Pitti was the barely
two-week old Buffoni, Villani e Giocatori alla Corte dei Medici (Buffoons,
Villains and Players at the Medici Court) Exhibit ongoing at the Andito degli
Angioni from May 19 to September 11, 2016. The exhibition, curated by Anna
Bisceglia, Matteo Ceriana and Simona Mammana, is promoted by the Ministry of
Cultural Heritage and Activities and Tourism with the Uffizi Galleries and
Florence Museums.
Between the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries, these marginal and deviant characters (fools, ignorant or grotesque peasants, dwarves and practitioners of both licit and illicit games) found significant, and sometimes curious, artistic representations through artists such as Anton Domenico Gabbiani, Faustino Bocchi and Hieronymus Bosch.
Four Servants at the Court of the Medici (Anton Domenico Gabbiani, ca. 1684, oil on canvas)
This colorful and unexpected
collection of often real-life characters, from the Medici court, illustrated
the comical aspects of social life and life at the court and embodies the
ambivalent world of buffoonery, rusticitas (holy rusticity) and play.
These characters were entrusted with the entertainment and leisure of the
gentlemen, an antidote to boredom always lurking in the mesh of the rigid
Spanish ceremonial.
Portrait of a child of Odoardo Farnese with a dwarf and a dog (Domenico and Valori Casini)
“Genre” painting is a
critical tool that allows you to draw, through art, from the most varied
reality of the world and these so-called ‘genre’ scenes, in the clear hierarchy
of Baroque painting,
has made it possible to illustrate, often also with moral or didactic intent,
various comic aspects of social and court life, those themes considered
otherwise low and without decoration, unworthy of a high painting, with a
sacred, mythological or historical subject.
Grotesque Banquet (Unknown Tuscan painter, ca. 1630 – 1640, oil on canvas)
From the archive documents
with a defined identity, they are, in fact, remembered for exploits (and
sometimes misdeeds) that insert them as real people in the life of the court,
whose biography can be outlined in savory details, and the high human and
cultural depth of many can be clarified.
Portrait of a dwarf with iron club and dog on a leash (ca. 1620 -30, oil on canvas)
These buffoons, dwarves and
jugglers, considered as living toys, wonders of nature worthy of a Wunderkammer
(Cabinet of
Curiosities), were also shrewd advisers with special licenses with respect
to court etiquette.
Portrait of Dwarf Morgante (Bronzino)
The position of the buffoons,
halfway between the fun and the speaking conscience of the gentleman, elevates
them to protagonists of a playful and bizarre art.
Marble statues of dwarves along the corridor
Aside from paintings, also on display are the marble sculptures of the Nano Musician (Agostino Ubaldini) and the Nano with Bells by Andrea (Michelangelo Ferrucci) as well as the bronze statue by Giambologna depicting the Birdman (from the National Museum of the Bargello).
Check out “Bargello Museum”
Buffoons, Villains and
Players at the Medici Court Exhibit: Andito degli Angioni, : Pitti
Palace, Piazza de’ Pitti, 1, 50125 Firenze FI, Italy. Open 8:30AM.
Tel: +39
055 294883.
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