Thursday, 9 September 2021

Johan Zoffany Tribuna of the Uffizi 1733-1810

 














List of the paintings by wall, from top row, left to right
Left wall
  • Annibale Carracci, Venus with a Satyr and Cupids (Uffizi, Florence);
  • Guido Reni, Charity (Palatine Gallery, Pitti Palace, Florence);
  • Raphael, Madonna della seggiola (Palatine Gallery, Pitti Palace, Florence);
  • Correggio, Madonna and Child (Uffizi, Florence);
  • Justus Sustermans, Portrait of Galileo Galilei (Uffizi, Florence);
  • Unreadable painting (left of the Cupid and Psyche statue).
Central wall
  • Titian's workshop, Madonna and Child with Saint Catherine (Uffizi, Florence);
  • Raphael and workshop, St John the Baptist (Uffizi, Florence);
  • Guido Reni, Madonna (private collection?);
  • Raphael, Madonna del cardellino (Uffizi, Florence);
  • Rubens, The Consequences of War (Palatine Gallery, Pitti Palace, Florence);
  • Franciabigio (formerly attributed to Raphael), Madonna del Pozzo (Uffizi, Florence);
  • Unrecognizable painting (between the legs of the Satyr);
  • Hans Holbein, Portrait of Sir Richard Southwell (Uffizi, Florence);
  • Raphael, Portrait of Perugino (Uffizi, Florence);
  • Perugino's workshop (Niccolò Soggi?), Madonna with Child, Saint Elizabeth and Saint John (Uffizi, Florence, still in the Tribuna).
Right wall
  • Guido Reni, Cleopatra (Palatine Gallery, Pitti Palace, Florence);
  • Rubens, Four Philosophers (Palatine Gallery, Pitti Palace, Florence);
  • Raphael, Pope Leo X with Cardinals Giulio de' Medici and Luigi de' Rossi (Uffizi, Florence);
  • Pietro da Cortona, Abraham and Hagarìì (Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna);
  • Bartolomeo Manfredi, Tribute to Caesar (Uffizi, Florence);
  • Cristofano Allori, Hospitality of Saint Julian (Palatine Gallery, Pitti Palace, Florence);
  • Unrecognizable painting (right of the Wrestlers);
  • Unrecognizable painting (Charity?);
  • Unrecognizable painting (behind the Venus);
  • Unrecognizable painting (you can only see a golden frame behind the man in red at the very right).
Lower part
  • Raphael, Niccolini-Cowper Madonna (National Gallery of Art, Washington). This painting was owned by Zoffany at the moment: this explains its prominence;
  • Guercino's workshop, Samian Sibyl (Uffizi, Florence);
  • Titian, Venus of Urbino (Uffizi, Florence).
Sculptures and other

Today Medici's Ancient Roman statues are mostly in the main corridors of the Uffizi Gallery, except those which are still in the Tribuna, and except the smaller busts and statuettes (some antique, some pseudo-antique), owned by the National Archaeological Museum and permanently displayed at Villa Corsini a Castello, near Florence. Many of those painted by Zoffany are still to be identified, thou. Other antiquities (Etruscan, Egyptian, Greek) are mostly in the National Archaeological Museum. Some very few Renaissance pieces from the Tribuna are now in the Bargello Museum.

Shelves
From left:
  • Bust of a woman (?);
  • Bust of a Roman emperor (?);
  • Bust of Heracles (?);
  • Bust of a man (?);
  • Ancient Roman bust of a Julio-Claudian dynasty (Villa Corsini a Castello, Florence);
  • Bust of Demetra (?);
  • Bust of a woman (?);
  • Ancient Roman art, Artemis of Ephesus, 2nd century AD (Villa Corsini a Castello, Florence);
  • Bust of a man in alabaster (?);
  • Seated man statuette (?);
  • Bronze seated Heracles (?);
  • Bust of a boy (?);
  • Bust of a boy (?);
  • Bust of a man (?);
  • Bust of Zeus (?);
  • Bronze statuette (?);
  • Bust of a man (?);
  • Cupid (?);
  • Bronze statuette of Heracles (?);
  • Bust of a man (?);
  • Relief of a horse (?);
  • Bust of a man (?);
  • Bertoldo di Giovanni, Putto playing the lute (Bargello, Florence);
  • Pan (?);
  • Seated Goddess (?);
  • Bust of a boy (?);
  • Ancient Roman art, Heracles and the Nemean Lion (Uffizi, Florence);
  • Seated woam (?);
  • Bust of Bacchus (?).
Center
  • Ancient Roman art, Cupid and Psyche (Uffizi, Florence);
  • Ancient Roman art, Dancing Faun (Uffizi, Florence, still in the Tribuna);
  • Jacopo Antelli (Monicca) and Jacopo Ligozzi, Octagonal table with Pietre Dure mosaics (Uffizi, Florence, still in the Tribuna);
  • Ancient Roman art, Baby Hercules strangling two serpents (Uffizi, Florence, still in the Tribuna);
  • Ancient Roman art, The Two Wrestlers (Uffizi, Florence, still in the Tribuna);
  • Cleomenes, Medici Venus (Uffizi, Florence, still in the Tribuna).
Lower
  • Baltimore Painter, Apulian krater with Amazonomachy (National Archaeological Museum, Florence);
  • Etruscan bronze elm with "button" on top, from Cannae (National Archaeological Museum, Florence);
  • Ancient Roman art, Arrotino (Uffizi, Florence, still in the Tribuna);
  • Etruscan (with 17th-century implements), Chimera of Arezzo (National Archaeological Museum, Florence);
  • Severo Calzetta da Ravenna, Lucerna in the shape of a Twisting Man (Bargello, Florence);
  • Late antique, Ardaburio's Plate (National Archaeological Museum, Florence);
  • Bust of a man (?);
  • Florentine pseudo-antique art, second half of the 16th century, Bronze head of Antinous (National Archaeological Museum, Florence);
  • Bronze lucerna (?);
  • Etruscan amphora in bucchero (National Archaeological Museum, Florence?);
  • Etruscan oinochoe in bucchero (National Archaeological Museum, Florence?);
  • Etruscan situla in bucchero (National Archaeological Museum, Florence?);
  • Ancient Greek art, Livorno Torso (National Archaeological Museum, Florence);
  • Ancient Egyptian art, Cube statue of Ptahmose (National Archaeological Museum, Florence);
  • Etruscan funerary urn probably Volterra production (?) (under the Venus of Urbino) | Source: © Wikipedia





























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