
The story
The word uffizi just means offices. Cosimo I de' Medici, who had made himself the first Grand Duke of Tuscany, wanted the city's magistracies and guilds gathered in one place, and in 1560 he had Giorgio Vasari design this long U-shaped block running down to the river Arno. The top floor, lit by its endless windows, was later glazed and hung with the family's art, and the offices quietly became a gallery.
Everything in it belongs to Florence because of one woman. Anna Maria Luisa de' Medici, the last of the line, signed a pact in 1737 leaving the entire Medici collection to the Tuscan state on a single condition, that nothing ever leave the city. Without that clause the Botticellis and Raphaels would have been scattered across the auction houses of Europe.
Instead they are still here. Sandro Botticelli's 'Birth of Venus', the goddess arriving on a shell, and the 'Primavera', with its orange grove and dancing figures, hang in the same set of rooms. A raised walkway called the Vasari Corridor still links the gallery across the river to the Pitti Palace, built so the Medici could pass between home and office without touching the street. In 1993 a Mafia car bomb exploded just outside, killing five people and damaging dozens of works, and the gallery has kept one scarred painting on view as a record of that night.
Collection
173 works
CharityPiero del Pollaiuolo, 1469
HopePiero del Pollaiuolo, 1470
JusticePiero del Pollaiuolo, 1470
Madonna and childAndrea del Castagno, 1443
Madonna and Child Enthroned with SaintsDomenico Ghirlandaio, 1484
Music in a LandscapeGuercino, 1617
Portrait of a WomanSebastiano del Piombo, 1512
Portrait of Folco PortinariHans Memling, 1487
Portrait of Iseppo da Porto and his son AdrianoPaolo Veronese, 1555
Portrait of Lorenzo de' MediciGiorgio Vasari, 1533
Portrait of Maria SalviatiPontormo, 1544
Portrait of the artist's fatherAlbrecht Dürer, 1490
Saint Jerome Reading in the DesertGiovanni Bellini, 1480
Saint John the Baptist as a BoyRaphael, 1518
San Barnaba AltarpieceSandro Botticelli, 1487
Self-portraitRembrandt, 1669
The Birth of John the BaptistPontormo, 1526
The Departure of Saint FlorianAlbrecht Altdorfer, 1518
The Holy Family di Parte GuelfaLuca Signorelli, 1490
The Massacre of the InnocentsDaniele da Volterra, 1557
The Resurrected ChristTitian, 1511
The VisitationMariotto Albertinelli, 1503
TriptychAndrea Mantegna, 1464
Adoration of the ShepherdsLorenzo di Credi, 1510
Madonna with Child with Young John the BaptistLucas Cranach the Elder, 1514