Facade of Palace
The Palazzo Lanfranchi-Toscanelli , presently the local State Archives, is a Renaissance -style palace located on Lungarno Mediceo #30, in the city of Pisa , region of Tuscany , Italy. Since 1913 the building has housed the Archivio di Stato di Pisa .
History
Initially commissioned in the first half of the 16th century by Bartolomeo Lanfranchi . Some authors state that the architect was Michelangelo .[ 1] A later Palazzo Lanfranchi commissioned by Alessandro stands across the Arno. In 1576, the palace was refurbished using designs by Francesco Mosca .
The recently enriched mercantile Toscanelli family acquired the palace in 1827; and restored it using the architect Alessandro Gherardesca . Giovan Battista Toscanelli and his wife Angiola Cipriani lived in the palace, and garnered a large and prominent art collection.[ 2] Among the artists in the painting gallery were Cornelis Bloemaert , Agnolo Bronzino , Pietro Ciafferi , Jacques Courtois , Carlo Dolci , Francesco Fidanza , Károly Markó the Younger , Cornelis van Poelenburgh , and Piero Zuccheri .[ 3] Among the artists employed in decoration of the rooms of the palace in the 1830s were Giuseppe Bacchini , Luigi Venturini , and Benvenuto Brazzini .[ 4] The palace, once had a peculiar Mannerist marble sculpture, part of a fountain, that displayed a chimeric female figure extruding bare breasts, but possessing wings, fins for feet, and a long tail. She sits atop a frog. The statue has been attributed to either Michelangelo or one of his followers, Silvio Cosini or Niccolo Tribolo .[ 5] The statue is now in Palazzo Blu in town.
They had the ceilings frescoed (1860s) by Nicola Cianfanelli , Gaspero Martellini , and Annibale Gatti with depictions of secular hagiography showing:
References
^ Le dimore di Pisa: l'arte di abitare i palazzi di una antica repubblica , Article title: Il Palazzo Toscanelli di Pisa nel XIX Secolo:Note e Documenti Inediti sugli Arredi e sulla Quadreria , by Barbara Bertelli, Universita di Udine, edited by Emilia Daniele, page 227.
^ Tourism office of Pisa , itineraries, text curated by A. Sobrero and M. Zampetti of the Pisan Historic Society (last revision 18/06/2013).
^ Michelangelo is rumored to have been the architect of the palace. see B Bertelli, page 228-232.
^ See B Bertelli, page 233.
^ The Medici, Michelangelo, & the Art of Late Renaissance Florence , by Cristina Acidini Luchinat , Palazzo Strozzi, Art Institute of Chicago, Detroit Institute of Arts, page 228.
^ Byron is said to have been a guest in the palace. see B Bertelli, page 227.
43°42′55″N 10°24′20″E / 43.7153°N 10.4055°E / 43.7153; 10.4055