Italy

  • Keats and Rome: 200 years

    Keats and Rome: 200 years

    The poet John Keats died of tuberculosis in Rome, in February 1821: two hundred years ago exactly. The apartment on the Spanish Steps that he had rented with his friend, the struggling painter Joseph Severn (who nursed him faithfully to the end), is now the Keats-Shelley Museum. The Life and…

  • The Victory of Brescia

    The Victory of Brescia

    I was last in Brescia in 2018, preparing for the first edition of Blue Guide Lombardy, Milan and the Italian Lakes which was published the following year. Apart from the extraordinary beauty and interest of her museums and monuments (which I remembered from my last visit when at work for…

  • News from Florence: The Uffizi

    News from Florence: The Uffizi

    At the time of writing this article, Italy was experiencing its second wave of Covid-19 and we were all being invited to stay at home as much as possible to avoid another lockdown. Museums and galleries were still open, even though theatres and concert halls were closed. Since then, however,…

  • The Venetian Empire at Sea

    The Venetian Empire at Sea

    The Venetian Empire, or Stato da mar, depended on a huge number of galleys, galleons and galleasses to protect its trade routes to the east. As Jan Morris has pointed out, โ€˜in an age when seamen preferred to spend their nights ashoreโ€™ the Republic soon set about establishing control of coastal…

  • An update on Dante

    An update on Dante

    Work is underway to plan next yearโ€™s celebrations for the seven-hundredth anniversary of the death of Dante Alighieri (see previous article posted here on 22 March this year โ€œDante Dayโ€). In fact Sergio Mattarella, the Italian President, went to Ravenna on 6th September to open the events (albeit behind a…

  • New Blue Guide Rome reviewed

    “Gripping” and “delicious”: Harry Mount reviews The Blue Guide’s latest offering for Chapter House in the Catholic Herald. Ever since 1918, Blue Guides have been the best guides to European cities. No other guide has the sheer quantity of facts. For people who want to know why a building is where it…

  • The Venetian Republic in times of plague

    The Venetian Republic in times of plague

    The Venetian Republic had to take steps to contain infection in the city as early as the 15th century. Their dependence on trade, bringing merchant ships from the East, meant that they were particularly vulnerable to the spread of disease (just as we are told today that globalisation has favoured…

  • Artemisia Gentileschi

    Artemisia Gentileschi

    This month, a new exhibition devoted to the art of the 17th-century painter Artemisia Gentileschi was to have opened at the National Gallery in London. Blue Guides was to have visited the exhibition and posted a review of it. That will now have to wait. Artemisia Gentileschi features in many…

  • Letter from Italy

    Virtual museum tours: some of the best For professional guides in Italy this is, of course, a period in which they suddenly find themselves without work. However many museums, while closed to the public, have made it possible not only to consult their catalogues or browse the collections online but…

  • Florence: Forged in Fire

    There are just a few days left to catch this exhibition in Palazzo Pitti (Forged in Fire. Bronze sculpture in Florence under the last Medici; on until 12th January 2020), which illustrates the bronze sculpture made for the Medici court in the 17th and 18th centuries, some of the most…

  • Food guide for River Cafรฉ

    One of London’s most prestigious and established Italian restaurants choses Blue Guide Italy Food Companion for its 2019 gift hamper. The River Cafรฉ of Hammersmith produces an annual Limited Edition Gift Box “packed full of the Italian ingredients we carefully source and use every day in the River Cafe kitchen”. Blue…

  • SPQR and expressions of Rome

    SPQR and expressions of Rome

    As work for the 12th edition of Blue Guide Rome goes full steam ahead, we found ourselves coming up time and time again against the letters SPQR, reproduced all over the city, on lamp posts, manhole covers and public fountains, not to mention in ancient inscriptions. Here is a little…

  • News from Florence

    News from Florence

    For anyone taking advantage of the relevant calm in Florence this month (when the queue outside the Accademia, the cityโ€™s most famous gallery, is usually minimalโ€”though it is still always worth booking your visit online) there is a fascinating little exhibition now running (until 5 May).. What brings these eight…

  • Lorenzo Lotto: Portraits

    Lorenzo Lotto: Portraits

    โ€œLorenzo Lotto. Portraitsโ€ is the title of an exhibition currently running at the National Gallery in London. It has come from the Prado in Madrid, in slightly slimmed-down form. Not all of the works on show in the Prado can be seen in London (the catalogue is teasingly tantalising in…

  • Leonardo’s Leicester Codex

    Leonardo’s Leicester Codex

    The celebrations to mark the 500th anniversary of the death of Leonardo da Vinci (1452โ€“1519) have already begun, with the Uffiziโ€™s exhibition of the Leicester Codex. Purchased in 1717 by Thomas Coke, Earl of Leicester, the Codex was preserved in the UK by the family until it was sold to…

  • A tale of two Camparis

    A tale of two Camparis

    Monday in Milan was forecast to be the “apex” of Northern Italy’s recent stormy weather.  It did not disappoint, with poor light, driving rain and strong winds. Not an ideal morning to find oneself exposed to the elements armed only with a โ‚ฌ3 folding umbrella, much of the time blown…

  • Best restaurants in Brescia

    The real highlight of Brescia, capital of the Lombard province of the same name, must be its recently re-opened Pinacoteca Tosio Martinengo – one of the best provincial art museums of the world. But to read about that you will have to buy the new Blue Guide Lombardy, Milan and the…

  • Extreme dairy farming in Sauris

    Extreme dairy farming in Sauris

    Visitors to the holiday resort of Forni di Sopra in the Carnic Dolomites, close to the source of the Tagliamento river, will be surprised to see that there is not much of a river in town. This is because a large proportion of the water is tapped at source and…

  • Islamic Art in Florence

    Islamic Art in Florence

    The world of Islamic art has been explored in Florence this summer in a major exhibition (Islamic Art and Florence from the Medici to the 20th century, open until 23rd September), divided between the Uffizi Gallery (the Aula Magliabecchiana exhibition space on the ground floor, so accessible directly from the…

  • The Wonders of Pontormo

    The Wonders of Pontormo

    A tiny exhibition in Florence this summer, which is a joy to visit (Incontri miracolosi. Pontormo dal disegno alla pittura), is running at Palazzo Pitti. In just one room and with only ten works on show, it is curated by Bruce Edelstein (and is on view until 29th July). Here…

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