, where he lived and died in Florence. Between 1955 and 1963, Pope-Hennessy's three-volume
Introduction to Italian Sculpture was published, covering Gothic, Renaissance and High Renaissance and Baroque sculpture. The following year, he was named
Slade Professor of Fine Art at the
University of Cambridge. Pope-Hennessy served as the director of the
Victoria and Albert Museum between 1967 and 1973, and then as
director of the British Museum from 1974 until 1976. There, he was nicknamed by colleagues as "The Pope". He is the only person to have served as head of both museums. Traumatised by the murder of his
gay brother
James in January 1974, Pope-Hennessy left Britain in 1976 for good. In 1986,
Philippe de Montebello, director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, created the John Pope-Hennessy Curatorship of European Paintings. Pope-Hennessy also served on the boards of the
Venice in Peril Fund and
Save Venice Inc., two
non-profit organisations dedicated to the conservation and preservation of Venetian cultural heritage. Besides his own scholarly publications, some of which became classics and were often reprinted, and his responsibilities as a museum director, he provided his name and expertise for others (such as
Sotheby's or the
Collins Encyclopedia of Antiques). He also wrote a foreword for
Helmut Gernsheim's photographies of
Beautiful London, contributed to a book on
Westminster Abbey (1972), and wrote an autobiography that was published in 1991. ==Death and legacy==