frescoes and
stucco work by Pietro da Cortona The Palatine Gallery, the main gallery of Palazzo Pitti, contains a large ensemble of
over 500 principally Renaissance paintings, which were once part of the Medicis' and their successors' private art collection. The gallery, which overflows into the royal apartments, contains works by
Raphael,
Titian,
Perugino (
Lamentation over the Dead Christ),
Correggio,
Peter Paul Rubens, and
Pietro da Cortona. The character of the gallery is still that of a private collection, and the works of art are displayed and hung much as they would have been in the grand rooms for which they were intended rather than following a chronological sequence, or arranged according to school of art. The finest rooms were decorated by Pietro da Cortona in the high
baroque style. Initially Cortona frescoed a small room on the
piano nobile called the Sala della Stufa with a series depicting the Four Ages of Man which were very well received; the
Age of Gold and
Age of Silver were painted in 1637, followed in 1641 by the
Age of Bronze and
Age of Iron. They are regarded among his masterpieces. The artist was subsequently asked to fresco the grand ducal reception rooms; a suite of five rooms at the front of the palazzo. In these five Planetary Rooms, the hierarchical sequence of the deities is based on
Ptolomeic cosmology; Venus, Apollo, Mars, Jupiter (the Medici Throne room) and Saturn, but minus Mercury and the Moon which should have come before Venus. These highly ornate ceilings with frescoes and elaborate stucco work essentially celebrate the Medici lineage and the bestowal of virtuous leadership. Cortona left Florence in 1647, and his pupil and collaborator,
Ciro Ferri, completed the cycle by the 1660s. They were to inspire the later Planet Rooms at
Louis XIV's
Palace of Versailles, designed by
Charles Le Brun. The collection was first opened to the public in the late 18th century, albeit rather reluctantly, by Grand Duke
Leopold I, Tuscany's first enlightened ruler, keen to obtain popularity after the demise of the Medici. •
Room of Castagnoli: named after the painter of the ceiling frescoes. In this room are displayed portraits of the Medici and Lorraine ruling families, and the Table of the Muses, a masterwork of stone-inlaid table made by the
Opificio delle Pietre Dure between 1837 and 1851. •
Room of the Ark: contains a painting by
Giovan Battista Caracciolo (17th century). In 1816, the ceiling was frescoed by
Luigi Ademollo with the
Transportation of the Ark of the Covenant Containing the Tablets of the Law. •
Room of Psyche: named after ceiling frescoes by
Giuseppe Collignon; it contains paintings by
Salvator Rosa from 1640–1650. •
Hall of Poccetti: the frescoes on the vault were once ascribed to
Bernardino Poccetti, but are now attributed to
Matteo Rosselli. In the center of the hall is a table (1716) commissioned by Cosimo III. In the hall are also some works by Rubens and
Pontormo. •
Room of Prometheus: named after the subject of the frescoes by Collignon (19th century), it contains a large collection of
tondi (circular paintings); among them are the
Bartolini Tondo by
Filippo Lippi (15th century), two portraits by
Botticelli and paintings by Pontormo and
Domenico Beccafumi. •
Room of Justice: has a ceiling frescoed by Antonio Fedi (1771–1843), and displays portraits (16th century) by
Titian,
Tintoretto and
Paolo Veronese. •
Room of Ulysses: frescoed in 1815 by Gaspare Martellini, it contains early works by
Filippino Lippi and
Raphael. •
Room of the Iliad: contains the
Panciatichi Assumption and the
Passerini Assumption (–1523 and 1526 respectively) by
Andrea del Sarto, and paintings by
Artemisia Gentileschi (17th century). •
Room of Saturn: contains the
Portrait of Agnolo Doni (1506), the
Madonna della Seggiola (1516), and the
Portrait of Tommaso Inghirami (1516) by
Raphael; it also contains an
Annunciation (1528) by Andrea del Sarto, and
Christ and the Evangelists (1516) by
Fra Bartolomeo. •
Room of Jupiter: contains
La Velata, the famous portrait by Raphael (1516) which, according to
Giorgio Vasari, represents the artist's lover. Among the other works in the room are paintings by Rubens, Andrea del Sarto and Perugino. •
Room of Mars: contains allegorical paintings by Rubens of the
Consequences of War (hence the name of the room) and the
Four Philosophers (among them Rubens portrayed himself, on the left). On the vault is a fresco by
Pietro da Cortona, the
Triumph of the Medici. •
Room of Apollo: contains a
Madonna and Child with Saints (1522) by
Rosso Fiorentino, originally from the Church of
Santo Spirito, and two paintings by Titian: the
Penitent Magdalene and the
Portrait of a Young Englishman (between 1530 and 1540). •
Room of Venus: contains the
Venus Italica (1810) by
Antonio Canova, commissioned by Napoleon. On the walls are landscapes (1640–1650) by
Salvator Rosa and four paintings by Titian, 1510–1545. Among the Titian paintings is a
Portrait of Pope Julius II (1545) and
La Bella (1535). •
White Hall: once the ball room of the palace, is characterized by the white decorations and is often used for temporary exhibitions. The Royal Apartments include 14 rooms. They were redecorated in the
Empire style by the Savoy monarchs, but there are still some rooms retaining decorations and furniture from the age of the Medici. The Green Room was frescoed by
Castagnoli in the early 19th century. It exhibits an intarsia cabinet from the 17th century and a collection of gilded bronzes; the throne room was decorated for King Victor Emmanuel II of Italy and is characterized by the red brocade on the walls and by the Japanese and Chinese vases (17th–18th centuries). The Blue Room contains furniture from the 17th–18th centuries and portraits of members of the Medici family by
Justus Sustermans (1597–1681).
Principal works of art File:Madona del gran duque, por Rafael.jpg|Raphael
Madonna del Granduca. 84 × 55 cm. File:Madonna del Baldacchino.jpg|Raphael
Madonna of the Canopy. 276 × 224 cm. File:La velada, por Rafael.jpg|Raphael
Woman with a Veil. 82 × 60 cm. File:Raphael Madonna della seggiola.jpg|Raphael
Madonna della Seggiola. Diameter 71 cm. File:Raphael - Ezekiel's Vision.jpg|Raphael
Vision of Ezekiel. 41 × 30 cm. File:Inghirami Raphael.jpg|Raphael
Portrait of Tommaso Inghirami. 90 × 62 cm. File:Madonna Impannata.jpg|Raphael and Assistants''
Madonna dell'Impannata''. 158 × 125 cm. File:Raphael-LaDonnaGravida(1505-1506).jpg|Raphael
La Donna Gravida. 66 × 52 cm. File:Titian - Christ the Redeemer - WGA22796.jpg|Titian
Christ the Redeemer. 78 × 55 cm. File:Tizian 013.jpg|Titian
The Concert. 87 × 124 cm. File:Tizian - La Bella.jpg|Titian
La Bella. 100 × 75 cm. File:Tizian 071.jpg|Titian
Portrait of Vincenzo Mosti. 85 × 67 cm. File:Titian - Portrait of Pope Julius II - WGA22961.jpg|Titian
Portrait of Pope Julius II. 99 × 82 cm. File:Magdalena penitente, por Tiziano.jpg|Titian
Penitent Magdalene. 84 × 69 cm. File:Rubens - The Consequences of War.jpg|Peter Paul Rubens
Consequences of War. 206 × 342 cm. File:Rubens, sacra famiglia, pitti.jpg|Peter Paul Rubens
Madonna of the Basket. 114 × 80 cm. File:Anthony van Dyck - Portrait of Cardinal Guido Bentivoglio, 1623 - Galleria Palatina, Florence.jpg|Anthony van Dyck
Portrait of Cardinal Guido Bentivoglio. 195 × 147 cm. File:Lippi, tondo bartolini.jpg|Filippo Lippi
Bartolini Tondo. Diameter 135 cm File:Portrait of Fra Antonio Martelli-Caravaggio (1610).jpg|Caravaggio
Portrait of Fra Antonio Martelli. 118 × 95 cm. File:Giorgione, Three Ages.jpg|Giorgione
The Three Ages of Man. 62 × 77 cm. File:San Jerónimo, por Andrea del Verrocchio.jpg|Verrocchio
St. Jerome. 41 × 27 cm. File:Sleeping Cupid-Caravaggio (1608).jpg|Caravaggio
Sleeping Cupid. 72 × 105 cm. File:Paolo Veronese - Gentleman in a Lynx Fur - WGA24981.jpg|Paolo Veronese
Portrait of a Gentleman in a Fur. 140 × 107 cm. File:Fra Bartolomeo - Lamentation - WGA1369.jpg|Fra Bartolomeo
Lamentation. 158 × 199 cm. File:Andrea del Sarto - Pietà with Saints - WGA0395.jpg|Andrea del Sarto
Pietà with Saints. 239 × 199 cm. ==Other galleries==