ART AND ARCHITECTURE IN NORTHERN TUSCANY
- Allows for leisurely exploration of one of the most beautiful and engaging of Tuscan cities.
- Within magnificent ramparts, a treasury of sculpture, painting and architecture, Romanesque and Renaissance in particular.
- Excursions to Prato, Pistoia, Pisa and Barga and to two country villas.
Nowhere in Tuscany can claim to be undiscovered. Some places are more undiscovered than others, however, and for no good reason Lucca is one of the most underrated of ancient Tuscan cities. Many know of its exceptional attractions, but few allow themselves the opportunity of getting to know it properly. Only by staying for several nights, and by allowing time to absorb, observe and reflect can real familiarity develop – familiarity not only with its historic fabric and works of art but also with the rhythm of life of its current inhabitants. For Lucca is not a museum but an agreeable and vital lived-in town.
To the approaching visitor, Lucca immediately announces its distinctiveness and its historical importance, while at the same time secreting the true extent and glory of its built heritage. The perfectly preserved circumvallation of pink brick, ringed by the green sward of the grass glacis, is one of the most complete and formidable set of Renaissance ramparts in Italy.
Unlike many Tuscan cities, Lucca sits on the valley floor. This and the traces of the grid-like street pattern – albeit given a mediaeval inflection – betray its Roman origin. Within the walls, the city is a compelling masonry document of the Middle Ages. There is a superb collection of Romanesque churches with the distinctive Lucchese feature of tiers of arcades applied to the façades and flanks. There is good sculpture, too, including the exquisite Gothic tomb of Ilaria del Carretto, and some quite exceptional (and exceptionally early) panel paintings. Looming over the dense net of narrow streets are the imposing palazzi of the mercantile elite, including some grand ones from the age of Baroque.
The Romanesque theme of the tour will be continued on the excursions to the nearby cities of Prato, Pistoia and Pisa, where the style has its greatest manifestation in Tuscany in the ensemble of cathedral, baptistry and campanile (the now not-quite so-leaning tower) at Pisa. Likewise mediaeval sculpture features prominently in all these places.
The Renaissance is represented by some of the best loved works of the Florentine masters – by Filippo Lippi and Donatello at Prato cathedral, for example, by Masaccio in Pisa and by the della Robbia workshop in Pistoia. There are also visits to delightful little hill-top towns and to villas and gardens of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.