Pinacoteca Nazionale di Bologna
Bologna's top art museum houses the world's finest collection of Bolognese School paintings, spanning five centuries in a beautifully converted 17th-century Jesuit building.
About Pinacoteca Nazionale di Bologna
Bologna's top art museum houses the world's finest collection of Bolognese School paintings, spanning five centuries in a beautifully converted 17th-century Jesuit building. You'll find Raphael's Ecstasy of Saint Cecilia, multiple masterpieces by Guido Reni, and works by the Carracci family who revolutionized Italian art. The collection moves chronologically from medieval altarpieces to baroque drama, showing how Bologna became Italy's second most important art center after Florence.
The galleries flow logically through elegant rooms with high ceilings and excellent lighting that showcases the paintings well. You'll spend most of your time in the main halls where the big names hang, but the atmosphere stays intimate since crowds are manageable. The Raphael draws a small gathering, but you can usually get close enough for detailed viewing. Each room builds on the last, creating a genuine sense of artistic evolution.
Most guides suggest focusing on rooms 15-23, which contain the heavyweight pieces. You may want to skip the early medieval section, unless you're genuinely interested in 13th-century religious art – it's repetitive. Entry costs €6 and there's rarely a wait, although you might encounter crowds during university exam periods when art students visit in large numbers. The audio guide adds €4, but it's not essential as the wall texts are provided in decent English.
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