Cappella Brancacci
The Cappella Brancacci houses what art historians consider the most revolutionary frescoes in Western painting.
About Cappella Brancacci
The Cappella Brancacci houses what art historians consider the most revolutionary frescoes in Western painting. Masaccio's work here literally invented Renaissance art in the 1420s, introducing mathematical perspective, realistic human emotion, and three-dimensional figures that jump off the walls. You'll see the complete cycle depicting St. Peter's life, but the real showstopper is Masaccio's Expulsion from the Garden of Eden, where Adam and Eve's anguish feels genuinely heartbreaking. Masolino started the project, Masaccio transformed it, and Filippino Lippi finished it 50 years later.
You enter this tiny chapel inside the Carmine church and immediately understand why artists like Michelangelo came here to study. The space feels intimate, almost cramped, with only 30 people allowed in at once. The frescoes surround you on three walls, and the lighting (recently restored) brings out details that photographs can't capture. You'll spend your 30 minutes craning your neck upward, trying to absorb centuries of artistic innovation. The contrast between the three artists' styles becomes obvious once you know what to look for.
Most guides don't mention that entry costs €10, cash only at the door. The 30-minute time limit feels rushed when you're staring at art history being rewritten, but it keeps crowds manageable. Skip the audio guide (€3 extra) and just focus on the Expulsion and the Tribute Money scenes. The chapel gets stuffy with a full group, and guards are strict about the time limit, so don't expect flexibility.
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