Cenacolo di Sant'Apollonia
This tiny former convent houses Andrea del Castagno's 1447 Last Supper fresco, one of Renaissance art's most psychologically intense works.
About Cenacolo di Sant'Apollonia
This tiny former convent houses Andrea del Castagno's 1447 Last Supper fresco, one of Renaissance art's most psychologically intense works. You'll find yourself face to face with a masterpiece that influenced Leonardo da Vinci himself. The fresco covers an entire wall of what was once the Benedictine nuns' dining hall, showing Judas isolated on the viewer's side of the table while the other apostles react with shock and anger. The painted marble backdrop and brutal emotional realism make this work more raw and powerful than most religious art in Florence.
The museum consists of just two small rooms, making your visit intimate and focused. You'll have the fresco mostly to yourself, able to study every detail of the apostles' expressions and Castagno's revolutionary perspective techniques. The silence in the former refectory adds gravity to the scene. Above the Last Supper, three smaller frescoes show the Crucifixion, Deposition, and Resurrection, completing the narrative.
Most guidebooks barely mention this place, which keeps crowds away but means you might walk right past it. Admission is completely free, making it one of Florence's best art bargains. The visit takes 20 minutes maximum, so don't plan your whole morning around it. Pair it with the nearby Mercato Centrale or use it as a quiet break between the chaos of San Lorenzo's markets.
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