Museo Bandini
Museo Bandini sits in a 14th century palazzo in Fiesole and holds one of Tuscany's finest collections of medieval and early Renaissance art.
About Museo Bandini
Museo Bandini sits in a 14th century palazzo in Fiesole and holds one of Tuscany's finest collections of medieval and early Renaissance art. You'll find masterpieces by Taddeo Gaddi, Bernardo Daddi, and Lorenzo Monaco, plus exceptional della Robbia ceramics and wooden sculptures that most Florence museums don't have room to display. The collection spans three centuries of Tuscan religious art, from Byzantine influenced panels to early Renaissance innovations.
The museum feels like exploring a private collector's home rather than a formal institution. You'll move through intimate rooms where each piece gets proper breathing space, unlike the packed galleries downtown. The lighting is excellent, letting you study the intricate details in tempera paintings and glazed terra cottas. Most rooms stay blissfully quiet, with maybe five other visitors wandering the same spaces.
Honest talk: this isn't a quick photo stop, it's for people who actually want to look at art. The collection quality rivals the Uffizi for this period, but you'll spend 15 minutes studying pieces instead of fighting crowds for a glimpse. Entry costs 10 EUR, or 15 EUR combined with the Roman theater next door, which is absolutely worth the extra 5 EUR. Skip the audio guide and use that money for a coffee in the palazzo's courtyard afterward.
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