Museo Poldi Pezzoli
The Poldi Pezzoli is what happens when a 19th-century aristocrat with impeccable taste and deep pockets creates his dream home.
About Museo Poldi Pezzoli
The Poldi Pezzoli is what happens when a 19th-century aristocrat with impeccable taste and deep pockets creates his dream home. Gian Giacomo Poldi Pezzoli filled this elegant palazzo with Renaissance masterpieces, medieval weapons, Persian carpets, and Venetian glass - it's like wandering through a wealthy collector's private residence rather than a formal museum. The star piece is Pollaiolo's ethereal Portrait of a Young Woman, but you'll also find works by Botticelli, Mantegna, and Giovanni Bellini scattered throughout rooms that feel more like a sophisticated apartment than gallery spaces.
You move through intimate chambers where each room has its own personality - the Armory bristles with medieval suits and swords, while the Golden Room drips with baroque excess. The scale stays human-sized, never overwhelming, and the lighting creates an almost conspiratorial atmosphere as you discover treasures tucked into corners. Unlike Milan's massive museums, this feels personal and slightly secretive, as if you're exploring someone's actual home while they're away.
At €14 for adults (€7 on Wednesdays), it's pricey for the size, but the quality makes up for quantity. Most people rush to the famous portrait and miss the extraordinary clock collection upstairs - those timepieces are genuinely spectacular. Skip the audio guide and just wander; the magic here is in stumbling upon unexpected beauty, not following prescribed routes.
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