Galleria Nazionale dell'Umbria

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Galleria Nazionale dell'Umbria
The Palazzo dei Priori, where the collection has been housed since 1878.
Map
Established1878
LocationCorso Vannucci 19,
0612 Perugia, Italy
Coordinates43°06′35″N 12°23′16″E / 43.1097°N 12.3879°E / 43.1097; 12.3879
TypeArt museum, Historic site
Websitewww.gallerianazionaleumbria.it

The Galleria Nazionale dell'Umbria is the Italian national paintings collection of Umbria, housed in the Palazzo dei Priori, Perugia, in central Italy. Its collection comprises the greatest representation of the Umbrian School of painting, ranging from the 13th to the 19th century, strongest in the fourteenth through sixteenth centuries. The collection is presented in 40 galleries in the Palazzo.

The collection's origins lie in the foundation of the Perugian Accademia del Disegno in the mid-16th century. The Academy was originally based in the Convento degli Olivetani at Montemorcino, where it began to assemble a collection of paintings and drawings. The town became part of the French department of Trasimène in 1798 and its religious houses were suppressed. This suppression was repeated by the united Kingdom of Italy from the 1860s onwards - both suppressions shifted a large number of paintings and artworks from church to state ownership.

In 1863, the civic paintings collection was formally named after Pietro Vannucci, but the problem of establishing an appropriate site to house the collection was not solved until 1878, when it moved into the third floor of the Palazzo dei Priori in the town centre. With the addition of acquisitions, donations and bequests, the pinacoteca became the Regia Galleria Vannucci in 1918, under the patronage of the king.

Collections

A brief overview of the museum in the official website lists:

First Floor

Second Floor

  • Halls 22-26 Renaissance masterworks: Perugino, Pintoricchio, and Francesco di Giorgio Martini
  • Halls 27–30 First half of 16th-century Umbrian painting
  • Halls 31-33 Umbrian Mannerism
  • Sala dell’Orologio
  • Halls 33-34 Martinelli Collection
  • Halls 35-37 1500-1600: Classicism and Caravaggisti; Refectory of the Priors
  • Hall 38 18th century
  • Hall 39 19th-century topography of Perugia
  • Hall 40 Luigi Carattoli Collection

External links