(ANSA) - Florence, March 5 - Botticelli's Adoration of the
Magi, Titian's Venus and Cupid with Partridge and Tintoretto's
Leda and the Swan are among the Uffizi Gallery jewels due to set
off on an 18-month tour of China this month.
Over 80 works spanning five centuries of Italian art
history will travel around the country, starting with an
exhibition at the Shanghai Museum before moving on to Shenyang,
Guangzhou, Chengdu and Beijing.
''The long voyage of these paintings is like a Florentine
and Italian delegation to this noble country, so rich in
traditions, and a pledge of intense cultural and human exchanges
in the future," said Florentine Museums Chief Cristina Acidini.
While most of the 50 artists whose work will be on display
are from Italy, the tour includes a number of paintings by
Flemish, French and Spanish artists in the Uffizi's collection.
"It's a wide chronological arc and a huge and varied choice
of artists and styles to offer visitors a look at art and
culture from the old continent up to the contemporary period,"
said Uffizi Director Antonio Natali, who is curating the tour.
He added that the paintings had been selected to provide a
unique opportunity for the Chinese public to admire works by the
great masters of European art without depriving visitors to the
Uffizi itself.
"The paintings that will leave Florence, while of high
artistic value, are all preserved in places outside the circuit
of the rooms open to the everyday public," Natali said.
As part of collaboration fostered by the show, China will
donate 100,000 euros to restore Uffizi art works, he added.
The exhibition has been divided into three sections, with
the first focusing on landscape paintings from the 15th to the
20th centuries.
In addition to Botticelli and Titian, highlights include
The Tower at Marghera from 18th-century Venetian landscape
master Canaletto, as well as a 1942 aerial view of trees bending
in the wind by leading Futurist artist Giacomo Balla.
Still life paintings from over two centuries feature in the
show's second section, with portraits of fruit and flowers
accompanied by numerous animal images, from fish and butterflies
to snakes and parrots.
Several works give visitors a peek into Italian 17th
century pantries, including Jacopo da Empoli's painting of a
larder full of strung-up poultry, racks of ribs, a pig's head
and a lone trotter.
The final section features portraits and self-portraits
from an Uffizi collection begun by Cardinal Leopoldo de' Medici
in the 17th century and continuing to the present day.
While many of the works featured draw on the collection's
nucleus of 15th- and 16th-century paintings, a handful of more
modern works round off the show, including self-portraits by
Giulio Aristide Sartorio and Balla.
The section also includes the only work on the tour from
outside Europe - a self-portrait by Columbian Art Deco artist
Sergio Trujillo Magnenat, who died in 1999.
From The Collections of the Uffizi Gallery. The Genres of
Painting: Landscape, Still Life and Portrait Paintings runs at
the Shanghai Museum from March 10-June 6 before continuing its
tour of China until August 2011.
photo: Titian's Venus and Cupid with Partridge