Discover the best top things to do in City of Venice, Italy including Collezioni della Fondazione di Venezia, Le Stanze Del Vetro, Ca' Rezzonico, Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Museo Querini Stampalia, Palazzo Fortuny (Pesaro degli Orfei), Deposito del Museo Diocesano d'Arte Sacra Sant'Apollonia, Palazzo Mocenigo, Museum of Icons, Museo Correr.
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5.0 based on 47 reviews
Le Stanze del Vetro (The Glass Rooms) is dedicated to Exhibitions of Glass. It is located behind the church on the island of Saint Giorgio Maggiore opposite the Doges Palace in the Historic Centre of Venice. From the water bus stop for line No 2 in front of the church walk to the left round the side of the church to find the Glass rooms to the right. They generally have two exhibitions per year. One which runs from September to the following January is devoted to a glass designer, or designers from Murano. Recent examples are the Cappellin workshop, the designer Carlo Scarpa, the Venini workshop many designers. The current exhibition is on Thomas Stearns for Venini. The other exhibition runs from April to July is devoted to other European glass designers and workshops. The space comprises 7 or 8 rooms and ip to 300 works are often displayed with excellent background information, sketches and drawings also exhibited . Collections displayed are assembled from loans from many private and public collections throughout the world. The exhibition is a free and open every day except Wednesday. I recommend these excellent exhibitions as an opportunity to see works that are otherwise often only seen in books . A first rate series of catalogues have been produced and many are available and are extremely good value. The exhibition space is run jointly by the Cini Foundation in Venice and the Pentagram Stiftung.
4.5 based on 1,816 reviews
Immerse yourself in Venice's Age of Decadence with a visit to this lavish palace of the Venetian aristocracy Rezzonico, which houses an unsurpassed collection of eighteenth-century Venetian art.
Interesting paintings, well labelled and explained in several languages. Porcelain of many makes, furniture. Nice and cool when really hot outside. Has a lift to get you to all floors. Friendly and helpful staff. Nice cafe with friendly waiter. Is directly at vaporetti stop of same name. Strongly recommend.
4.5 based on 8,434 reviews
This satellite gallery of the famous Guggenheim in New York occupies the 17th-century Customs House in Venice, featuring modern and contemporary works of art.
This is well worth a visit for any fans of surrealist art! Married to Max Ernst - Peggy Guggenheim collated a fantastic art collection - Magritte, Mondrian, Pollock, Dali and Miro to name a few are all amongst the notable collection.
4.5 based on 250 reviews
In the heart of Venice, near Piazza San Marco, is one of the most interesting cultural complexes in the city: Palazzo Querini Stampalia, the home of the Foundation of the same name created in 1868 by Count Giovanni.The Library, with around 340.000 volumes for public use, the Museum with its eighteenth century and neoclassical furniture, an area for temporary exhibitions and the new Auditorium designed by Mario Botta are housed there.
A hidden gem in Venice, five minutes walk from the Palasso Grimaldi and roughly half way between Rialto and St Mark on a route tourists don't follow, the Fondazione Querini Stampalia is easy to miss even when you are in the square in front of it due to its discrete entrance from a bridge across the rio. The Foundation is a cultural institution founded in 1869 by Conte Giovanni (Count John), the last descendant of the Venetian Querini Stampalia family. Italian architect Carlo Scarpa, famous for his sensitive modern additions to historic buildings, designed modernist additions historic buildings to create a cultural complex which connects into the historic home of the Querini Stampalia family, displaying historic collections and supporting a variety of different activities and exhibitions. It also houses a loan collection from the Intesa Sanpaolo banking group. For the Biennale, modern art includes interventions and photographs by Roman Opalka in the historic rooms and a major exhibition of the work of the German painter Jorg Immendorff, while there is also an explanatory display on the Count and his library and modern art on display in Scarpa's ground floor spaces at the level of the rio. The admission charge allows admission to all the exhibition and museum areas, plus there is a cafe. There is much more to see than you might appreciate so plan to spend a serious amount of time in this fascinating complex.
4.5 based on 256 reviews
Situated in the Gothic palazzo Pesaro degli Orfei in Campo San Beneto; the building was transformed by Mariano Fortuny into his own photography, set-design, stagecraft, fabric-creation and painting atelier: the building still testify to all of these activities, with various art and tapestries collections. The museum also hosts temporary art exhibitions, all of which closely connected to the spirit of its founder. Now closed due to maintenance work. It will reopen on December 14th, with the exhibition FUTURUINES
The fabric and photographs, paintings, artifacts— oh my what a lots of wonderful real things to get close to without the crowds. In depth story about the family and the fabric designs. Peggy Guggenheim had a dress made in the tiny pleated art (something currently an inspiration for a Navajo Native American friend who is a fashion designer). I say a dress made in this style in a Fortuny store in the San Marco area, as viable a design as when originally conceived. Hard not to "feel the goods" in the museum, fingers simply ache to want to touch! The early photos and the art by the elder Fortuny were additional glimpses into areas we cannot otherwise now know.
4.5 based on 509 reviews
A patrician residence at San Stae, Palazzo Mocenigo houses valuable 18th century artworks and is also home to the Study Centre for the History of Textiles and Costumes. A fine selection of rare textiles and costumes of particular importance are displayed. The collection is laid out with a significant importance given to garments and accessories. Mainly of Venetian origin, the works are often embellished with lace and embroidery, skills of several artisans who made such a contribution to that refined luxury and elegance for which the Venetians of those days were famous for.
Venice has a surfeit of riches - especially when it comes to historic attractions. The “Premier League” ones such as the Doge’s Palace, St. Mark’s etc. are so popular, that a visit requires some prior planning – or a long time standing in line. If you don’t have the appetite for either, then the Palazzo Mocenigo could be the place you are looking for. You just alight from the #1 vaporetto at San Stae, walk up the “salizada” to the right of the church and within seconds – you’re there. The Palazzo is billed as being the best preserved example, of a noble Venetian family’s residence. A family that produced an impressive seven Doge’s, during the 15th through to the 18th centuries. On that count alone, it does not disappoint. The rooms are obviously a shadow of their “peak opulence” but are still very impressive. Throw in the artworks, a display of 18th century clothing and an interesting exhibition on the development of the perfume industry and you have a very enjoyable couple of hours. The whole experience was amplified by the unaggressive stewardship of the staff. On so many occasions, a visit to an attraction has been ruined by the wail of proximity alarms, or the piercing gaze of overly cautious guardians. Not that I blame establishments for this, tourists can be monumentally stupid at times. Plonking their derrieres on delicate antique furniture and above all, exhibiting a curious desire to touch anything within reach. On the whole - we get what we deserve. Palazzo Mocenigo may not be at the top of Venice’s “must see” list of attractions but a visit should satisfy almost everybody’s expectations – and then some.
4.0 based on 1,751 reviews
Museo Correr is situated in the ex-Royal Palace in Piazza San Marco and includes the Napoleonic Wing and the Procuratie Nuove. It was created out of the art collection which Teodoro Correr left to the city in 1830 and offers various tours: from the neoclassical rooms, with sculptures by Antonio Canova, to historical collections on the city’s institutions, urban history and daily life. The picture gallery, one of the most fascinating collections of Venetian painting from its origins to the early 16th century, includes works by Lorenzo Veneziano, the Bellini family, Carpaccio, Cosmè Tura, Antonello da Messina and Lorenzo Lotto, displayed in an interesting layout by Carlo Scarpa.
Included with Museum Pass, this is a gorgeous space that takes up two or three sides of St Mark’s Square. Some of the exhibits are fascinating but it is just as interesting for its views sneaked through the windows and the wonderful rooms you walk through. A perfect taste of sixteenth/seventeenth century Venice.
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