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St
Mark's square, the basilica and the doge's palace
St. Mark's square was the political and religious center of the
Republic of Venice; since ancient times it has been a place extraordinarily
rich in historical and artistic value: we shall visit the basilica
with its precious mosaics and the ducal palace with its well-known
Bridge of Sighs, the Procuratie palaces and the Napoleonic Wing,
the Clock Tower, the Campanile and the Marciana National Library.
You can decide whether to include in the tour the visit to the
doge's palace inside or continue our walk through campi and campielli
to the Rialto area.
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Canal
Grande
The main street in Venice is of course a waterway. Visiting Venice
from the water level is certainly the best way to get close to
the city and its most magical dimension. The Grand Canal was defined
as "the most beautiful street in the world": here palaces, churches
and the few campi show their most important and richly decorated
façade to the people passing by. The tour is on a boat and includes
several variations which we can choose together, passing through
side canals, re-entering and leaving the Grand Canal in order
to see more Venetian corners.
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The
Frari Church and the Scuola of San Rocco
The tour starts at the Frari campo:
the signs of the foreign communities that lived here in the past
characterize the square and its history. Inside the Frari church,
it is possible to retrace the development of the history of Venice
as well as that of the Venetian art (and not only Venetian) from
the 13th to the 19th century - in particular, you can admire the
masterpieces by Giovanni Bellini and Titian. Then, around the
corner, we enter San Rocco campo where we can visit the site of
the much celebrated San Rocco brotherhood, internally decorated
with Tintoretto's masterpieces in the late Renaissance.
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Ca'
Rezzonico: the museum of the 18th century
The
Museum of 18th Century is set in one of the most beautiful palaces
on the Grand Canal in Venice, Ca' Rezzonico. The Rezzonico family
were rich merchants who became part of the new aristocracy. They
were not Venetian, but thanks to their extraordinary wealth, they
could buy a noble title, and they lived in this splendid dwelling,
which was completed by the architect Giorgio Massari in 1756.
The palace has been the site of the Museum of the 18th Century
since 1936. This is where you can admire the splendours of that
age, looking at the masterpieces by Tiepolo, Guardi, Longhi, Rosalba
Carriera, Giambattista Pazzetta and Canaletto, as well as its
original furniture, elegant staircases and large rooms and above
all, the beautiful ballroom.
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The
Accademia Art Gallery
The most important art museum in
Venice is situated in the ancient site of the Scuola of Charity.
Here the masterpieces of Venetian painting (and not just Venetian)
produced from the origins till the end of the Republic of Venice,
are preserved and protected. Works by Giorgione, Bellini, Carpaccio,
Titian, Tintoretto, Veronese, Tiepolo and many other artists can
be seen together with temporary exhibits on specific themes.
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The
Church of San Giorgio Maggiore & the Giorgio Cini Foundation
The Church of San Giorgio Maggiore is on the island opposite St.
Markos Square. The Venetian government allowed the Benedictine
monks to build their church and monastery in the year 982. The
church was rebuilt on several occasions, and its final version
was designed by Andrea Palladio. Inside the church you can admire
two masterpieces by Tintoretto and wonderful wooden choir stalls.
At the side of the church, in the old monastery structure, there
is the Giorgio Cini Cultural Foundation. The tour can then move
into the cloisters and the library planned by Baldassarre Longhena.
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