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Italy Purchases Rare Caravaggio Portrait For $34.7 M.
(MENAFN- USA Art News) Italy Buys Rare Portrait of Future Pope Urban VIII for Palazzo Barberini Collection
A portrait of a man who would later become Pope Urban VIII has entered Italy’s public holdings after the state acquired the painting in a deal the country’s culture ministry characterized as among the largest sums it has ever paid for a single artwork.
The work depicts Monsignor Maffeo Barberini, the Florentine-born cleric who would eventually ascend to the papacy. In a statement announcing the acquisition, Italy’s culture minister, Alessandro Giuli, called the portrait of“exceptional importance,” underscoring the government’s view of the purchase as a significant act of cultural stewardship.
Until recently, the painting had remained out of public view in a private collection in Florence. It was first exhibited publicly in 2004 in Rome, a relatively late debut for a work now being positioned within one of the country’s most closely watched narratives: the preservation and presentation of Caravaggio and his circle.
Following the state’s purchase, the portrait has been transferred to the permanent collection of the Palazzo Barberini, the historic Roman residence of the Barberini family. The museum plans to exhibit it alongside other works by Caravaggio, placing the image of the future pope within the visual and political world that shaped early 17th-century Rome.
The move also reinforces Palazzo Barberini’s role as a key site for encountering Caravaggio in the city, where questions of attribution, provenance, and public access often intersect with national heritage policy. By bringing a once-private portrait into a state collection and situating it in a museum tied to the Barberini name, Italy is not only expanding a major public holding but also sharpening the historical frame through which visitors will encounter the period.
With the painting now secured for the Palazzo Barberini, attention will likely turn to how it is interpreted in the galleries: as an image of ecclesiastical ambition, a document of power in the making, and a new point of comparison within Rome’s dense constellation of Caravaggio-related works.
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