Every time I am in Florence, I return to the Bargello. It is not a large museum. It does not have the crowds of the Uffizi. And yet, it holds something that feels closer to the core of the Renaissance: sculpture as thought made physical. Michelangelo is there. Donatello is there. But for me, it is Giambologna. His bronze Mercury — balanced on a breath, one foot resting on a gust of wind, the body spiralling upward as if gravity were merely a suggestion — is one of those works that seem almost implausible. Not only as art, but as physics. Perhaps that is why it has been copied so many times. It invites repetition, almost demands it. As if each copy were an attempt to understand how such lightness could be cast in bronze. This time, I gave in. I bought a small version. Not the original, of course, but something closer to the miniature variants also present in the museum — a version scaled to the desk rather than the piazza. There is something slightly paradoxical about bringing Mercury home. A god of movement, reduced to an object of stillness. And yet, perhaps that is precisely the point. Because what we take with us from places like Bargello is not the object itself, but the attempt to hold on to a moment of attention.

04/21/2026 11:27:12


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