Although Pietrasanta is a relatively small town, it feels almost absurdly dense with sculpture. You walk through medieval streets and small piazzas and suddenly encounter monumental bronze figures, experimental marble forms or strange contemporary works placed quietly between cafés, churches and ordinary daily life. Sculpture here is not hidden away inside museums. It is simply part of the town’s metabolism. One of the works that stayed with us most was Jørgen Haugen Sørensen’s La folla (“The Crowd”), which Jeanne is standing beside in one of the photos. The sculpture feels both ancient and strangely contemporary at the same time. Human figures almost dissolve into one another, merging into an anonymous mass. Something simultaneously human, tragic and unsettling. We also became very fond of Andrea Roggi’s The Albero della Pace (Tree of Peace), shown in the second photo. The tree growing organically out of a spherical form has something both poetic and cosmic about it — somewhere between planet, seed and olive tree. Only later did we realise that we had already encountered a monumental version of the same work earlier in Florence, on the corner of Via Lambertesca and Via dei Georgofili near the Uffizi. There was something beautiful about rediscovering the same artistic language across different cities and scales, as if the artwork itself continued a quiet conversation through Tuscany. Naturally we also visited the wonderful Museo dei Bozzetti. The museum is dedicated to bozzetti — sketches, plaster studies and prototype versions of sculptures that later become monumental works in bronze or marble. Several of the attached photos are from there. There is something deeply fascinating about seeing sculpture before it becomes “finished.” You see hesitation, experimentation, structural problems and artistic thinking normally hidden behind polished surfaces. Walking through the museum almost feels like entering the subconscious of sculpture itself. Another work that caught our attention was by the Danish sculptor Søren Georg Jensen — son of Georg Jensen. His abstract marble forms somehow balance geometry and organic softness at the same time. And suddenly yet another connection appears between Pietrasanta and Denmark, because a very similar sculpture by him can also be found at Langelinie in Copenhagen. Perhaps that is why Pietrasanta feels so alive artistically. Not as a place where finished artworks are simply exhibited, but as a place where you can still sense the process of making.

05/06/2026 17:46:12


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