Italiano

State Museums

Venice Accademia Galleries
From 3.99

Venice Accademia Galleries

A very rich collection of Venetian paintings from Veneto as well, from the Bizantine and Gothic fourteenth century to the artists of the Renaissance, Bellini, Carpaccio, Giorgione, Veronese, Tintoretto and Tiziano until Gianbattista Tiepolo and the Vedutisti of the eighteenth century, Canaletto, Guardi, Bellotto, Longhi.

National Archaeological Museum of Naples
From 4.97

National Archaeological Museum of Naples

Admire the National Archaeological Museum of Naples without queueing up! The Museum has a particularly rich collection of Greek and Roman sculptures, deriving mostly from all around Vesuvius and the Phlegrean Fields.

Uffizi Gallery Tickets
From 9.45

Uffizi Gallery Tickets

Reserve your tickets for the Uffizi Gallery in Florence and visit it without queueing up! Do not waste your precious vacation time! Buy now tickets online through our easy system and you will have fast access to the masterpieces of Uffizi.

From 2.50

Capodimonte Museum

The Museo di Capodimonte is one of the most important Italian museums; its art collection is made by the Farnese and Borbone collections. The museum preserves also a series of paintings coming from Neapolitan churches, among them two Caravaggio masterpieces.

From 4.97

Royal Palace

Admire the Royal Palace without queueing up! When Naples is viewed from the sea one building in particular strikes the eye: the long pink and grey facade of the Royal Palace, decorated with the trellises of the hanging gardens on the first floor.

From 4.97

Saint Martin National Museum and Charterhouse

Admire the Saint Martin National Museum and Charterhouse without queueing up!

From 1.50

Duca di Martina Museum

Visit the Duca di Martina Museum without queuing up

From 4.50

Leonardo Da Vinci's Last Supper + Brera Art Gallery

Combo ticket to visit Leonardo da Vinci's Last Supper and Brera Art Gallery. Leonardo da Vinci's masterpiece, the Last Supper (in Italian, Cenacolo Vinciano), is located in the refectory of the 15th century Church of Santa Maria delle Grazie. The Brera Art Gallery is the main museum of Milan, and one of the most important of the world for its prestigious collections of ancient and modern painting. Collections come from the concentration in this building of painting required to churches and convents during Napoleon government.

From 9.49

The Accademia Gallery

Admire the original David (and other Michelangelo's masterpieces) without queuing up! Unforgettable experience...... In the heart of the city, it hosts the examples of paintings and sculptures by the great masters of the Florentine 14th and 15th centuries who have made Florence the capital of art.

From 3.98

Colosseum: guided visit for individuals

Guided visit to the Colosseum for individuals: the Colosseum is probably the most famous monument in the world: this elliptical colossal construction, with a height of 48mt, has impressed and fascinated men of all Ages.

From 3.98

Hadrian's Villa

Admire Hadrian Villa without queueing up! Emperor Hadrian built this country villa for himself and his court, and it bears unique testimony to the grandeur and architectural and decorative characteristics of the period. Today it exists as an immense park, extending over 80 hectares and dotted with several Roman ruins as well as spas and houses from the 1700s and all set in an environment charged with ancient fascination.

From 3.95

Ca' d'Oro - Franchetti Gallery

An ancient patrician residence of the fifteenth-century gathers the art collection which Baron Giorgio Franchetti gave the State: in this house, decorated with a Venetian Gothic style, through fascinating architectonical glimpses, it is possible to admire paintings of the Venetian school among which the famous San Sebastiano by Andrea Mantegna, works of the Tuscan and the Flemish school, wonderful bronze statues and Renaissance statues as well. There is also an interesting collection of ceramics found  in the Venetian lagoon

From 8.49

Palatina Gallery and Modern Art Gallery

Admire two important art collection in the gorgeous Palazzo Pitti without queueing up! Situated in the first great square in the area that the Florentines call "Diladdarno" - beyond the Arno - Palazzo Pitti dominates uncontested by a small hill at the feet of Boboli.

From 1.70

Palestrina Museum

Admire the Palestrina Museum without queuing up: the museum is located inside the Palazzo Barberini-Colonna, which was built on top of the sanctuary known as ‘Fortuna Primigenia’. A visit to the museum will take you through a series of themes fundamental to the history of Rome: the cult of fortune, sculpture, written documents both secular and religious, sanctuaries.

From 1.30

Villa Gregoriana

Admire Villa Gregoriana without queuing up: The park was created in 1835 by order of pope Gregory XVI following the umpteenth flooding of the Aniene. It was decided to reorder the river bed and to transform a beautiful, but dangerous site into a model of integration between nature and artistic invention.

From 1.50

Pignatelli Cortes Museum

Visit the Pignatelli Cortes Museum withou queuing up

From 0.90

Villa Jovis

Visit Villa Jovis without queuing up

From 3.00

Brera Art Gallery

The Pinacoteca is the main museum of Milan, and one of the most important of the world for its prestigious collections of ancient and modern painting. Collections come from the concentration in this building of painting required to churches and convents during Napoleon government. As in Venice and Bologna, this art gallery had specific didactic purposes under Fine Arts Gallery direction.

From 7.98

Bargello Museum

The palace was built in 1255 on commission of Fazione del Popolo (People Guard) as fortress and arsenal to hold out against noble family of Florence. In 1865 a superb collection of sculpture from the Florentine Renaissance and an assembly of small renaissance bronzes was installed, including works of art by Michelangelo, Donatello, Cellini and Gianbologna. From courtyard you can approach the first room with masterpieces by Michelangelo, "Tondo Pitti" and "Bacco", and many other mythological sculptures. On the ground floor, there are works of art by Cellini and Giambologna, including his "Mercurio (Mercury)" and "Firenze vittoriosa su Pisa

From 7.98

Medici Chapels

The Medici Chapels were built as a personal sepulchre of the Medici family right in the basilica of San Lorenzo, the one considered by the Medici as their private church and located in front of the residential palace in via Larga (presently via Cavour). The works began in March 1520 and were definitely completed by Giorgio Vasari in 1546, after Michelangelo, in 1534, had left Florence directed to Rome.

From 7.97

San Marco Museum

The convent was founded in the 13th century and was enlarged in 1437 by the architect Michelozzo, when Dominican monks from nearby Fiesole moved there invited by Cosimo the Elder who financed the whole rebuilt of the convent with a large sum of money. Consacreted in 1443, this building hosted personalities like S. Antonino Pierozzi, Bishop of Florence, Beato Angelico and later Girolamo Savonarola.
Opened to the public in 1869, after long structural and fresco restoration projects, the Museum of San Marco houses the largest collection of sacred art in Florence.

From 7.97

Archaeological Museum

A visit to the Archeological Museum is a trip, a leap through the times of peoples now gone and cultures extinct, but deeply imprinted in the memory of man. Particular information is available to the visitor in each room.

From 7.97

Opificio delle Pietre Dure

The Museum annexed to the Opificio delle Pietre Dure, currently a modern centre specialising in conservation, directly derives from the manufactory for the artistic production and workmanship of semiprecious stones which was officially founded in 1588 by Ferdinand I de’ Medici. The rooms created out of the great hall document works produced in the Grand-ducal Medici and Lorraine periods, whereas the 19th century rooms contain works of the post-Unification period.

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