I didn't travel anywhere this weekend. On Saturday, I went to Pitti Palace, which was the palace of the Medici family. The Medici's ruled most of Tuscany at some point. Their palace is actually connected to the The Uffizi, which was like an office?, through a special bridge over Ponte Vecchio. Now Uffizi is the huge art museum where I saw Bottecelli's Venus. And Pitti Palace is also a museum now. And the Boboli Gardens I went to earlier are in the Medici's backyard. I was really excited for the Gallery of Modern Art at Pitti, because I'm a little renaissanced-out. However, the modern art was from 1700-1920. Everything here is so old, that the 1700s are considered "modern." America is such a baby country. I also ate my daily kebab on Saturday.Also on Saturday, we had an impromptu photoshoot. It was pretty silly. I used everything Tyra taught me like, "Act like one body part is in pain, but pretty" and "Smile with your eyes." Prepare yourself for secondhand embarrassment.
On Sunday I slept too much, for no good reason. However, when I finally awoke, I decided to go to La Specola. I had read about it in some guidebooks, and it was one of the few things I HAD to do while I was here. Really, my list was 1. Cinque Terre 2. La Specola. Here is how Wikipedia, in its infinite wisdom, describes La Specola: "Today the museum spans 34 rooms and contains not only zoological subjects, such as a stuffed hippopotamus (a 17th-century Medici pet, which once lived in the Boboli Gardens), but also a collection of anatomical waxes, an art developed in Florence in the 17th century for the purpose of teaching medicine. This collection is very famous worldwide for the incredible accuracy and realism of the details, copied from real corpses."
It was the creepiest thing ever. I loved it, but I expect nightmares in my future. Basically it was a Museum of Natural History, that they haven't touched since the 1700s. Picture all these tall glass cases framed in old wood, filled with taxidermied animals. And taxidermied animals that look kind of mangy and a lot of the fur has been rubbed off. Then add 300 year old wax anatomy figures, also in glass cases, that are displayed on stained satin beds. But wait, I have illegal pictures! They said don't take pictures, so I used my phone.