The exhibition showcases around 90 works from the collections of the Uffizi, Palazzo Pitti, and other museums, including a rich selection of waxworks, paintings, sculptures, cameos, and works in semi-precious stones, many of which were originally displayed in the Tribuna but were removed from the collections in the late 18th century.
An entire room will be dedicated to the great waxwork master, Gaetano Giulio Zumbo, featuring a recent acquisition by the Galleries: La Corruzione dei Corpi (The Corruption of Bodies), an extraordinary piece that embodies the Baroque intensity with which the artist explored the themes of life and death.
With Cera una volta, the Uffizi brings back to the public a forgotten chapter of Italian sculpture, in which wax — the quintessentially ephemeral material — becomes a symbol of time, beauty, and memory.