Thomas J Price in Florence

  • When:   March 14, 2025 - September 14, 2025

Contemporary artArt Exhibitions in FirenzeFirenze


Thomas J Price in Florence
Thomas J Price in Florence Installation View, Palazzo Vecchio Firenze (2025) ©Thomas J Price. Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth 
ph. Ela Bialkowska OKNO Studio

Museo Novecento is pleased to present one of the most anticipated events of 2025 with the major exhibition of the renowned British sculptor Thomas J Price. As with past exhibitions featuring Jenny Saville, Rachel Feinstein, and Louise Bourgeois, the exhibition Thomas J Price in Florence, starting on Friday, March 14, will extend and engage with key locations in the historic center of Florence, including a major installation in Piazza della Signoria, where in previous years works by Jeff Koons, Jan Fabre, Urs Fischer, Francesco Vezzoli, and Henry Moore have been displayed. These works sparked much debate and, at the same time, accelerated the cultural renewal process the city had been longing for.


The great contemporary art returns to Palazzo Vecchio and Piazza della Signoria with the British sculptor Thomas J Price. Florence continues to confirm itself as a crossroads of new trends, a city with a rich past that is capable of looking to the present and the future. After Jeff Koons, Jan Fabre, Francesco Vezzoli, and Henry Moore, Piazza della Signoria becomes once again a stage for the contemporary, thanks to a monumental work by Price that embodies the challenges and dilemmas of today. Palazzo Vecchio also confirms itself as an extraordinary exhibition venue for contemporary art, fostering an intriguing dialogue between these years and the Renaissance, between eras and styles, continuing the city’s ongoing research, experimentation, and renewal,” emphasized Mayor Sara Funaro.

The contemporary is once again at the forefront in our city with the exhibition of British artist Thomas J Price, extending to its heart, Piazza Signoria,” said the Councilor for Culture Giovanni Bettarini. “The reflection on humanity and the individual accompanies this exhibition, which will be distributed throughout the city—from Palazzo Vecchio museum to Museo Novecento and Piazza della Signoria—engaging everyone in this cultural project that extends beyond designated spaces and interacts with the city. The invitation is to observe the work Time Unfolding in Piazza della Signoria, made of bronze with a golden patina, and then enter the museums, where other beautiful works by Price await.”

“British sculptor Thomas J Price has been commissioned to create a monumental sculpture for the modern-day agorá that is Piazza della Signoria, where the most famous masterpieces of Renaissance sculpture stand— from the copy of Michelangelo's David to Baccio Bandinelli's Heracles and Cacus, Benvenuto Cellini's Perseus, Giambologna’s Rape of the Sabines, and Ammannati's stunning Neptune Fountain, to the equestrian monument of Cosimo I by Giambologna, and Donatello's replica of Judith,” said Sergio Risaliti, director of Museo Novecento. “For the first time, a contemporary young woman will appear as the protagonist, ‘immortalized’ in a pose that is far from heroic or terrible, but one of everyday normalcy, almost detached from the imaginary world dominated by rhetorical figures, ancient mythologies, biblical characters, and symbolic devices that were meant to represent and celebrate power and the enemy. Thomas J Price’s work will be a significant conversation with the canons and aesthetic models that have defined the history of Western art for centuries, and which have been considered timeless and non-negotiable with other cultures. His language, radically contemporary, appropriates these 'ideal' forms to regenerate them, entrusting them with the celebration of identity in a public space that is also an open-air museum. For the first time in 600 years, the figure of a young woman of our time rises here: an image of everyday life that dialogues with heroic, biblical, or mythological figures. Her monumental size, posture, and gestures, the golden patina, and the fact that she is not installed on a pedestal but rests directly on the stones of the square, places her in an ‘other’ dimension, creating a short circuit between the passage of time (Time Unfolding, the title of the work) of life and sociality and the immobile eternity of the Renaissance sculptures that dominate the Piazza della Signoria scene. The statue will not have a base: her feet, wearing simple sandals, rest on the paving stones. Anyone will be free to interpret her looking at her phone as they wish: perhaps reading the news of what is happening in the world, perhaps looking at a map trying to orient themselves, reading an insight about one of the works in the Loggia dei Lanzi, or learning more about Thomas J Price’s work. This is not a figure attuned to the past or supernatural worlds, but one connected to the present. It is not a provocation but an unexpected presence, but real, that connects with the artistic stratification process—a defining quality of Piazza della Signoria—giving life to a relay between languages and styles. Time does not stop at the past, and the history of art continues to flow, embracing the cosmopolitan present, forcing it, anticipating it.”

Thomas J Price draws our attention to the psychological embodiment of his fictional characters, highlighting the intrinsic value of the individual and subverting hierarchical structures. His works, inspired by diverse sources, are developed through a hybrid approach combining traditional sculpture and intuitive digital technology. Price balances presentation methods, materials, and scale to challenge our expectations and offer opportunities for a deeper human connection. The artist forces the viewer to consider how and why things are made, incorporating references to ancient, classical, and neoclassical sculpture alongside a sophisticated understanding of the symbolic power of materials. He leaves open questions, inviting us to doubt our ideological certainties, which form the foundation of our absolute thoughts regarding hierarchies and moral certainties.
Famous for his large-scale figurative sculptures displayed in public spaces and museum halls, Price will bring to the symbolic square of the Renaissance a nearly 4-meter-tall female figure made of bronze with a gold patina, titled Time Unfolding.... read the rest of the article»

For Palazzo Vecchio, the artist has used traditional sculptural materials, such as bronze and marble, to create fictional characters that appear to be ordinary people. These characters, which combine undefined identities, invite reflection on preconceived attitudes toward power and value.

Through a Steady Gaze (2025), in polished Ming Green marble, Price enters into dialogue with the Sala Leone X, a room for state receptions and a symbol of the Medici family’s power and ties between Florence and the papacy. Opposite the frescoes celebrating Giovanni de’ Medici, elected pope in 1513 with the name Leone X, Price presents a critical reflection on the individuals that museums have represented throughout history. The anonymous yet universal face is a contrast to the portraits of illustrious men of the past, from princes Giulio de’ Medici to Pope Leo X, cardinals, dukes, painters and men of letters such as Pietro Bembo and Ludovico Ariosto.

The exhibition continues with five bronze heads exhibited on the Table of the Magistracy in the Sala delle Udienze. The room, frescoed by Francesco Salviati and used for court meetings and audiences, exalts the figure of the Roman military leader Marco Furio Camillo, who was compared to Duke Cosimo I de’ Medici. In this setting, Thomas J Price’s Bronze Heads, created between 2006 and 2021, invite us to think about the consistently stereotyped representation of Black people within European art history. 

The critical view of cultural hierarchies and the system of sociopolitical privileges is also reflected in the contrast between the materials used by the artist. Bronze, historically considered a noble material for sculpture, is contrasted with contemporary Perspex bases and automotive spray paint. 

In the Sala dei Gigli, A Place Beyond (2023), a young woman with a mobile phone in her hand, appears suspended in the space where Donatello’s famous bronze of Judith and Holofernes stands. The Renaissance masterpiece, mounted on an imposing plinth, depicts Judith in a heroic yet unsettling pose as she triumphantly raises the head of Holofernes, slain in his sleep and symbol of defeated evil. Donatello’s expressive realism transcends simple naturalism, and is sublimated into a message loaded with symbolic meaning and moral values that reflected the historical climate of the time. The work stood in Piazza della Signoria and became the symbol of the Florentine Republic.

In contrast, A Place Beyond portrays an ordinary person who could easily be mistaken for a visitor in the rooms of the Palazzo Vecchio, without any solemn or grandiloquent connotations, if not for the larger-than-life scale of the work. The base reduced to the bare minimum suggests that the figure has just interrupted her journey, stopping spontaneously in the middle of the room. 

Despite being known for his figurative works, Price’s practice is underpinned with conceptual thinking that informs the way in which the viewer encounters the sculptures and their presence in space. 

The exhibition continues at the former Leopoldine venue: exhibited in the Renaissance cloister of the Museo Novecento is the work A Kind of Confidence (2023). A young man, dressed in an elegant suit, stands at the centre of the garden, a quiet presence. His feet rest directly on the ground whilst his gaze evokes a feeling of suspended concentration. “It's all about his shoes basically…The suit fits. But he's not so sure…” Price states, “I have worked for a long time with the idea of vulnerability being actually a strength. The question is: How is he inhabiting the space he is in? Does he feel lesser than others? Does he feel he is being judged?” The bronze sculpture reflects Price’s investigation into the representation and historical stereotyping of Black people. A Kind of Confidence encourages questions about how the individual occupies the space around them and is subject to preconceived attitudes, exploring the delicate relationship between strength and fragility.

On display within the Alberto Della Ragione Collection are the sculptures Tasman Road, Figure 2 (2008) and Untitled (Icon 6) (2023). The title Tasman Road, from the Nude Series, references streets across London as well as the Dutch explorer Abel Tasman. The Western toponymy, traditionally associated with dominant white historical figures, is countered by a Black man, whose figure is captured in a vulnerable and seemingly melancholy yet steadfast pose.

Untitled (Icon 6) by Thomas J Price is positioned in a dialogue between eras and styles, between Antonietta Raphaël Mafai’s Ritratto di Emilio Jesi [Portrait of Emilio Jesi] (1940), made of onyx, and Marino Marini’s Ritratto di Lamberto Vitali [Portrait of Lamberto Vitali] (c.1936-1937), modelled in plaster and wax. These two busts are testaments to a complex historical period: Marini portrayed his friend, art historian and collector Vitali, while the piece by Raphaël immortalises the trusted benefactor and patron who took her and her family following in the enactment of the racial laws of 1938. The artist, of Jewish-Latvian origin, was forced to flee Rome, where she would only return in 1943.

Price’s experience at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, which he visited frequently, profoundly influenced his artistic training, immersing him in the study of traditional ancient portraiture. His work, particularly his investigation into the language, materials and techniques of sculpture, is widely reflected in the museum’s permanent collection. The aluminium composite head gilded with gold brings together contemporary 3D printing and digital sculpting with echoes of the iconography of ancient sculpture, from Mycenaean funerary masks to Roman busts in gold, the mask of Tutankhamen and the Hercules of the Forum Boarium. Placing the head of an introspective contemporary figure rendered in luxurious gold on a slate base and a quartzite plinth, the sculpture exudes a powerful cultural resonance. Hieratic and solemn, the work Untitled (Icon 6) is not only a silent messenger of past traditions but also explores the modern conception of the meaning of sculpture.

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Title: Thomas J Price in Florence

Opening: March 14, 2025

Ending: September 14, 2025

Organization: Museo Novecento

Curator: Sergio Risaliti

Place: Firenze, Museo Novecento e Piazza della Signoria

Address: Piazza Santa Maria Novella, 10 - 50123 Firenze

Museo Novecento
Tel. +39 055 286132 / info@musefirenze.it
Piazza di Santa Maria Novella, 10 – Florence

Opening hours:
Mon - Tue - Wed - Fri - Sat - Sun | 11:00 AM - 8:00 PM
Thursday | Closed

Last entry one hour before closing.

Palazzo Vecchio
Tel. +39 055 0541450 / info@musefirenze.it
P.za della Signoria, 50122 Florence FI

Mon - Tue - Wed - Fri - Sat - Sun | 9:00 AM - 7:00 PM
Thursday | 9:00 AM - 2:00 PM

More info on this website: https://www.museonovecento.it/



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