Resources for Artists living in Florence and Tuscany

1998-2006© Angie Elizabeth Brooksby
 
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art and painting workshops in Florence, Tuscany and other places in Italy
Where to find art supplies, how to ship and deal with customs
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Where to buy art supplies in Florence.

 

Zecchi - Via dello Studio
good for powder pigments, painting supplies, oil acrylic watercolor, etching materials, sculpture and general fine arts

Rigacci - Via dei Servi
painting supplies, watercolor, canvas in unusual sizes

LORY - Piazza Frescobaldi Oltrarno Ponte S. Trinità--- painting supplies graphic arts supplies, large format photocopies, computer scans and other things for architects and designers

Cartoleria "San Frediano" Via S. Onofrio --Oltrarno good for painting supplies

BATI - Via Verdi good for painting supplies open in August

PHASE - Via Dello Sprone The only place for gold leafers and art restaurers, a true specialty shop that seems more like a chemists shop instead of an art supply store

MB FOTO- Via Ghibellina. The place for professional photographers that don't use digital The last of its kind.

 

How to export your artworks out of Italy

Exportation and Importation of Contemporary Art Works by Angie Elizabeth Brooksby ©2005 published in The Florentine 19 May 2005

Sending contemporary art works out of Italy can be a nerve racking experience. What can be even worse is trying to bring ones own artworks into Italy from non EC countries.
To export paintings and other artworks one must go to the Soprintendenza in Palazzo Pitti to obtain a nullaosta or permit of clearance. The Soprintendenza seems to change names frequently thanks to the whims of the legislators but in Florence it is commonly called the Belle Arti.
Exporting contemporary artworks from living authors is simpler than sending antiques, as if any bureaucratic situation in Italy is easy. Before 1999 even contemporary artworks were subject to inspection by the Belle Arti. One had to take the original piece in its packaging to the inspection hall, unpack it, have it viewed, pack it back up and tie a string around the whole parcel making an artful knot that was sealed with a piece of lead and crimped with the Belle Arti’s seal then pay a fee. It was a complicated affair trying to make one piece of string go around the whole package blocking all sides from fraudulent intrusion. Fortunately this came to an end for contemporary art works and we artists no longer have to waste our mornings carrying our paintings and sculptures to Palazzo Pitti to be viewed.
Currently the Italian customs requires one to execute a self declaration in order to export a contemporary artwork. An example of the self declaration for exportation can be obtained from the Ufficio d’Esportazione (Exportation Office) in Palazzo Pitti. It is there that you will have to return with two copies each of: two colour images of your artworks, a photocopy of valid identification, and the self declaration. To go to the Ufficio d’Esportazione in Palazzo Pitti, one must first obtain a pass from the Carabinieri station beyond the gate to the left of the Palace just inside the Boboli garden. The Ufficio d’Esportazione is open weekday mornings except for Mondays and Wednesdays. The self declaration is free of charge but you will have to wait at least a week for them to process it.
Once you have the validated declaration, you can export your artworks with any courier or regular mail service. Most artworks are too large to be sent with the regular mail. You can ask your courier to obtain the nullaosta from the Belle Arti and therefore avoid going yourself but the courier will most likely charge you for this service. If you are not an artist and have bought a painting from a gallery, the gallery should take care of the nullaosta.
Artworks that have been sold or that are not intended to return to Italy must be sent with an invoice of sale if you are an artist with an Italian Tax ID number. If you are an artist and do not have an Italian Tax ID number you can export your artworks with a proform invoice.
If you are sending artworks to an exhibition in a non EC country and plan that these artworks return, then it is better that you perform a Temporary Export Licence -- a “T.E.” Why should you do this? Because if you send your artworks without a T.E., the Italian customs will charge you 30% of the declared value upon re-entry. The T.E. has to be prepared by a customs agent for a fee. The T.E. can be renewed for two years and has to be renewed every six months. The cost of the renewal is approximately Euro 120.00 for each time. If you do not renew the T.E. the Italian customs will contact you at the beginning of the following year asking that you account for the artworks in question. You can choose between three options: renew the T.E.; transform the temporary exportation into a definitive one, thus invoicing the sale of your artworks; or have your artworks returned. Each of these choices requires that you pay a customs agent for their services. Customs agents want specific documentation in order to perform a temporary export licence.
When you send your artworks with a T.E., you must be very careful to conserve the original papers that you are consigned by the Italian customs. You will need these papers to renew the T.E. or to transform the temporary into definitive. If you send your artworks with a T.E. you will discover that some couriers will not handle these shipments. Usually couriers have their own customs agents that can help you.
To think that shipping artworks is easier than it used to be!

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Alternative spaces where to exhibit your paintings in Florence.

What are alternative spaces? They are spaces that are not galleries, places where an artist may hang his or her works to get exposure, places like restaurants and cafe's and Hotels.

These are places that are usually not interested in promoting you as an aritst but like to hang different paintings on the walls.

In Florence there are many spaces that make their walls available. Here are a few. We are not affiliated with them in any way. Here are some.

SEI DIVINO, in Borgo ognissanti

ENOTECA VINARIUS, Borgo Santa Croce,

Ristorante LA BUSSOLA in via Porta Rossa

REX CAFFE in via Fiesolana

CAFE PETRARCA in Piazza Porta Romana

LA DOLCE VITA in piazza del Carmine

CAFE SANT' AMBROGIO in Piazza Sant' Ambrogio

Bed & Breakfast IL BARGELLO in Via Pandolfini

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
   
       
 

 

 

 
 
 
     
       
see the oil paintings go to home page go to the Art and Painting Workshops page how to contact us Where to find art supplies, how to ship and deal with customs see available prints and more