Accademia Galleries Venice

Book your Venice Accademia tickets in advance and avoid the lines.

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.

 


Info & Booking

Gallerie dell'Accademia di Venezia
Campo della Carità, Dorsoduro 1050, Venezia

Reservations must be made with a minimum of 1 day notice.

ATTENTION: By selecting "audioguide" visit will also include this service; audioguides are available in Italian, English, French, German, Japanese and Spanish.

Save time in ordering! Add into your basket all the museum tickets you want, then fill the form and send the request.
Before making your reservation, please, read the Ordering Informations

IMPORTANT NOTICE:

After succesfully completing a reservation, you will receive two e- mails: the copy of your order (immediately after submitting your order) and the confirmation mail (one working day after). In order to receive them, please make sure you insert your e-mail address correctly and check that your anti-spam filter or antivirus are not blocking mails from our address [email protected]. Special attention for AOL mailbox users.

PLEASE NOTICE: Confirmed time is not always the same time you requested; museum automatically confirms the closest available time on the same date if requested time is sold out.
Opening hours: Monday from 08:15 to 14:00; from Tuesday to Sunday from 08:15 to 19:15

CANCELLATION POLICY: ONCE CONFIRMED, A VISIT CANNOT BE MODIFIED NOR CANCELED.

How to get there:

The Accademia Galleries are located in Campo della Carità in the Sestriere of Dorsoduro (street number 1050) in Venice, very close to the Accademia Bridge. The Museum is reachable by foot (about 25/30 minutes) or by water bus (schedules and lines www.actv.it).

By train

In front of the Santa Lucia train station you can take the water bus: Line 1, Line 2 and exit at Accademia stop (walking distance to Museum: 1 minute) or line 2, line 5.1 and exit at Zattere stop (walking distance to Museum: 5 minutes).

By car

  • Parking at Piazzale Roma: water bus: Line 1, Line 2 and exit at Accademia stop (walking distance to Museum: 1 minute) or line 2, line 5.1 and exit at Zattere stop (walking distance to Museum: 5 minutes).
  • Parking at Tronchetto: water bus: Line 2 and exit at Zattere stop (walking distance to Museum: 5 minutes)
  • From the Lido di Venezia: the boat landing stage S.M. Elisabetta: Line 1 and exit at Accademia stop (walking distance to Museum: 1 minute) or line 5.2, line 6 and exit at Zattere stop (walking distance to Museum: 5 minutes).

By plane

  • Reaching Venice from the airport by bus arriving at Piazzale Roma: Line 5 ACTV bus or ATVO Air Terminal (timetable of the shuttle visit www.atvo.it Air Terminal), then water bus: Line 1, Line 2 and exit at Accademia stop (walking distance to Museum: 1 minute) or line 2, line 5.1 and exit at Zattere stop (walking distance to Museum: 5 minutes).
  • Reaching Venice from the airport with the Alilaguna waterbus (www.alilaguna.it): Venice can be reached with the (Orange Line) from the Airport direction San Marco, and exit at S. Marco (Giardinetti) stop (walking distance to Museum: 15/20 minutes or line 1, line 2 and exit at Accademia) or with the (Blue Line) from the Airport direction Marittima, and exit at Zattere stop (walking distance to Museum: 5 minutes).

 


Gallery

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Before You Book

PLEASE NOTE: Immediately after submitting an order, you will receive two email. The first email contains your order summary (this one you receive immediately after placing your order), the second email confirms your successful payment (one business day after placing the order). In order to receive these two emails, please make sure that you enter your email address correctly and check that antispam or antivirus filters do not block emails from our [email protected] address. Users of AOL, Comcast and Sbcglobal.net need to pay special attention to this, please. Vouchers will also be available, one business day after the request, at your dashboard.

IMPORTANT NOTE: The time you select on the order form is your preferred time. The closest available time, which can be anytime during opening hours on the selected date, will be automatically confirmed if your preferred time is no longer available.

Overview

See the rich collection of Venetian paintings up to the 18th century, as well as some splendid examples from the Byzantine and Gothic 14th century to the artists of the Renaissance. Unparalleled works by Bellini, Carpaccio, Giorgione, Veronese, Tintoretto and Titian until Gianbattista Tiepolo are on view, as well as the Vedutisti of the eighteenth century, Canaletto, Guardi, Bellotto, and Longhi.

Accademia Galleries

The Accademia Galleries hold an important collection of Venetian painting from the 14th to the 18th centuries, including masterpieces by the most famous masters - such as Bellini, Giorgione, Carpaccio, Tiziano, Tintoretto, Veronese, and Tiepolo.


Founded in 1750 by the Venetian Senate as Venice’s school of painting, sculpture, and architecture, the school was one of the first to study and develop art restoration. The Accademia was renamed the Accademia Reale di Belle Arti and moved to its present premises in 1807 by order of the Napoleonic occupying forces. After the suppression of religious congregations and public Venetian magistratures, a large quantity of art works was confiscated. A selection of masterpieces was sent to Paris, to be shown in the Louvre Museum.



In Venice, many paintings of the local school from the 14th to the 18th centuries were rescued from dispersion and sale by the Accademia gallery, which functioned as didactic collection for young artists. In order to include a systematic overview of Italian art, the Accademia strove to purchase works from most important Italian schools, but it was decided later to give preference to regional works.



The Venetian Academy of Painters and Sculptors, created in 1750, had its seat at the Fonteghetto della Farina in San Marco. In 1807, Napoleon's government chose as its new seat the building complex of the Carità, formed by the ancient church of Santa Maria della Carità, the Convent of the Canonici Lateranensi (built by Andrea Palladio) and the Scuola Grande della Carità.


On November 5, 1807, the new school opened, and in August 10, 1817, the Accademia gallery of paintings was opened to the public. The first nucleus of the collections were formed by works from the old Academy, selected paintings of the Scuola della Carità, and the Farsetti plasters collection. Additional paintings were recovered from France, while others were taken from Venetian churches such as San Giobbe's. The museum continuously increased its collection with private donations and new acquisitions of significant works.


A renovation project began in 1819 and was completed in 1856: two large halls were constructed to the left of the convent, divided by four marble columns. The convent was enlarged and in 1830 the Carità emblems of the facade were substituted by Accademia symbols. The great hall of the ground floor was divided to create a separate entrance for the gallery, independent from the school.



A radical reorganization of the galleries was undertaken in 1895. The 19th century artists were removed, and the works were organized chronologically. The 15th century paintings were grouped together, and polygonal exhibition spaces were created for some painting cycles to allow the experience of pictorial continuity. The Galleries became independent from the School and the Academy in 1906.



Between 1945 and 1948, paintings were selected and frames that were not original removed. The reorganization project continued until the end of the 1950's.



The connection between the Accademia Galleries and Venice is deep, as many important works from churches, schools, and public magistratures are preserved here. In some cases, the shown works are the only testimony remaining from churches destroyed during the Napoleonic period. Some of the most famous paintings form part of the collections thanks to the generosity of private collectors.

Cancellation Policy

Once the visit is confirmed, you can not cancel or modify.

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