An exhibition opening on 2 July 2026 at Florence’s Bardini Garden traces the long-standing relationship between the city and the United States through a selection of historic photographs from the Foto Locchi Archive. Titled Florence and the U.S. – The Story of a Friendship, the exhibition will remain open until 18 October 2026 and has been organised to coincide with the 250th anniversary of the United States’ Declaration of Independence.

The exhibition is promoted by the U.S. Consulate General in Florence, Fondazione CR Firenze and Fondazione Parchi Monumentali Bardini e Peyron, in collaboration with Gruppo Editoriale. It presents ten photographs selected from the Foto Locchi Archive, which has documented life in Florence since the 1920s and today preserves more than five million images.
From explorers to post-war reconstruction
The exhibition places the modern relationship between Florence and the United States within a broader historical context. It recalls figures such as Florentine explorer Amerigo Vespucci, after whom the Americas were named, and Giovanni da Verrazzano, the explorer from Greve in Chianti who charted the bay of present-day New York. It also highlights the role of Tuscan intellectual Filippo Mazzei, whose political ideas influenced debates on liberty and equality during the American Revolution.
Most of the exhibition, however, focuses on the twentieth century, documenting key moments that strengthened the connection between Florence and the United States.

The photographs include scenes from the liberation of Florence by the U.S. Fifth Army in August 1944, the work of the Monuments Men in protecting the city’s artistic heritage, and the contribution of American art historian Frederick Hartt to post-war restoration efforts. Other images capture baseball games, social events, Hollywood stars visiting Florence, the city’s growing international tourism industry and the emergence of Italian fashion through the shows organised by Giovanni Battista Giorgini with strong support from American buyers and journalists.
The exhibition also remembers the international response to the 1966 flood, when volunteers from around the world—including many Americans known as the “Mud Angels”—helped rescue Florence’s damaged artworks, books and archives.

Historic personalities
Among the figures featured in the photographs are U.S. Senator Ted Kennedy visiting Florence’s National Central Library after the flood, General Mark Clark, commander of the U.S. Fifth Army during the liberation of the city, fashion designer Emilio Schuberth, actor Tyrone Power and Clare Boothe Luce, the first woman to serve as U.S. ambassador to Italy.

Visitor information
Florence and the U.S. – The Story of a Friendship will be on display at Bardini Garden from 2 July to 18 October 2026. Set against one of Florence’s best-known panoramic gardens, the open-air exhibition offers visitors an opportunity to explore the historical, cultural and human connections that have linked Florence and the United States across several centuries through rarely seen archival photographs.
(Photos: ©Archivio Foto Locchi)
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