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Fauglia
Photo © Lucarelli
Photo © Lucarelli

Fauglia

With its rolling hills inspiration for painters and literati

For connoisseurs of iconic Tuscan landscapes, made up of rolling hills that change colors and nuances with the passing of the months, Fauglia is like a picture gallery of ideal images. This small town with a rural past is now a pleasant and relaxing place far from the city, nestled as it is among fields of wheat and hay bales.

If Fauglia is beautiful every day of the year, surely it must have been particularly so in the summers that the painter Giorgio Kienerk spent here from 1919 until his death. The yellow of the wheat and the light of the sunny countryside were the fire that fueled his most beautiful paintings, now preserved and displayed in the museum dedicated to him. Fauglia, evidently a second homeland for the Macchiaioli, is also the birthplace of the painter Alvaro Marioni, author of numerous paintings depicting these Tuscan settings.

What to see in Fauglia

The village lies on a hill and is characterized by its being traversed by a single road, overlooked by houses and small squares.

The points of interest in the village are the bell tower of the old church, the Town Hall and the Church of San Lorenzo, while in the Piazza del Mercato some old warehouses for the storage of grains are striking.
The Church of San Lorenzo, already mentioned in 1251, collapsed following the earthquake of 1846, but was immediately built back. Today the building has a simple neoclassical facade and an interior divided into three naves; among the works preserved inside are a beautiful painted terracotta relief depicting the revered image of the “Madonna del Soccorso”, the altar of the Crucifix, made of polychrome marble in the 18th century, the “Madonna del Rosario” (18th century) and the 18th-century painting depicting “San Lorenzo”, attributed to Luigi Secchi from Pisa.

Elegant villas are also a hallmark of the town, chosen as a favorite place for intellectuals and literary figures, and among them Villa Trovarsi stands out, inhabited by the famous actress Marta Abba, closely linked to the playwright and writer Luigi Pirandello.

The Giorgio Kienerk Museum is housed in the 19th-century building of Fauglia's former magistrate’s court, inside what were once prison cells. It was created to preserve the works of the painter Kienerk of the period after the Macchiaioli - oil paintings, bas-reliefs, sculptures, engravings and lithographs - donated by his daughter Vittoria to the community of Fauglia. The artist, born in Florence in 1869, spent many years here, at the Villa at Via Poggio alla Farnia, his country home, where he died in 1948. During his lifetime Kienerk immortalized the hills around the village in several works, which can be seen in the museum.

The village lies on a hill and is characterized by its being traversed by a single road, overlooked by houses and small squares.

The points of interest in the village are the bell tower of the old church, the Town Hall and the Church of San Lorenzo, while in the Piazza del Mercato some old warehouses for the storage of grains are striking.
The Church of San Lorenzo, already mentioned in 1251, collapsed following the earthquake of 1846, but was immediately built back. Today the building has a simple neoclassical facade and an interior divided into three naves; among the works preserved inside are a beautiful painted terracotta relief depicting the revered image of the “Madonna del Soccorso”, the altar of the Crucifix, made of polychrome marble in the 18th century, the “Madonna del Rosario” (18th century) and the 18th-century painting depicting “San Lorenzo”, attributed to Luigi Secchi from Pisa.

Elegant villas are also a hallmark of the town, chosen as a favorite place for intellectuals and literary figures, and among them Villa Trovarsi stands out, inhabited by the famous actress Marta Abba, closely linked to the playwright and writer Luigi Pirandello.

The Giorgio Kienerk Museum is housed in the 19th-century building of Fauglia's former magistrate’s court, inside what were once prison cells. It was created to preserve the works of the painter Kienerk of the period after the Macchiaioli - oil paintings, bas-reliefs, sculptures, engravings and lithographs - donated by his daughter Vittoria to the community of Fauglia. The artist, born in Florence in 1869, spent many years here, at the Villa at Via Poggio alla Farnia, his country home, where he died in 1948. During his lifetime Kienerk immortalized the hills around the village in several works, which can be seen in the museum.

In the surroundings

The territory of Fauglia is located at the beginning of the Colline Pisane (Hills of Pisa), the heart of the Terre di Pisa (Lands of Pisa), which with their harmonious landscape made of countryside and villages have inspired in the past many paintings of the Macchiaioli.
Among the places that can be easily reached from Fauglia is Orciano Pisano, surrounded by one of the most beautiful landscapes in Tuscany, amid wide, rolling hills that reach down to the sea.

The territory of Fauglia is located at the beginning of the Colline Pisane (Hills of Pisa), the heart of the Terre di Pisa (Lands of Pisa), which with their harmonious landscape made of countryside and villages have inspired in the past many paintings of the Macchiaioli.
Among the places that can be easily reached from Fauglia is Orciano Pisano, surrounded by one of the most beautiful landscapes in Tuscany, amid wide, rolling hills that reach down to the sea.

Typical products

Fauglia falls within the production area of the Bianco Pisano di San Torpé wine and within the territory crossed by the Strada dell’Olio dei Monti Pisani (Mounts Pisani Oil Road). During the fall in the area there are market exhibitions, festivals and fairs related to the olive oil produced by local oil mills, alongside initiatives dedicated to other local products, such as chestnuts and mushrooms.

Fauglia falls within the production area of the Bianco Pisano di San Torpé wine and within the territory crossed by the Strada dell’Olio dei Monti Pisani (Mounts Pisani Oil Road). During the fall in the area there are market exhibitions, festivals and fairs related to the olive oil produced by local oil mills, alongside initiatives dedicated to other local products, such as chestnuts and mushrooms.

Pisa Area

Pisa Area
The land of towers: each so different, each so unique
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Pisa Area
The land of towers: each so different, each so unique
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