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Italy buys rare Caravaggio portrait after year‑long talks

By Thomson Reuters Mar 10, 2026 | 7:30 AM

By Crispian Balmer

ROME, March 10 (Reuters) – Italy has bought a rare portrait by baroque master Caravaggio for 30 million euros ($32.7 million), one of the largest sums the state has ever ​paid for a single artwork, the Culture Ministry said on ‌Tuesday.

Painted around 1598, the work depicts Monsignor Maffeo Barberini, an influential cleric who later became Pope Urban VIII, one of the great patrons of the arts of his time.

The work had been held in a private Florence collection and was ‌attributed ​to Caravaggio in 1963. It was shown in ⁠public for the first ⁠time in 2024 at Rome’s Palazzo Barberini and will now enter that museum’s permanent collection.

“After more than a year of negotiations, we are announcing today the acquisition… of an extraordinary masterpiece by Caravaggio,” ​Culture Minister Alessandro Giuli said in a statement.

He described the purchase as part of a broader effort to strengthen Italy’s public cultural ⁠heritage and prevent major works from disappearing ⁠into private collections.

The acquisition comes a month after the ​Culture Ministry bought Antonello da Messina’s “Ecce Homo” for $14.9 million, securing the rare ​work by the 15th‑century Renaissance master just as it was ‌due to be auctioned in New York.

Caravaggio, whose real name was Michelangelo Merisi, was a master of the chiaroscuro technique of lighting to make his subjects seem to come alive. He died in 1610 in ⁠his late 30s after a turbulent life.

The painting of the future Pope Urban VIII is one of only a handful of surviving Caravaggio portraits, with ⁠others having been ‌lost or destroyed. Only around 60 paintings worldwide ⁠are attributed to Caravaggio, many depicting religious narratives.

The Barberini ​portrait ‌shows the bearded cleric seated and seemingly issuing instructions ​with a ⁠subtle gesture of his right hand.

The Culture Ministry said it would look to buy more artworks in the coming months “with the aim of making available to scholars and enthusiasts certain masterpieces of art history that would otherwise be destined for the private market”.

(Additional reporting by Alvise Armellini; editing ​by Gareth Jones )