A Renaissance Palazzo, Reimagined for Contemporary Practice
The Florence School of Fine Arts is housed in a historic Italian Renaissance palazzo in the heart of Florence's city center. Within walls shaped by centuries of artistic and intellectual life, FSFA offers students a working environment that is both grounded in history and fully dedicated to contemporary artistic practice.
Our studios are spacious, light-filled, and designed to support focused making, experimentation, and research. Abundant natural light defines the working atmosphere, creating an environment where observation, material exploration, and sustained studio practice can thrive.
FSFA offers one of the most comprehensive and well-equipped studio arts facilities in Italy. With rare art-making equipment and specialized resources not commonly found in other programs, students are able to work across disciplines while maintaining a strong sense of individual studio space.
Each student is provided with a personal work area, allowing for continuity of process, experimentation over time, and the freedom to develop ideas without interruption. This balance of shared studio culture and individual space supports both collaboration and independent inquiry.
Unlike many programs that rely on external facilities, FSFA brings a wide range of resources together under one roof. This integrated setting allows students to move fluidly between disciplines, materials, and techniques while remaining immersed in a cohesive learning environment.
The palazzo itself becomes part of the learning experience—an architectural and cultural context that continuously informs artistic practice.
Enrollment at FSFA is intentionally limited to ensure small class sizes and meaningful access to facilities. Our faculty are practicing artists, highly qualified in their disciplines, and deeply engaged in their fields. This structure allows instructors to offer individualized guidance, technical support, and sustained mentorship tailored to each student's work.
FSFA provides a rare combination: exceptional facilities, a high level of student support, and a culturally rich environment that extends far beyond the classroom. Studying and working in Florence—within a historic palazzo—offers daily inspiration and a direct connection to the artistic traditions that continue to shape contemporary practice.
Natural light studios with individual easels, storage, and communal critique space
Spacious studios with adjustable lighting, still life stations, and figure drawing platforms
Letterpress, etching, lithography, silkscreen, and risograph equipment
Analog, digital, wet plate equipment, and lighting
Intimate classrooms, art history projection, and research library
Bookbinding, paper making, letterpress, and archival preservation equipment