Prehistory
Parma was already a built-up area in the Bronze Age. In the current position of the city rose a terramare. The "terramare" (marl earth) were ancient villages built of wood on piles according to a defined scheme and squared form; constructed on dry land and generally in proximity to the rivers. During this age (between 1500 BC and 800 BC) the first necropolis (on the sites of the present-day Piazza Duomo and Piazzale della Macina) were constructed.
Information and pictures about Italy, its history, monuments and events taken in the Peninsula with art exhibitions, theaters plays and concerts.
Wednesday, April 27, 2016
Wednesday, April 20, 2016
Alessandria
Alessandria was founded in 1168 with a charter as a free commune; it was sited upon a preexisting urban nucleus, to serve as a stronghold for the Lombard League, defending the traditional liberties of the communes of northern Italy against the Imperial forces of Frederick Barbarossa. Alessandria stood in the territories of the marchese of Montferrat, a staunch ally of the Emperor, with a name assumed in 1168 to honor the Emperor's opponent, Pope Alexander III. In 1174–75 the fortress was sorely tested by Imperial siege and stood fast. A legend (related in Umberto Eco's book Baudolino, and which recalls one concerning Bishop Herculanus’ successful defense of Perugia several centuries earlier) says it was saved by a quick-witted peasant, Gagliaudo: he fed his cow with the last grain remaining within the city, then took it outside the city walls until he reached the Imperial camp. Here he was captured, and his cow cut open to be cooked: when the Imperials found the cow's stomach filled with grain, Gagliaudo was asked the reason to waste such a rich meal. He answered that he was forced to feed his cow with grain because there was such a lot of it, and no room to place it within the city. The Emperor, fearing that the siege would last too long, left Alessandria free. (Malaria was probably the real cause of his departure.) A statue of Gagliaudo can be found on the left corner of the city cathedral.
Alessandria entered into jealous conflicts with the older communes of the region, in particular with Asti.
In 1348 Alessandria fell into the hands of the Visconti and passed with their possessions to the Sforza, following the career of Milan, until 1707, when it was ceded to the House of Savoy and henceforth formed part of Piedmont. The new domination was evidenced by the construction of a new big Cittadella on the left side of the river Tanaro, across from the city.
With Napoleon's success at the Battle of Marengo (1800), Alessandria fell to France and became the capital of the Napoleonic Département of Marengo. During this period another substantial fort was built to the north of the city containing impressive and substantial barracks which are still used as a military headquarters and stores (2006). The remains of a second fort to the south of the city (Cristo quarter) have been sliced in two by a railway (Forte ferrovia); a third one still remains in the middle of the same quarter (Forte Acqui).
From 1814 Alessandria was Savoyard territory once more, part of the Kingdom of Sardinia. During the years of the Risorgimento, Alessandria was an active center of the liberals.
In a suburb, Spinetta Marengo, the Battle of Marengo is reenacted annually, on June 14.
Alessandria was the first capital of an Italian province to be governed by a Socialist: the clockmaker Paolo Sacco was elected mayor on July 25, 1899.
Alessandria was a tactical military target during World War II and was subjected to intense Allied bombing, the most serious being the raids of April 30, 1944, with 238 dead and hundreds wounded, and April 5, 1945, with 160 deaths, among them 60 children from the children's asylum in Via Gagliaudo. On end of that month the city was liberated from the German occupation (1943–1945) by the partisan resistance and troops of Brazilian Expeditionary Force.
On November 6, 1994 the Tanaro flooded a good part of the city, causing major damage, especially in the Orti quarter.
Saturday, April 16, 2016
Toulouse-Lautrec, at the Museo dell’Ara Pacis in Rome
A major exhibition devoted to Toulouse-Lautrec, the quintessential bohemian painter of fin-de-siècle Paris, is opening at the Museo dell’Ara Pacis in Rome. The show features around 170 works from the Budapest Museum of Fine Arts, which span the artist’s career from 1891 to 1900, shortly before he died prematurely at the age of thirty-six.
Promoted by Roma Capitale – Capitoline Superintendency for Cultural Heritage, produced by Arthemisia Group and organized by Zètema Progetto Cultura, the exhibition brings to Rome the pick of the Toulouse-Lautrec Collection at the Budapest Museum of Fine Arts (Szépművészeti Múzeum) – one of the most important in Europe, with masterworks ranging from the Middle Ages to the 20th century. The Rome exhibition, curated by Zsuzsa Gonda and Kata Bodor, displays around 170 lithographs from the collection (including eight large-format posters and two covers of albums, each composed of about 10 lithographs, devoted to the French singer, actress and writer Yvette Guilbert), which will be on display at the Museo dell’Ara Pacis from 4 December 2015 to 8 May 2016.
The show is intended to give visitors a complete picture of Toulouse-Lautrec’s graphic output through posters, illustrations, sheet music covers and playbills, some of which are absolute rarities, since they were printed in signed and numbered limited editions with a dedication by the artist.
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec is considered the most celebrated master of the print and poster in the Parisian Belle Époque period. One of the most distinguishing features of his art is his portrayal of the most diverse aspects of humanity in everyday or entertaining situations, which the French bourgeoisie found fascinating. He drew most of his inspiration from Montmartre in Paris, and the majority of his works depict the nightlife and popular haunts in this quarter. They are snapshots of the quotidian rendered with great immediacy. In next to no time he became one of the most sought-after illustrators and draughtsmen in Paris, receiving commissions for posters advertising plays, ballets and shows, and for illustrations that appeared in leading contemporary magazines like Le Rire.
In addition to the works of Toulouse-Lautrec, the exhibition includes rare photos and film clips from the beginning of the 20th century which evoke the Parisian Belle Époque. There is also an interactive app that enables the visitor to learn about lithography and printing techniques at the end of the 19th century, from colour and large-scale reproduction to the birth of the advertising poster, which Henri anticipated with his art.
THE EXHIBITION AND THE ARTIST
The exhibition is divided into five thematic sections that cover the great French painter’s formative artistic and intellectual experiences, from the first works executed under the guidance of his teacher René Princeteau, to those of his early period in Paris, which are strongly indebted to Montmartre and Léon Bonnat and Fernand Cormon. The trajectory begins with his realistic academic studies, develops through the humorous and avant-garde influences of the Artistes Incohérents, and culminates in the Post-Impressionist works executed after his encounter with Théo van Rysselberghe and the painting of Seurat, Gauguin and Van Gogh.
Section 1 – Parisian Nights
In 1881 Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, scion of an ancient aristocratic family from the south of France, decided to become a painter. By then it had become quite clear that he could not follow in his father’s footsteps due to his genetic bone disease and his family agreed for him to continue his art studies in Paris. Henri easily fitted into the free, bohemian world of Montmartre where he not only found a home, but also themes to inspire his art. These included café-chantants and cabarets, the most popular haunts of fin-de-siècle Parisian night life (At the Moulin Rouge: La Goulue and her Sister, 1892; The Englishman at the Moulin Rouge, 1892; Caudieux, 1893).
Section 2 – The Stars
One of the most tangible and familiar signs of Toulouse-Lautrec’s cult of celebrity is the advertising poster featuring La Goulue, a dancer with a huge following, which he created for the Moulin Rouge in 1891.
The success of this first poster led to many other commissions, which brought him into contact with the most popular performers (Aristide Bruant in his Cabaret, 1893; Jane Avril, 1893; Divan Japonais, 1893). He became a good friend of the singer-songwriter and cabaret artist Aristide Bruant (1851–1925), whose image he helped to shape with a series of prints and lithographs, including Aristide Bruant in his Cabaret (1893), where the star is depicted wearing a voluminous cloak, wide-brimmed hat, and red scarf around his neck. The modernity of the stylized representations, composed of areas of solid colour, brought the artist unexpected overnight success.
The painter also established a friendship with the famous Parisian cabaret star Jane Avril (1868–1943), a sophisticate who appreciated his art, and portrayed her at a café-chantant in the poster Divan Japonais (1893). Jane Avril is also depicted as a connoisseur on the cover of L’Estampe originale, a publication in the form of an album promoting contemporary lithography (Cover for l’Estampe originale, 1893).
Section 3 – Women of the Night (I’ll take up quarters in a brothel … )
Toulouse-Lautrec liked the frivolity of brothels, indeed between 1892 and 1895 he often spent entire weeks in the maisons closes near the Opera and the Stock Exchange. He observed the girls for hours as they rested, played cards or applied their make-up. He liked to depict the lighter moments in brothels, and especially the prostitutes who did not make him feel ashamed of his stunted appearance. The complete lack of inhibition with which these women practised their profession made them the perfect models for him. This section includes the series of colour lithographs, Elles, of 1896, depicting intimate moments from the world of brothels with unusual empathy (Woman at the Tub; Seated Clowness; Mademoiselle Cha-U-Kao). Lautrec did not refrain from the subject matter of lesbian love, but treated it with special sensitivity (The Large Theatre Box, 1897).
Section 4 – In the Theatre (I don’t mind what is on. I always have a good time in theatre ... )
Between 1893 and 1896 Lautrec became an active participant of that exciting world of the theatre, designing programmes and portraying theatrical scenes (The Theatre Box with the Gilded Mask, 1893). He was captivated by Marcelle Lender, the actress of the Théâtre des Variétes, whose daringly erotic portrait bust printed in eight colours is a masterpiece in the history of lithography (Bust of Mademoiselle Marcelle Lender, 1895).
In his theatrical scenes the artist renders the intensity of the dramas or comedies with vigorous movements and powerfully contrasting light and shade, inspired both by Japanese woodcuts and Daumier’s images of theatre audiences (Princely Idyll, 1897).
Section 5 – Among Friends
The office and the homes of the editors of La Revue blanche were an important scene of Parisian social life. Here, Toulouse-Lautrec made several friends, and in 1895 he designed a poster for the magazine (Poster for La Revue blanche, 1895).
Although he experimented with new techniques, like drypoint, the influence of his early training and his fascination with natural elements and animals was always evident as his work developed. For example, horse-riding had been part of his aristocratic education as a youth, and it returned to the fore in his late period. This section sheds light on various aspects of Toulouse-Lautrec’s private life: his passion for the races at Longchamp (The Jockey, 1899), his daily outings in the Bois de Boulogne (Country Outing, 1897), and his love for an unknown woman sitting in a deckchair onboard a ship (The Passenger from Cabin 54, 1895).
The show is completed by the many book and cover illustrations that the artist created solely at the request of friends during his last years, including Cover for L'Etoile rouge (an anthology of poems by Paul Leclercq, one of the founders of La Revue Blanche) of 1898. The writer Victor Joze also asked him to do the cover for his novel (Cover for La Tribu d'Isidore, 1897) and Georges Clemenceau commissioned ten illustrations for the volume Au Pied du Sinai (1897), published in 1898.
This exhibition illustrates Toulouse-Lautrec’s eccentric art and nonconformist and provocative poetics – among the most sophisticated and groundbreaking of the fin-de-siècle period – through the works from the Budapest Museum of Fine Arts. He was a late discovery, but is now one of today’s most admired and appreciated artists.
“ ... my drawing was not too bad, because the competition was mediocre.” These words of Henri’s – possessed the soul of a “tormented artist” who was not duly “recognized”, despite the fact that he was extremely optimistic and aware of the beauty of life. An essential beauty whose outlines are deliberately blurred, to be experienced through debauchery; a beauty rendered with bold, unconventional tints and without any frills, where both drawing and colour are concerned. No one after Toulouse Lautrec has succeeded in rendering imperfection so “perfectly”. This is his style.
Promoted by Roma Capitale – Capitoline Superintendency for Cultural Heritage, produced by Arthemisia Group and organized by Zètema Progetto Cultura, the exhibition brings to Rome the pick of the Toulouse-Lautrec Collection at the Budapest Museum of Fine Arts (Szépművészeti Múzeum) – one of the most important in Europe, with masterworks ranging from the Middle Ages to the 20th century. The Rome exhibition, curated by Zsuzsa Gonda and Kata Bodor, displays around 170 lithographs from the collection (including eight large-format posters and two covers of albums, each composed of about 10 lithographs, devoted to the French singer, actress and writer Yvette Guilbert), which will be on display at the Museo dell’Ara Pacis from 4 December 2015 to 8 May 2016.
The show is intended to give visitors a complete picture of Toulouse-Lautrec’s graphic output through posters, illustrations, sheet music covers and playbills, some of which are absolute rarities, since they were printed in signed and numbered limited editions with a dedication by the artist.
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec is considered the most celebrated master of the print and poster in the Parisian Belle Époque period. One of the most distinguishing features of his art is his portrayal of the most diverse aspects of humanity in everyday or entertaining situations, which the French bourgeoisie found fascinating. He drew most of his inspiration from Montmartre in Paris, and the majority of his works depict the nightlife and popular haunts in this quarter. They are snapshots of the quotidian rendered with great immediacy. In next to no time he became one of the most sought-after illustrators and draughtsmen in Paris, receiving commissions for posters advertising plays, ballets and shows, and for illustrations that appeared in leading contemporary magazines like Le Rire.
In addition to the works of Toulouse-Lautrec, the exhibition includes rare photos and film clips from the beginning of the 20th century which evoke the Parisian Belle Époque. There is also an interactive app that enables the visitor to learn about lithography and printing techniques at the end of the 19th century, from colour and large-scale reproduction to the birth of the advertising poster, which Henri anticipated with his art.
THE EXHIBITION AND THE ARTIST
The exhibition is divided into five thematic sections that cover the great French painter’s formative artistic and intellectual experiences, from the first works executed under the guidance of his teacher René Princeteau, to those of his early period in Paris, which are strongly indebted to Montmartre and Léon Bonnat and Fernand Cormon. The trajectory begins with his realistic academic studies, develops through the humorous and avant-garde influences of the Artistes Incohérents, and culminates in the Post-Impressionist works executed after his encounter with Théo van Rysselberghe and the painting of Seurat, Gauguin and Van Gogh.
Section 1 – Parisian Nights
In 1881 Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, scion of an ancient aristocratic family from the south of France, decided to become a painter. By then it had become quite clear that he could not follow in his father’s footsteps due to his genetic bone disease and his family agreed for him to continue his art studies in Paris. Henri easily fitted into the free, bohemian world of Montmartre where he not only found a home, but also themes to inspire his art. These included café-chantants and cabarets, the most popular haunts of fin-de-siècle Parisian night life (At the Moulin Rouge: La Goulue and her Sister, 1892; The Englishman at the Moulin Rouge, 1892; Caudieux, 1893).
Section 2 – The Stars
One of the most tangible and familiar signs of Toulouse-Lautrec’s cult of celebrity is the advertising poster featuring La Goulue, a dancer with a huge following, which he created for the Moulin Rouge in 1891.
The success of this first poster led to many other commissions, which brought him into contact with the most popular performers (Aristide Bruant in his Cabaret, 1893; Jane Avril, 1893; Divan Japonais, 1893). He became a good friend of the singer-songwriter and cabaret artist Aristide Bruant (1851–1925), whose image he helped to shape with a series of prints and lithographs, including Aristide Bruant in his Cabaret (1893), where the star is depicted wearing a voluminous cloak, wide-brimmed hat, and red scarf around his neck. The modernity of the stylized representations, composed of areas of solid colour, brought the artist unexpected overnight success.
The painter also established a friendship with the famous Parisian cabaret star Jane Avril (1868–1943), a sophisticate who appreciated his art, and portrayed her at a café-chantant in the poster Divan Japonais (1893). Jane Avril is also depicted as a connoisseur on the cover of L’Estampe originale, a publication in the form of an album promoting contemporary lithography (Cover for l’Estampe originale, 1893).
Section 3 – Women of the Night (I’ll take up quarters in a brothel … )
Toulouse-Lautrec liked the frivolity of brothels, indeed between 1892 and 1895 he often spent entire weeks in the maisons closes near the Opera and the Stock Exchange. He observed the girls for hours as they rested, played cards or applied their make-up. He liked to depict the lighter moments in brothels, and especially the prostitutes who did not make him feel ashamed of his stunted appearance. The complete lack of inhibition with which these women practised their profession made them the perfect models for him. This section includes the series of colour lithographs, Elles, of 1896, depicting intimate moments from the world of brothels with unusual empathy (Woman at the Tub; Seated Clowness; Mademoiselle Cha-U-Kao). Lautrec did not refrain from the subject matter of lesbian love, but treated it with special sensitivity (The Large Theatre Box, 1897).
Section 4 – In the Theatre (I don’t mind what is on. I always have a good time in theatre ... )
Between 1893 and 1896 Lautrec became an active participant of that exciting world of the theatre, designing programmes and portraying theatrical scenes (The Theatre Box with the Gilded Mask, 1893). He was captivated by Marcelle Lender, the actress of the Théâtre des Variétes, whose daringly erotic portrait bust printed in eight colours is a masterpiece in the history of lithography (Bust of Mademoiselle Marcelle Lender, 1895).
In his theatrical scenes the artist renders the intensity of the dramas or comedies with vigorous movements and powerfully contrasting light and shade, inspired both by Japanese woodcuts and Daumier’s images of theatre audiences (Princely Idyll, 1897).
Section 5 – Among Friends
The office and the homes of the editors of La Revue blanche were an important scene of Parisian social life. Here, Toulouse-Lautrec made several friends, and in 1895 he designed a poster for the magazine (Poster for La Revue blanche, 1895).
Although he experimented with new techniques, like drypoint, the influence of his early training and his fascination with natural elements and animals was always evident as his work developed. For example, horse-riding had been part of his aristocratic education as a youth, and it returned to the fore in his late period. This section sheds light on various aspects of Toulouse-Lautrec’s private life: his passion for the races at Longchamp (The Jockey, 1899), his daily outings in the Bois de Boulogne (Country Outing, 1897), and his love for an unknown woman sitting in a deckchair onboard a ship (The Passenger from Cabin 54, 1895).
The show is completed by the many book and cover illustrations that the artist created solely at the request of friends during his last years, including Cover for L'Etoile rouge (an anthology of poems by Paul Leclercq, one of the founders of La Revue Blanche) of 1898. The writer Victor Joze also asked him to do the cover for his novel (Cover for La Tribu d'Isidore, 1897) and Georges Clemenceau commissioned ten illustrations for the volume Au Pied du Sinai (1897), published in 1898.
This exhibition illustrates Toulouse-Lautrec’s eccentric art and nonconformist and provocative poetics – among the most sophisticated and groundbreaking of the fin-de-siècle period – through the works from the Budapest Museum of Fine Arts. He was a late discovery, but is now one of today’s most admired and appreciated artists.
“ ... my drawing was not too bad, because the competition was mediocre.” These words of Henri’s – possessed the soul of a “tormented artist” who was not duly “recognized”, despite the fact that he was extremely optimistic and aware of the beauty of life. An essential beauty whose outlines are deliberately blurred, to be experienced through debauchery; a beauty rendered with bold, unconventional tints and without any frills, where both drawing and colour are concerned. No one after Toulouse Lautrec has succeeded in rendering imperfection so “perfectly”. This is his style.
Wednesday, April 13, 2016
Venice
Although no surviving historical records deal directly with the founding of Venice, tradition and the available evidence have led several historians to agree that the original population of Venice consisted of refugees from Roman cities near Venice such as Padua, Aquileia, Treviso, Altino and Concordia (modern Portogruaro) and from the undefended countryside, who were fleeing successive waves of Germanic and Hun invasions. Some late Roman sources reveal the existence of fishermen on the islands in the original marshy lagoons. They were referred to as incolae lacunae ("lagoon dwellers"). The traditional founding is identified with the dedication of the first church, that of San Giacomo on the islet of Rialto (Rivoalto, "High Shore") — said to have taken place at the stroke of noon on 25 March 421 (the Feast of the Annunciation).
Wednesday, April 06, 2016
Foggia
The name Foggia derives from Latin "fovea", meaning "pit", referring to the pits where wheat was stored. Although the area had been settled since Neolithic times, and a Greek colony known as Argos Hippium (in Greek, Ἀργόριππα or Ἀργύριππόι) existed nearby, the first document attesting the existence of the modern city dates from 1000 AD. According to the legend, the first settlers were peasants who had found a panel portraying the Madonna, on which three flames burnt.
UNCOMMON PLACES an accelerationist aesthetics
UNCOMMON PLACES |
LUCA CAMPIGOTTO - OLAF OTTO BECKER - DAVIDE BRAMANTE -
JULIANE EIRICH - ANDREA GALVANI - HIROYUKI MASUYAMA
REGINE PETERSEN - ALVARO SANCHEZ-MONTAÑES
project by Manon Comerio
curated by Camilla Boemio
Palazzo da Schio
Via Capitano G. Sella 4 – Schio, Vicenza
dal 15 aprile al 15 maggio 2016/from April 15 to May 15, 2016
Palazzo da Schio, an unusual context but one overflowing with history and fascination, has become the venue for an analytical show resulting from the interaction between the project's originator, Manon Comerio, and thecurator-theoretician Camilla Boemio. The show aims at investigating the natural and urban landscape in another dimension: that of the imagination in a state of aesthetic acceleration. An imagination that, in the face of nature's display, searches for nothing from itself, nor does it search for a confirmation of its own certainties, but highlights ways for integrating multiple visions. We are living in an age of time without time, one in which images are superimposed to recount disorderly landscapes from which emerge parallel stories, vernacular elements, and allusions to geometrical-temporal aesthetic constructions. The hendiadys of Being and Time, to which Martin Heidegger had devoted his 1927 masterpiece, today seems to reveal itself in the disturbing form of an endless being without time. The legitimate child of the acceleration of historybegun with the Industrial revolution and by the French Revolution, thephenomenon of urgency was promoted, at a theoretical level, by theEnlightenment's enthusiasm for a future as the realisation of projects foremancipation and improvement. All the same, our postmodern age, one that has in fact stopped believing in the future, has not stopped hurrying, and has given life to a wholly self-referential version of urgency: a nihilistic version of it because it has been emptied of projects for universal emancipation and the promise of colonising the future.
The process of transcending the present is partly undertaken by our exhibition, with the narrative supplied by multifaceted works consisting of different scenarios: from the Broken Line and Ilulissat series by Olaf Otto Becker, to Regine Petersen with Find a Fallen Star, Luca Campigotto with a selection of landscape extracted from his well-known series, Davide Bramante's Saint Petersburg, the works specifically made for Italy by the Spaniard Alvaro Sanchez Montañes, a series of iconic works by Andrea Galvani, Hiroyuki Masuyama with a site-specific installation, and the German Juliane Eirich with a selection from her series Korea Diary and Itoshima.
Camilla Boemio è la curatrice di Diminished Capacity il Primo PadiglioneNazionale della Nigeria alla 15°.International Architecture Exhibition La Biennale di Venezia/Camilla Boemio was the curator of Diminished Capacity the first national pavilion of Nigeria at the 15th International Architecture Exhibition, the Venice Biennale.
Orari/Opening Hours:
Martedì al Venerdì dalle 10 alle 18 /Tuesday to Friday from 10a.m. to 6 p.m.
Sabato e Domenica dalle 10 alle 19/Saturday and Sunday, from10 p.m. to 7 p.m.
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