Given the great critical and public success, an extension of more than a month has been granted to the exhibition Voglia d’Italia. International Collecting in the Rome of the Vittoriano, underway in Rome at the two venues of Palazzo Venezia and Gallerie Sacconi at the Vittoriano. The exhibition was supposed to end on March 4 but it was decided to continue until April 8.
“Inaugurated last December on the initiative of the Polo Museale del Lazio, directed by Edith Gabrielli, the exhibition,” reads a note, “has been greeted by great attention from critics, print media, radio and television media and social networks while also registering a wide consensus among the public at Palazzo Venezia and at the Vittoriano, thanks to which it has been firmly placed among the most visited exhibitions in Italy. The exhibition event is the result of a complex and ambitious project, which, as part of the program of enhancement of its museums and places of culture carried out by the Polo Museale del Lazio, emphasizes the attention devoted in particular to Palazzo Venezia and the Vittoriano, which have now returned as protagonists of the cultural life of the capital and in the hearts of the general public. In the circumstance, visitors can take advantage of a single ticket for the two venues, which also gives them access to the Vittoriano’s spectacular panoramic terrace.”
The exhibition is curated by Emanuele Pellegrini, professor at the IMT - School for Advanced Studies in Lucca, and the scientific committee includes Francesca Baldry, Roberto Balzani, Flavio Fergonzi, Annamaria Giusti, Donata Levi and Carl Brandon Strahlke. The installation is curated by Benedetta Tagliabue of the EMBT studio in Barcelona, in collaboration with Sonia Martone and Gabriella Musto of the Polo Museale del Lazio. Civita Mostre communication, arte’m catalog. Click here to read the review of the exhibition written by Finestre sull’Arte.
Pictured is one of the works in the exhibition: Giulio Aristide Sartorio, Le Vergini Sagge e le Vergini Stolte (1890-1891; oil and tempera on panel and canvas, 188X295 cm; Rome, Galleria Comunale d’Arte Moderna).
Extended until April 8, the exhibition Voglia d'Italia |
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