Silvio Berlusconi has moved out of his historic Roman residence, Palazzo Grazioli: in fact, the former prime minister has moved his headquarters to what was once director Franco Zeffirelli’s villa on the Appian Way, and was formerly owned by Berlusconi, who had granted it on loan for use to the Florentine filmmaker.
The news did not escape the notice of street artist Laika, who greeted the premier by posting, on Via degli Astrali (just behind Palazzo Grazioli), a work of street art to pay homage as uo his way to the Cavaliere: it is a poster in which the former premier completes his move, bringing with him two boxes, one with “court files,” and the other with “memories,” from which a statue of the god Priapus with the typical erect phallus, as per classical iconography, emerges. “If those walls could talk,” says Laika, “they would have stories to tell.”
Berlusconi leaves Palazzo Grazioli and a street art work by Laika pops up depicting him moving out |
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