Eventi Archives - Page 3 of 4 - Fondazione Giorgio Cini

The Teatro Verde. The Mask of Time

Book your seat for September 29, 2022 6:00 p.m., at Fondazione Giorgio Cini to the link.

 

Digitisation practices are peerless and now irreplaceable tools for the preservation and enhancement of cultural heritage, but they can also be used to produce new works. This is the case with The Mask of Time, an audio-visual creation made for the Fondazione Giorgio Cini by Mattia Casalegno and the sound artist Maurizio Martusciello aka Martux_M, announced with a trailer launched for the reopening of the Teatro Verde on the Island of San Giorgio on 10 April 2022.

 

Inaugurated in 1954 by Vittorio Cini, the theatre is the focus of a major campaign to restore the island’s monumental architecture and a fascinating subject of study for the artists who have chosen to feature it in the four-part film. In The Mask of Time, the theatre is seen through its history of constructions and glorious past productions but also through the future in a distant, utopian post-anthropocentric age, in which nature has regained its spaces, now inhabited by high-definition digital humans. Experimental technologies were used to create the film, such as Midjourney, a text-based image generator derived from Open AI DALL-E, and Unreal Engine 5, the major platform for gaming and for the future development of a metaverse with increasingly realistic avatars.

 

The overall project will bring one of Venice’s most suggestive theatres back to life, also virtually, and connect contemporary creativity with innovations involved in producing sophisticated narratives for audiences both near and far. By starting from considering the theatre as a place of fiction and representation, its potential will be explored further. To do so, Mattia Casalegno has adopted digitisation tools and processed the images taken by scanner drones. Moreover, by exploring the archive documents in the Institute of Theatre and Opera, he became familiar with historical Teatro Verde performances: the classics of Greek tragedy, Ariadne, Pasiphae and the Minotaur, but also the mythologies of religious symbols closest to his Neapolitan culture; all of this would then be accompanied by original music from sound artist Maurizio Martusciello aka Martux_M.

 

Together they have created a work of great artistic and communicative significance, which will be presented to the public on 29 September as a symbol of the regeneration of the Teatro Verde and of a culture increasingly interested in the latest, fast-evolving technological-scientific developments.

 

Homo Faber 2022 | Crafting a More Human Future. Living Treasures of Europe and Japan

Homo Faber: Crafting a More Human Future” returns to San Giorgio from 10 April to 1 May 2022. This year’s edition is devoted to the Living
Treasures of Europe and Japan, a major project for the promotion of excellent artistic craftsmanship organised by the Michelangelo Foundation for Creativity and Craftsmanship, in partnership with the Fondazione Giorgio Cini, the Fondazione Cologni Mestieri d’Arte, Milan, the Japan Foundation and the Fondation Bettencourt Schueller, France, with the patronage of UNESCO. On the Island of San Giorgio Maggiore, visitors will be able to explore masterpieces, exhibitions, installations and workshops showcasing the art of great European master artisans and creatives and a selection of “Japanese National Living Treasures”. The exhibitions and events have been designed by a team of international curators, coordinated by Alberto Cavalli, executive director of the Fondazione Cologni and director of the Michelangelo Foundation.
A cultural experience of craftsmanship:

15 exhibitions, 22 curators and designers, 12 Japanese National Living Treasures, over 850 unique works crafted by more than 400 designers and artisans from 43 countries.

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Since 2018, Homo Faber has presented the excellence of craftsmanship from around the world every two years, an initiative organized by Michelangelo Foundation in collaboration with Fondazione Cologni dei Mestieri d’Arte and Fondazione Giorgio Cini. With each edition, the spaces of Isola di San Giorgio are transformed and brought to new life.

14–30 September 2018
Homo Faber. Crafting a more human future

10 April – 1 May 2022
Homo Faber: Crafting a more human future. Living Treasures of Europe and Japan

1–30 September 2024
Homo Faber 2024 – The Journey of Life

1–30 September 2026
Homo Faber 2026 | An Island of Light 

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A Guest at the Palace | “Saint George and the Dragon” by Paolo Uccello

The Guest at the Palace initiative, promoted by the Art History Institute of the Fondazione Giorgio Cini, was created through collaborations with some of the most prestigious Italian and international museum institutions. Conceived to temporarily enrich the museum holdings of Galleria di Palazzo Cini, the project features the exhibition of particularly important artworks granted on extraordinary loan and hosted for several months in the historic residence of Vittorio Cini, which houses the masterpieces of his remarkable art collection.

From 28 May to 1 November 2021, to mark the 70th anniversary of the Giorgio Cini Foundation (1951–2021), one of the most remarkable works by the celebrated Florentine Renaissance artist Paolo Uccello is on display: the panel depicting St George and the Dragon, generously loaned by the Musée Jacquemart-André in Paris to coincide with the loan of Botticelli’s The Judgement of Paris from the Cini collection for the exhibition Botticelli. Un laboratoire de la Renaissance (11 September 2020 – 25 January 2021). The presence of this Parisian masterpiece enriches the core of the Florentine 15th-century section of the permanent collection, creating new resonances; and symbolically evokes the miles christianus that features prominently in the logo of the institution founded on the island of San Giorgio Maggiore in 1951, at the behest of Vittorio Cini in memory of his son Giorgio.

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The painting of St George and the Dragon was purchased by Nélie Jacquemart at the Stevens auction in London in 1899; it had previously been in the collection of the Florentine antiquarian Stefano Bardini.

 

The painting is characterised by an elegant heraldic-chivalric composition that captures the climactic moment of the action: St George, lance at the ready, has just pierced the monster’s jaws, piercing its three-pronged tongue; the surcoat bearing the cross banner (the Cross of St George) rises above the armour in the heat of the assault, whilst the horse rears up; balancing the dynamism of the struggle is the silhouette of the princess, cloaked in a precious floral-patterned robe of embossed velvet.

 

The rural landscape is not reduced to a single vanishing point, but consists of two sections conceived from different angles of view: the ploughed fields stretch out before us, with the path coming to life with figures and leading straight to the white, turreted walls; to the right, the bird’s-eye view, amidst the gentle slopes, widens and compels us to look up.

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Open daily from 11am to 7pm, closed on Tuesdays.

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May 24 – July 21, 2014

Portrait of a Young Man with a Lute by Agnolo Bronzino

 

 

September 5 – November 2, 2014

Adoration of the Shepherds by Lorenzo Lotto 

 

 

June 17 – September 28, 2015

The Madonna of Pontassieve by Beato Angelico

 

 

September 19 – November 15, 2015

Capriccio with a Small Square by Francesco Guardi  

 

 

April 8 – June 6, 2016

Saint Mark by Andrea Mantegna

 

 

May 28 – November 1, 2021

Saint George and the Dragon by Paolo Uccello

 

 

July 15 – October 15, 2023

Warsaw, Church of the Holy Cross by Bernardo Bellotto

 

 

May 11 – July 16, 2023

Cleopatra by Artemisia Gentileschi

 

 

May 14 – September 8, 2025

The Crucified Christ by Antoon van Dyck

 

 

 

June 18  — September 27, 2026

Minerva Infuses the Soul into the Human Figure Modeled in Clay by Prometheus

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Homo Faber 2018 | Crafting a More Human Future

The Michelangelo Foundation for Creativity and Craftsmanship, an institution based in Switzerland dedicated to the promotion of master craftsmanship on an international scale, is holding its first major cultural event dedicated to art crafts in Europe: Homo Faber. Crafting a More Human Future.

The exhibition has been conceived by a highly select team of renowned designers, curators and architects. It aims to showcase the excellence of European craftsmanship, offering visitors a memorable unique experience. Homo Faber has relied on the collaboration of an exceptional team to infuse the show with extraordinary creativity and energy, including leading figures in the design field, such as Michele De Lucchi, Stefano Boeri, India Mahdavi, Judith Clark, Jean Blanchaert and Stefano Micelli. The partners of the Michelangelo Foundation who have collaborated in the organisation all share the same vision: the Fondazione Giorgio Cini, the Fondation Bettencourt Schueller, the Triennale Design Museum and the Fondazione Cologni dei Mestieri d’Arte. The exhibition will feature a wide selection of materials and disciplines, from jewellery to custom bicycles, from near extinct artisan skills to some of the most representative examples of European art crafts. Covering an area of 4,000 square metres, Homo Faber will be the largest ever exhibition to be held at the Fondazione Cini; visitors are required to register in advance on the website www.homofaberevent.com.

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Since 2018, Homo Faber has presented the excellence of craftsmanship from around the world every two years, an initiative organized by Michelangelo Foundation in collaboration with Fondazione Cologni dei Mestieri d’Arte and Fondazione Giorgio Cini. With each edition, the spaces of Isola di San Giorgio are transformed and brought to new life.

14–30 September 2018
Homo Faber. Crafting a more human future

10 April – 1 May 2022
Homo Faber: Crafting a more human future. Living Treasures of Europe and Japan

1–30 September 2024
Homo Faber 2024 – The Journey of Life

1–30 September 2026
Homo Faber 2026 | An Island of Light 

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Art Conversation

The Institute of Art History of Fondazione Giorgio Cini regularly organizes series of talks by art historians, researchers and experts, in order to introduce the public to Vittorio Cini’s museum-house and explore themes linked with its collections and the artworks it temporarily hosts.

11 October Francesco Aceto (Università degli Studi di Napoli Federico II)I “Francescani” Cini, il pittore Colantonio e la pala degli ordini in San Lorenzo Maggiore a Napoli

18 October  Chiara Ceschi (Istituto di Storia dell’Arte, Fondazione Giorgio Cini): Nelle stanze del conte: dalla casa al museo

25 October Antonella Chiodo (Fondazione Giorgio Cini): Vittorio Cini, gli antiquari e i mercanti

9 November Carmen Ravanelli Guidotti (Storica dell’arte): Vittorio Cini e la collezione di maioliche e porcellane

15 November Mauro Natale (Università di Ginevra): L’Officina ferrarese di Vittorio Cini


Download the program Cartolina conversazioni autunno.

Booking is strongly advised.

tel. 0412710217
[email protected]

Art Conversations at Palazzo Cini

Art Conversations return to Palazzo Cini, from 24 May to 21 June: a unique opportunity to be accompanied by experts and art historians to discover the Masterpieces of the Vittorio Cini collection.

24 May, 5.30pm
I dipinti fiorentini antichi: dal Maestro del Bigallo a Taddeo Gaddi
Angelo Tartuferi
Vice Director Galleria dell’Accademia di Firenze

31 May, 5.30pm
Sul polittico di San Paolo della Collezione Cini
Federica Siddi
Art Historian

7 June, 5.30pm
L’ultima stagione di Piero di Cosimo nei due dipinti della Collezione Cini
Marco Campigli
Art Historian

14 June, 5.30pm
Ritratto di un’amicizia. Il Pontormo di Palazzo Cini
Vittoria Romani
Università degli Studi di Padova

21 June, 5.30pm
La zuffa di Dosso Dossi della Collezione Cini
Lucia Menegatti
Art Historian

Twelfth World Conference On the Future of Science. Digital Revolution: what is changing for humankind?

The pervasive “digital revolution” is one of the most topical phenomena of our age and has brought about profound changes in social, cultural, medical and scientific terms. Each stage of our life is undergoing deep transformations as traditional roles and phases evolve, while the greater human-machine collaboration may have largely unexplored consequences.

The twelfth edition of the World Conference on the Future of Science will attempt to reveal the secrets of the digital age. From 22 to 24 September, some of the world’s leading experts on science will gather on the Island of San Giorgio Maggiore in Venice to discuss the most pressing issues arising from this revolution. They will express their own points of view on questions of crucial importance for the destiny of our society before an audience of scientists, philosophers, theologians, industrialists, politicians, economists, journalists, students and Others interested in the social, economic and political consequences of continuous scientific progress.

The “Future of Science” is a series of annual international conferences jointly organised by the Fondazione Umberto Veronesi, the Fondazione Silvio Tronchetti Provera, and the Fondazione Giorgio Cini. The aim of the conferences is to examine the importance of scientific development as a mean of improving the quality of our lives and to delineate a new role for science in the society of the third millennium. The underlying idea arises from an awareness that the problems and  dilemmas generated by unrelenting scientific and technological progress are not being adequately discussed in terms of their social, economic and cultural consequences, while society seems to be ill-informed about the ongoing technological revolution and its short- and long-term implications.

More info on

http://www.thefutureofscience.org/

 

A Guest at the Palace | “Saint Mark” of Andrea Mantegna

The Guest at the Palace initiative, promoted by the Art History Institute of the Fondazione Giorgio Cini, was created through collaborations with some of the most prestigious Italian and international museum institutions. Conceived to temporarily enrich the museum holdings of Galleria di Palazzo Cini, the project features the exhibition of particularly important artworks granted on extraordinary loan and hosted for several months in the historic residence of Vittorio Cini, which houses the masterpieces of his remarkable art collection.

From April 8 to June 6, 2014, the Gallery’s permanent collection was enriched by an extraordinary loan: the painting of Saint Mark by Andrea Mantegna (Isola di Carturo, c. 1431 – Mantua, 1506), generously lent by the Städel Museum.

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Saint Mark has been attributed to the very earliest phase of the young Mantegna’s activity in Padua, closely connected with the work he was carrying out in the Ovetari Chapel in the Church of the Eremitani in Padua between 1448 and 1449, in collaboration with Nicolò Pizolo. The painting represents an unsurpassed achievement of the artist’s youthful period and a cornerstone of antiquarian-inspired painting in fifteenth-century northern Italy.

The influence of his master Francesco Squarcione, evident in the rendering of details, merges with a profound commitment to the concept of solid perspective, a constant feature of Mantegna’s art. This places the Saint—absorbed in divine contemplation—within the projecting space of a marbleedicule of classical composure.

A spatial illusionism marked by noble and restrained gravity—further emphasized by the cartouche attached to the parapet bearing the artist’s signature and invocation to the Venetian patrimony of Saint Mark—makes the Frankfurt painting one of the defining masterpieces of the youth of one of the most brilliant painters of the Renaissance.

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It is open every day (except Wednesdays) from 11:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.

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May 24 – July 21, 2014

Portrait of a Young Man with a Lute by Agnolo Bronzino

 

 

September 5 – November 2, 2014

Adoration of the Shepherds by Lorenzo Lotto 

 

 

June 17 – September 28, 2015

The Madonna of Pontassieve by Beato Angelico

 

 

September 19 – November 15, 2015

Capriccio with a Small Square by Francesco Guardi  

 

 

April 8 – June 6, 2016

Saint Mark by Andrea Mantegna

 

 

May 28 – November 1, 2021

Saint George and the Dragon by Paolo Uccello

 

 

July 15 – October 15, 2023

Warsaw, Church of the Holy Cross by Bernardo Bellotto

 

 

May 11 – July 16, 2023

Cleopatra by Artemisia Gentileschi

 

 

May 14 – September 8, 2025

The Crucified Christ by Antoon van Dyck

 

 

 

June 18  — September 27, 2026

Minerva Infuses the Soul into the Human Figure Modeled in Clay by Prometheus

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A Guest at the Palace | “Madonna of Pontassieve” by Beato Angelico

The Guest at the Palace initiative, promoted by the Art History Institute of the Fondazione Giorgio Cini, was created through collaborations with some of the most prestigious Italian and international museum institutions. Conceived to temporarily enrich the museum holdings of Galleria di Palazzo Cini, the project features the exhibition of particularly important artworks granted on extraordinary loan and hosted for several months in the historic residence of Vittorio Cini, which houses the masterpieces of his remarkable art collection.

The Gallery of Palazzo Cini in San Vio welcomes a new distinguished guest: Madonna di Pontassieve by Beato Angelico (Vicchio di Mugello, c. 1395 – Rome, 1455), a masterpiece by the great Tuscan painter, on loan from the Uffizi Gallery in Florence. It is likely the central panel of the lost polyptych created for the Tuscan city (c. 1435).

The painting arrives at Palazzo Cini on June 17, 2015, coinciding with the opening of the exhibition Piero di Cosimo. An Eccentric “Florentine” Painter Between the Renaissance and the Mannerist Period (Florence, June 23 – September 27, 2015), which will feature the two paintings by Piero di Cosimo normally housed in the Gallery: the Madonna and Child with Angels (recently also exhibited in the show Piero di Cosimo: The Poetry of Painting in Renaissance Florence at the National Gallery of Art in Washington) and the Holy Family with the Young Saint John.

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The Madonna of Pontassieve, commissioned in 1435 by six members of the wealthy Florentine Filicaia family, who held the patronage of the church of San Michele in Pontassieve, most likely forms the central panel of the high altar polyptych.

 

This masterpiece from the mature period of the ‘pictor angelicus’ remained in the shadows for a long time, due to its peripheral location and the early dismantling it must have undergone as early as the mid-17th century. It was not until 1909 that the painting received its first critical mention (Giovanni Poggi), with an attribution, universally accepted, to the Dominican painter: the interest aroused by the work, thanks also to the exhibitions in London and Florence in the 1930s which brought it to the attention of scholars, contributed to the decision to transfer it to the Uffizi Gallery in 1949. Since then, it has been the subject of constant scientific scrutiny, right up to the recent exhibition in Pontassieve curated by Ada Labriola (2010), which was entirely dedicated to it and brought to light many new insights, primarily regarding its patronage.

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Open daily from 11am to 7pm, closed on Tuesdays.

 

On Wednesday 17 June at 5.30pm, the Art Talk “Beato Angelico: Painter of Light. The Madonna of Pontassieve” will take place, led by art historian Ada Labriola, former curator of the 2010 exhibition “Beato Angelico in Pontassieve”. The event is free and open to all by booking via email, subject to purchase of an entry ticket to the gallery.

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May 24 – July 21, 2014

Portrait of a Young Man with a Lute by Agnolo Bronzino

 

 

September 5 – November 2, 2014

Adoration of the Shepherds by Lorenzo Lotto 

 

 

June 17 – September 28, 2015

The Madonna of Pontassieve by Beato Angelico

 

 

September 19 – November 15, 2015

Capriccio with a Small Square by Francesco Guardi  

 

 

April 8 – June 6, 2016

Saint Mark by Andrea Mantegna

 

 

May 28 – November 1, 2021

Saint George and the Dragon by Paolo Uccello

 

 

July 15 – October 15, 2023

Warsaw, Church of the Holy Cross by Bernardo Bellotto

 

 

May 11 – July 16, 2023

Cleopatra by Artemisia Gentileschi

 

 

May 14 – September 8, 2025

The Crucified Christ by Antoon van Dyck

 

 

 

June 18  — September 27, 2026

Minerva Infuses the Soul into the Human Figure Modeled in Clay by Prometheus

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A Guest at the Palace | “Adoration of the Shepherds” by Lorenzo Lotto

The Guest at the Palace initiative, promoted by the Art History Institute of the Fondazione Giorgio Cini, was created through collaborations with some of the most prestigious Italian and international museum institutions. Conceived to temporarily enrich the museum holdings of Galleria di Palazzo Cini, the project features the exhibition of particularly important artworks granted on extraordinary loan and hosted for several months in the historic residence of Vittorio Cini, which houses the masterpieces of his remarkable art collection.

From September 5 to November 2, 2014, the Galleria di Palazzo Cini hosted Adoration of the Shepherds by Lorenzo Lotto (Venice, c. 1480 – Loreto, 1556–1557), on loan from the Musei Civici di Brescia and considered one of the masterpieces of the artist’s mature period. The initiative was promoted by the Art History Institute in collaboration with Fondazione Brescia Musei and the Pinacoteca Tosio Martinengo.

The relationship established with the city of Brescia is rich in significance, as it was historically a place of encounter and exchange between Venetian and Lombard artistic cultures, as well as with its Pinacoteca, which preserves some of the most important examples of the great Lombard and Brescian painting tradition. The presence of the Adoration of the Shepherds at Palazzo Cini represented a stage in an ideal itinerary of Lorenzo Lotto’s works in Venice, connecting nearby institutions and sites such as the Gallerie dell’Accademia with the extraordinary Portrait of a Young Man, the Church of Santa Maria dei Carmini with the altarpiece depicting Saint Nicholas in Glory with Saints, and finally the Basilica dei Santi Giovanni e Paolo with the other magnificent altarpiece representing The Alms of Saint Antoninus.

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The painting Adoration of the Shepherds was acquired by Count Paolo Tosio in 1825 and is regarded as one of the masterpieces of the Brescian collection.

Enclosed within a setting defined by simplified architectural lines, forming a shed-like stable compressed by shadows gathered in its recesses into a backdrop of pure geometry, the group of figures is arranged to express the theme of the Adoration of the Christ Child by Mary and the shepherds. Here, the image of the recognition of Christ’s divinity is combined with the older iconographic tradition of the Virgin of Humility.

In the detail of Mary adoring the Child, kneeling on the very same moss-covered basket in which the Infant lies, one may perceive an allusion to the debate concerning Mary’s role as co-redeemer in the plan of eternal salvation — a central issue in the religious disputes surrounding Catholic reform and the Council of Trent. Joseph, portrayed as a protective father figure, occupies the background, from which the ox and the donkey emerge within the evening atmosphere.

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It is open every day (except Wednesdays) from 11:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m.

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May 24 – July 21, 2014

Portrait of a Young Man with a Lute by Agnolo Bronzino

 

 

September 5 – November 2, 2014

Adoration of the Shepherds by Lorenzo Lotto 

 

 

June 17 – September 28, 2015

The Madonna of Pontassieve by Beato Angelico

 

 

September 19 – November 15, 2015

Capriccio with a Small Square by Francesco Guardi  

 

 

April 8 – June 6, 2016

Saint Mark by Andrea Mantegna

 

 

May 28 – November 1, 2021

Saint George and the Dragon by Paolo Uccello

 

 

July 15 – October 15, 2023

Warsaw, Church of the Holy Cross by Bernardo Bellotto

 

 

May 11 – July 16, 2023

Cleopatra by Artemisia Gentileschi

 

 

May 14 – September 8, 2025

The Crucified Christ by Antoon van Dyck

 

 

June 18  — September 27, 2026

Minerva Infuses the Soul into the Human Figure Modeled in Clay by Prometheus

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