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Italia

Italia, oficialmente la República Italiana , es uno de los veintisiete estados soberanos que forman la Unión Europea. Su forma de gobierno es la república parlamentaria. Su territorio, con capital en Roma, se divide en veinte regiones formadas estas, a su vez, por 106 provincias. Italia se ubica en el centro del mar Mediterráneo, en Europa Meridional. Ocupa la península itálica, así como la llanura Padana, la islas de Sicilia y Cerdeña y alrededor de ochocientas islas menores entre las que se destacan las islas Tremiti en el mar Adriático, los archipiélagos Campano y Toscano en el mar Tirreno, o las islas Pelagias en África septentrional, entre otras. En el norte, está rodeada por los Alpes y tiene frontera con Francia, Suiza, Austria, y Eslovenia. Los Estados de San Marino y Ciudad del Vaticano son enclaves dentro del territorio italiano. A su vez, Campione d'Italia es un municipio italiano que forma un pequeño enclave en territorio suizo. Ha sido el hogar de muchas culturas europeas como la civilización nurágica, los etruscos, los griegos, los romanos y también fue la cuna del Humanismo y del Renacimiento, que comenzó en la región de Toscana y pronto se extendió por toda Europa. La capital de Italia, Roma, ha sido durante siglos el centro político y cultural de la civilización occidental. Además, es la ciudad santa para la Iglesia católica, siendo el Papa el obispo de Roma y encontrándose dentro de la ciudad el microestado del Vaticano. El significado cultural del país se refleja en todos sus Patrimonios de la Humanidad, ya que tiene 55, el país con mayor número del mundo.[6]​ Es el tercer país de la Unión Europea que más turistas recibe por año, siendo Roma la tercera ciudad más visitada.[7]​ Otras ciudades importantes son: Milán, centro de finanzas y de industria, y, según el Global Language Monitor, la capital de la Moda;[8]​ Nápoles, importante puerto en el Mediterráneo, capital histórica y ciudad más poblada del Mezzogiorno;[9]​ Turín, centro de industria automovilística y de diseño industrial. Italia es una república democrática, forma parte del G7 o grupo de las siete más grandes naciones avanzadas del mundo y es un país desarrollado con una calidad de vida muy alta, encontrándose en 2005 entre las siete primeras del mundo.[10]​ Es el país número 28 en materia de alto índice de desarrollo humano.[11]​ Es una potencia regional y mundial[12]​[13]​[14]​[15]​ miembro fundador de la Unión Europea, firmante del Tratado de Roma en 1957. También es miembro fundador de la Organización del Tratado del Atlántico Norte y miembro de la Organización para la Cooperación y el Desarrollo Económico, de la Organización Mundial del Comercio, del Consejo de Europa y de la Unión Europea Occidental. El país, y especialmente Roma, tiene una fuerte repercusión en temas de política y cultura, en organizaciones mundiales como la Organización para la Agricultura y la Alimentación ,[16]​ el Fondo Internacional de Desarrollo Agrícola , el Glocal Forum,[17]​ o el Programa Mundial de Alimentos .

Stefano Bardini

Florencia

Stefano Bardini was an Italian connoisseur and art dealer in Florence who specialized in Italian paintings, Renaissance sculpture, cassoni and other Renaissance and Cinquecento furnishings and architectural fragments that came on the market during the urban regeneration of Florence in the 1860s and 70s.Trained as a painter and expert copyist at the Accademia di Belle Arti Firenze from 1854, Bardini received increasing commissions as a restorer and expanded into selling works of art from 1870 onwards. Working as a restorer Bardini, who successfully removed some Botticelli frescoes from the Villa Lemmi, was commissioned to remove the frescoes commissioned by Jakob Salomon Bartholdy from several of the German Nazarene circle of painters from Casa Bartholdy, Rome, which had been purchased by Berlin, in 1886–87. His esthetic, barely distinguishable restoration of Simone Martini's Saint Catherine of Alexandria, now in the National Gallery of Canada, has been examined as an outstanding example of the seamless restorations that his generation preferred.Many well-known works of Renaissance art bear a Bardini provenience. The National Gallery of Art, Washington DC, has some twenty works that passed through his hands, notably the Benedetto da Maiano Madonna and Child, the Bernardo Daddi Saint Paul and the Portrait of a Youth by Filippino Lippi. The Metropolitan Museum of Art conserves eight paintings that Bardini once owned, including Veronese's Boy with a Greyhound, and Giovanni di Paolo's Coronation of the Virgin from the Robert Lehman collection, as well as the baroque portrait bust of Ferdinando de' Medici by Giovanni Battista Foggini and an eagle lectern by Giovanni Pisano. Bardini's connections with Bernard Berenson resulted in several of Bardini's purchases finding their way to the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, where Berenson was the guiding light; among them are two North Italian Romanesque stylobate, column-supporting lions and a basin, purchased from Bardini in 1897. The much-damaged marble of a curly-haired youth from the Borghese collection, employed by Stanford White as a fountain figure in the Payne Whitney house at 972 Fifth Avenue, New York City, which remained in situ as the house was bought for the French Cultural Services, then made headlines in 1996 when it was attributed as a youthful work of Michelangelo. belonged to Bardini, Stanford White's mainstay in Florence for panelling, paintings and sculpture and Renaissance furnishings, who supplied White with two 16th-century wooden ceilings reinstalled in Whitney's palazzo among the caseloads of works of art he shipped across the Atlantic to White. In the decades after 1860 he was also responsible for the transformation of many painted cassone panels that had been previously removed from the furniture, which was considered valueless, by creating new carved and part gilded walnut cassoni in the pristine condition that was required of furniture for grand houses. Of such cassoni, the quantity that came onto the market were astonishing: the German art historian Paul Schubring was shown an outbuilding, probably at Bardini's Torre del Gallo, that consisted of a single room in which he counted some 200 cassoni. The archives of the Museo Bardini make it clear that the free restorations and adaptations and imitations sold by Bardini were not misattributed; "confusion set in only half a century later when the heirs of the original owners came to sell the pieces," Ellen Callmann observes. Not all Bardini's cassoni were heavily restored: the famous cassone painted with The Conquest of Trebizond from Palazzo Strozzi, with Strozzi armorial bearings, one of the minority of cassone panels remaining integral to its cassone, is conserved at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.In 1881 Bardini acquired the deconsecrated church and convent of San Gregorio facing piazza dei Mozzi in the Oltrarno and set about transforming it into his opulent residence and restoration studio, Palazzo Bardini, now housing the Museo Bardini, with his collections of paintings, sculpture, most notably a marble Charity by Tino da Camaino, 15th- and 16th-century Italian furniture, ceramics, tapestry, arms; stringed and keyboard musical instruments, including one of only two surviving oval spinets by Bartolomeo Cristofori; Roman and Etruscan antiquities and 15th- and 16th-century architectural fittings, including paneled and painted ceilings, chimneypieces and door surrounds. His example inspired his most successful protégé, Elia Volpi, to purchase and freely restore Palazzo Davanzati in the heart of Florence, and fill it with a similar range of art. Bardini's extensive connections among impecunious patricians and with dealers and restorers opened many avenues for acquiring works of art. Works of art from the Giampietro Campana collection, dispersed in 1858, later passed, probably indirectly, through Bardini's hands. In 1892 Bardini was commissioned to oversee the dispersal of a major part of the Borghese Collection in Rome. In the spring of 1892 Bardini prepared a lavish catalogue for an auction sale of pieces from his own collection, held at Christie's.In 1902 he purchased the Torre del Gallo at Pian de' Giullari, in the hills of Arcetri, on top of a ridge with a panoramic view over the city. There he undertook neo-medieval restorations that were carried out between 1904 and 1906. In winding down his activities, Bardini organized a sale in New York in 1918 that dispersed his sculpture and furniture into American private collections, and which eventually came to American museums. Among the works was a polychromed terracotta of the Virgin and Child that remains firmly attributed to Donatello, "in the small class of autograph Donatello reliefs", as John Pope-Hennessy observed. Lot 427 in the sale was of two Polyclitan marble fragments, a Diadoumenos torso associated with a head possibly of Hermes, both fine Roman copies: they are now in the Walters Art Museum, Baltimore.His bequest to the city of Florence resulted in the opening of the Museo Bardini in 1923; the Giardino Bardini across from it is also his legacy. The recent work of Lynn Catterson has corrected much of the often repeated urban legend about Bardini. See Lynn Catterson, “Stefano Bardini, His Conservative Side and the Protection of Frescoes,” in Stefano Bardini ‘estrattista;’ affreschi staccati nell’Italia Unita fra antiquariato, collezionismo e musei, Luca Ciancabilla and Cristiano Giometti, eds, Edizioni ETS Pisa, 2019, pp. 79-92. Lynn Catterson, "Art Market, Social Network and Contamination: Bardini, Bode and the Madonna Pazzi Puzzle,” in Lynn Catterson, ed, Florence, Berlin and Beyond: Social Network and the late 19C Art Market, The Netherlands: Brill, 2020. https://brill.com/view/title/56528 Lynn Catterson, “Duped or Duplicitous? Bode, Bardini and the many Madonnas of South Kensington,” Journal of the History of Collections, Spring 2020. Lynn Catterson, “From visual inventory to trophy clippings: Bardini & Co. and the use of photographs in the late 19C art market,” from the conference, The Art Market in Italy Around 1900: Actors, Archives, Photographs / Il mercato dell'arte in Italia intorno al 1900. Protagonisti, archivi, fotografie, , Mitteilungen des Kunsthistorischen Instituts in Florenz,” Summer 2020. Lynn Catterson, “From Florence to London to New York: J.P. Morgan’s Bronze Doors,” Nineteenth Century Art Worldwide, 2017, vol. 16, no. 3, Autumn; “Addendum,” vol. 18, no. 1, 2019 . Lynn Catterson, “Stefano Bardini & the Taxonomic Branding of Marketplace Style. From the Gallery of a Dealer to the Institutional Canon,” in eds. Melania Savino, Eva-Maria Troelenberg. Images of the Art Museum, Connecting Gaze and Discourse in the History of Museology, Berlin: de Gruyter GmbH, 2015, pp. 41-64. Lynn Catterson, “Stefano Bardini: Forming the Canon of Fifteenth-Century Italian Sculpture,” CENTER35, National Gallery of Art Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts, Record of Activities and Research Reports, June 2014 -May 2015, Washington, 2015, pp. 60-63. Lynn Catterson, “American collecting, Stefano Bardini & the Taste for TreQuattrocento Florence,” Discovering the Italian Trecento in the 19th Century, dedicated issue of Predella.it, 2017 n.41-42 . Lynn Catterson, Editor and Introductory essay, Dealing Art on Both Sides of the Atlantic, 1860 to 1940, The Netherlands: Brill, 2017 .

Iglesia del Gesù

Lacio

La iglesia del Gesù situada en la plaza del Gesù en Roma, es la iglesia madre de la Compañía de Jesús, conocida como los jesuitas, una orden de la Iglesia católica. Su fachada está reconocida como «la primera verdaderamente barroca»[1]​ y fue el modelo de innumerables iglesias jesuitas en todo el mundo, especialmente en el continente americano.

Museo dell'Opera del Duomo (Prato)

Prato (Toscana)

El Museo dell'Opera del Duomo de Prato se encuentra en la plaza de la catedral de esa ciudad y usa algunos locales del palacio episcopal adyacente a la catedral.

Museo Nazionale di Palazzo Mansi

Luca (Italia)

The Museo Nazionale di Palazzo Mansi is one of the two main art museum hosting tapestry collections and mainly post-19th century art collections owned by the city of Lucca, Italy. The collection is displayed in the Baroque palace, formerly belonging to the Mansi family, and located in central Lucca. Many of the original room decorations remain in place.The Palace was first erected at the site of a few earlier tower-houses bought in 1616 by the Lucchese merchant of silk Ascanio Mansi and his descendants. While the facade retains earlier Renaissance window features, between 1686 and 1691, Ascanio's son Raffaello employed the architect Raffaello Mazzanti to further renovate the now palace, and the piano nobile rooms acquired the present decoration and a grand staircase access. The cooler ground floor rooms were turned into a summer apartment. In the second half of the 18th century, Luigi Mansi pursued further refurbishing. The Mansi family retained prestige in the early 19th century; Raffaele Mansi and Camilla Parensi had been appointed courtiers to Elisa Bonaparte and Felice Baciocchi. Raffaello Mansi Orsetti, who died in 1956, was the first to display the art collections to the public. In the mid-1960s his children sold the palace to the state, which has converted into a National Museum of arts and tapestries. The interiors house a highly decorated bedroom alcove with gilded caryatid columns flanking the portal.

Piazza della Santissima Annunziata

Florencia

Piazza della Santissima Annunziata is a square in the city of Florence, region of Tuscany, Italy. The Piazza is named after the church of the Annunziata at the head of the square. In the center of the piazza is the bronze Equestrian statue of Ferdinando I and two Mannerist fountains with fantastical figures, all works completed by the late-Renaissance sculptor Pietro Tacca.

Iglesia de Sant'Andrea (Pistoia)

Pistoya

Sant'Andrea es una iglesia en Pistoya, Toscana, centro de Italia que servía como un pieve o lugar que las congregaciones de las iglesias de los pueblos que lo rodean usan para el baptismo. Está dedicado al apóstol San Andrés, e incluye el famoso púlpito de Sant'Andrea por Giovanni Pisano. La iglesia probablemente date de principios del siglo VIII, aunque en un tamaño menor. En el siglo XII se amplió a lo largo. La fachada muestra la típica decoración en mármol a dos colores del estilo románico de Pistoya, ejecutada a mediados del siglo XII por Gruamonte y su hermano Adeodatus, quien fue también responsable para las esculturas y para el arquitrabe del portal. Esta última presenta el «Viaje de los Reyes Magos», un tema raro cuyo uso aquí deriva del hecho de que la iglesia se ubicaba en la Via Francigena, a través de la cual, en la Edad Media, los peregrinos alcanzaban Roma desde Francia. Los capiteles decorativos son obra del Maestro Enrique, mientras que la pequeña estatua de San Andrés en la luneta sobre el portal recuerda el estilo de Giovanni Pisano. A finales del siglo XV la fachada superior estaba acabada y la nave central cubierta de bóveda. Los frescos en el ábside datan de 1506, ejecutados por Bernardino del Signoraccio. Hoy solo sobrevive la parte central, con el Padre apoyado por cuatro ángeles. Los altares en las naves laterales se añadieron en el siglo XVII, con pinturas de artistas como Cristofano Allori, Alessio Gimignani, y Girolamo Scaglia.

Iglesia de Santa Maria Formosa

Venecia

Santa María Formosa es una iglesia de Venecia . Fue erigida en 1492 con diseño del arquitecto renacentista Mauro Codussi. Queda en el lugar de una iglesia anterior que databa del siglo VII que, según la tradición, fue una de las ocho fundadas por San Magno, obispo de Oderzo. El nombre formosa se refiere a la aparición de la Virgen disfraza de mujer a la moda.

Academia Albertina

Turín

La Academia Albertina de las Bellas Artes es una institución de educación superior en artes visuales en la ciudad de Turín, Italia, fundada en 1678.

Baptisterio de Parma

Parma

El baptisterio de Parma es un baptisterio —edificio destinado al rito del bautismo cristiano— italiano del siglo XIII que está situado junto a la catedral de Parma y se considera estilísticamente como un punto de unión de la arquitectura románica y la arquitectura gótica.