Campli's National Archaeological Museum, Abruzzo, by Ilaria Di Gregorio
Ilaria Di Gregorio's project work, made for Visual Arts Management's Course at the University of Teramo, run by prof. Paolo Coen. The project work focuses on the National Archaeological Museum of Campli, in Abruzzo, Italy.
.
National archaeological museum Municipality of Campli Abruzzo Italy
Archaeological Museum of Campli is directly connected to the nearby necropolis of Campovalano which returned, during forty years of research, 610 burials of the Iron Age and Romanization (IX-III sec. BC).
Napole Archeological Museum - Italy
Napole Archeological Museum - Italy
A small trip (english subtitled), by Paolo Coen
The short's source of inspiration is the Memorial Day held January 27 2011 at the Università della Calabria, in Southern Italy, co-organized by the author. Paolo Coen appears here together with some other scholars who attended to the conference, such as Carlo Fanelli, playing here a major role as an expert in history and theory of theatre, as well as Antonio Cataldi, Giorgio Giannini, Leonardo Passarelli, Grazia Maria Fachechi, Alexia Giustini, Pio Colonnello and the artist Silvio Vigliaturo. One might also easily recognize two Italian witnesses of the Shoah, Giulia Spizzichino e Giulia Mafai.
2011 Memorial Day and some others related events, such as the seminary De André e l'Altro, l'Altro e De André, where the student band Lello e i suoi was protagonist, are connected to other trips, stories or episodes which reflect or simply evoke the experience of the Shoah. One might then understand the images from the author's visit to the Synagogue of Stommeln, near the Pulheim and Cologne, of those from Dan Flavin's installation in villa Litta - o Menafoglio Litta Panza - near Varese, in northern Italy; or, again the photographs from The Drowned and the Saved by Richard Serra in the Kolumba Museum at Cologne, or those of the Università della Calabria - a project by Vittorio Gregotti.
Abruzzo
Abruzzo (pronounced [aˈbruttso]) is the northernmost region of Southern Italy, with an area of about 10,763 square kilometres (4,156 sq mi) and a population of about 1.3 million inhabitants. Its western border lies less than 50 miles (80 km) east of Rome. The region, divided into the provinces of L'Aquila, Teramo, Pescara and the Chieti, borders the region of Marche to the north, Lazio to the west and south-west, Molise to the south-east, and the Adriatic Sea to the east. Abruzzo is split into a mountainous area in the west with the Gran Sasso D'italia, and into a coastal area on the eastern side with the beaches of the Adriatic sea. Geographically it is more of a central than southern region, although ISTAT (the Italian statistical authority) considers it to be part of Southern Italy, as a vestige of Abruzzo's historic association with the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies.
Abruzzo boasts the title of Greenest Region in Europe thanks to one third of its territory, the largest in Europe, being set aside as national parks and protected nature reserves. In the region there are three national parks, one regional park and 38 protected nature reserves. These ensure the survival of 75% of all of Europe's living species and are also home to some rare species, such as the small wading dotterel, golden eagle, Abruzzo chamois, Apennine wolf and Marsican brown bear. Abruzzo is also home to Calderone, Europe's southernmost glacier.
This video is targeted to blind users.
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
Creative Commons image source in video