ISLAMIC ART AND CULTURE: the Venetian Perspective

h2_vnfg_11.jpgIslamic Philosophy and Science in VenicePrecisely because Venice remained so open to foreign cultures, all kinds of philosophical, scientific, religious, and literary texts circulated in the city throughout the medieval and Renaissance periods. Mostly interested in Greek and Latin works, Venetian literati, however, understood that transmission occurred through Arabic texts.After printing presses were established in Europe in 1469, Venice’s prolific publishing shops quickly multiplied the number of copies of Arab texts in Latin translation. Venetian publishers issued Ptolemy’s astronomical work Almagest, Averroes’ philosophical Destructio destructionis, and many other related texts. In the most luxurious editions, Venetian illuminators enhanced the text with images of learned turbaned men, who often wield astrolabes.Particularly during the Middle Ages and Renaissance, medicine was far more advanced in the Islamic world than in western Europe. Venetian recognition of this fact is evident in their use of Avicenna’s Canon, a Greco-Arabic medical encyclopedia noted for its comprehensiveness and excellent organization, as their principal textbook for medical students at the University of Padua. In 1521, the Junta Press in Venice issued a revised Latin edition of the Canon that superseded the twelfth-century translation common throughout Europe.Venetian Representations of Islamic Figures

In the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, Venetian painters often incorporated Muslim figures in their large-scale narrative cycles and altarpieces. The fashion for this imagery, now known as the “Oriental Mode,” appears to have been fueled primarily by the Venetian guilds and religious confraternities then lining the walls of their meeting halls and chapels with scenes from the legends of their patron saints. Many of these saints, including Mark, Stephen, and George, had lived in the eastern Mediterranean prior to the rise of Islam, yet Venetian painters began depicting them surrounded by figures in contemporary Muslim attire. In many cases, Islamic-style architecture, including minarets, domes, and houses, are also illustrated, as are Islamic decorative arts, such as mosque lamps, ceramics, and blazons.

What is perhaps most remarkable is the Venetian painters’ intimate knowledge of Near Eastern costume. During his visit to Constantinople in 1479–81, Gentile Bellini made portraits of Sultan Mehmet II and figure studies of local men and women from different social groups, including soldiers and scribes; in each instance, he painstakingly described their costumes. He and his pupils later drew on his studies in their paintings, which accounts for their strikingly detailed representations of Ottoman turbans and dress. Later, the Bellini protégés Vittore Carpaccio and Giovanni Mansueti became veritable experts in Mamluk dress and its decorum, most likely as a direct result of increased Mamluk-Venetian diplomatic relations at the end of the fifteenth and beginning of the sixteenth century. For Venetian Renaissance painters, stock drawings, or simili, of Muslim figures became prized possessions, passed down from one generation to another and circulated among workshops for reuse.

By 1525, the last canvases painted in the Oriental mode for the Venetian confraternities were in place, many of the city’s most important Orientalist painters had died, and the Ottomans had conquered by the Mamluk empire. The Venetian tradition of setting large narrative scenes in the Islamic world had no followers in the late sixteenth century, when portraits of Muslims, most often Ottoman sultans, or the inclusion of a single Muslim figure in a religious scene were more characteristic.

During the second half of the sixteenth century, costume books emerged as a popular new genre and reflect a greater curiosity about foreign cultures derived from travels and new discoveries. Venice and the Veneto, where at least nine examples were published between 1540 and 1610, played a leading role in the costume book’s early development. The most famous and important example is Cesare Vecellio’s Degli abiti antichi et moderni di diverse parti del mondo of 1590, which became a model of the genre. It includes more than 500 illustrations and pays special attention to Venetian and Ottoman dress.

By the sixteenth century, Venice’s relations with her Muslim neighbors became increasingly complex. Venetian merchants continued trading in the eastern Mediterranean, but Turkey’s aggressive navy made travel more precarious. As a result, Venetians began representing Muslim subjects in less sympathetic ways. Turbaned men were frequently stereotyped as aggressive warriors or ridiculed as acrobats in Venetian paintings, drawings, prints, and even in wooden ship decorations.

Even in the changed political environment, the Islamic Near East continued to occupy a place in the collective imagination of Venetians. Wealthy patrons commissioned paintings with Muslim subjects, such as Turkish women relaxing in the sultan’s harem, to decorate their private palaces. These scenes serve as an important prologue to the new Orientalism, a pan-European phenomenon, of the nineteenth century.

Collecting Islamic Art in Venice

The presence of Islamic art in Venice can be documented from the Middle Ages until today. The earliest objects to arrive in the city—such as the luxurious relief-cut glass and rock crystal vessels from Fatimid Egypt in the Treasury of San Marco—can perhaps best be interpreted as spolia, or booty, rather than as a sign of an appreciation of Islamic art per se. Over the centuries, however, Venetian merchants and diplomats definitely developed a taste for Islamic ceramics, textiles, arms and armor, metalwork, and manuscripts and displayed them in their homes as works of art alongside objects from other periods and places. Perhaps no greater testament to the esteem of Islamic artifacts in Venice can be found than the portraits of Venetian patrician families with one of their most prized possessions, an oriental carpet.

By the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, so much Islamic art had accumulated in Venice’s palaces and churches that the city became an important destination for collectors of Islamic art, such as Wilhelm von Bode of Germany, wanting to make new acquisitions. Provenance research reveals that many Islamic art objects now in western European collections passed through Venice first. Major examples still remain in the city today, however, and the number of Venetian museums and churches with works of Islamic art is truly impressive; they include the Biblioteca Nazionale Marciana, the Basilica and Treasury of San Marco, the Museo Civico Correr, the Fondazione Giorgio Cini, and the Museo Franchetti alla Ca’ d’Oro.

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VENICE CUISINE

Fegato Fegato alla Veneziana

4 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
4 tablespoons unsalted butter
8 onions, very thinly sliced Salt
1 pound calves liver, thinly sliced
1/3 cup red wine
A few drops of aceto tradizionale

Heat the olive oil with 3 tablespoons of the butter in a large, heavy saute pan over a medium flame. Add the onions and cook them over low heat until they are very soft but not colored, for literally about 1 hour.

Salt the onions and remove them to a warm platter. Add the liver to the pan, salting and cooking for 30 to 45 seconds on each side. Work in batches if necessary to avoid overcrowding the pan. When done, place the liver over the onions and keep warm.

Add the wine to the pan and scrape the bottom of the pan with a wooden spoon to dislodge any browned bits. Add the remaining tablespoon of butter and pour it over the liver and onions. Drizzle the vinegar over and serve immediately.

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VENETIAN VILLAS ALONG THE BRENTA CANAL

villa1.jpgThe Brenta Riviera has always been considered such as the ideal extension of the Canal Grande in Venice and offers you a lost world made of richness, beauty and nature. On board of our motor-ship “Città di Padova” you will have the exclusive opportunity to navigate this luxurious route admiring wonderful villas set in beautiful gardens, once summer residences of the venetian nobles.
The most important artists worked here for the richest families of the Venetian Republic and the most famous personalities were guests in these mansions.
Three locks, nine swing bridges, forty-four km with more than eight metres of difference in level mark this excursion in Venetia; a cruise so rich in history, culture and nature.

  • Villa Foscari known as “La Malcontenta”
    Villa Foscari is the first villa located on the road leading out of Venice. It is near Malcontenta, a small village next to the Lagoon, from which the villa has taken its nickname. This wonderful villa was built by Palladio around the first half of the 18th century for the Foscari brothers, Nicolò and Alvise, who then made it their summer residence. The monumental, grandiose architectural style is a reflection of the ancient power of the Foscari family, which was once one of the most important in Venice. The interiors are decorated by Battista Franco e Gian Battista Zelotti
  • Villa Widmann Rezzonico Foscari
    This marvelous Villa is in Mira and was built on the wishes of the Scerimann family, an aristocratic Persian family, at the beginning of the 18th century. It was completed some decades later by the Widmann family, in a style that is reminiscent of the French Rococo fashion. The main lounge is a wonderful sight to see, full of frescoes by Giuseppe Angeli, a pupil of Giambattista Piazzetta, and Gerolamo Mengozzi Colonna, who worked with Tiepolo. The Villa is surrounded by huge gardens filled with cypress and horse-chestnut trees, interspersed by several stone statues of gods, nymphs and cupids. A Barchessa and a small church where Elisabetta and Arianna Widmann are buried are also part of the Villa’s buildings.
  • Barchessa Alessandri
    The Barchessa at Villa Alessandri is located in Mira, right opposite the Brenta river. It is guarded by a gate topped by two huge busts of the Emperors Caesar and Alexander, which were sculpted in honor of the villa’s first owner, Cesare Alessandri.
    The Barchessa is the home of a superb series of frescoes that have been attributed to Giannantonio Pellegrini, the person who inspired Tiepolo a few decades later. The remarkable frescoes depict a part of the tale of Ovid’s Metamorphoses, such as the moment when Daphne turns into a tree to escape from Apollo.
  • Barchessa Valmarana
    The Barchessa Valmarana stands on one of the prettiest sites on the Brenta Riviera, just a short distance from Mira. The Barchessa was originally part of Villa Valmarana, a building from the 16th century whose main structure was demolished at the beginning of the 20th century. The villa’s two external buildings, which were once used as a warehouse and a lodge, survived the demolition. The latter was opened to the public after restoration work which uncovered the wonderful frescoes painted by Michelangelo Schiavoni, also known as “il Chiozzotto”.
  • Villa Pisani
    This is often thought to be the most magnificent, grandiose building on the Riviera. Villa Pisani is in Stra, about 8 km from Padua. It was built around 1720 in a style that brings together Classical and Baroque elements, producing an effect that is worthy of the palaces in Versailles and Caserta. Visitors to the Villa can still see the original furnishings in the 114 rooms and the magnificent frescoes painted by Gianbattista Tiepolo between 1760 and 1762 in the ballroom. The huge park surrounding the villa is filled with statues and buildings, such as the exedra, the archeological hill, the ice-house, the lemon-house and the stables.
  • Villa Foscarini-Rossi
    Villa Foscarini-Rossi was built for the Foscarini family around the end of the 16th century by the famous architects Vincenzo Scamozzi, Francesco Contini and Giuseppe Jappelli, who followed a design by Andrea Palladio. The Villa is located in Stra, just a short distance from Villa Pisani. The Villa contains rooms that mingle Classical and Gothic elements, all filled with frescoes by pupils of Jappelli. The Villa also has two permanent exhibitions of the important Brenta shoemaking tradition.
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    GIUSEPPE SANTOMASO at San Giorgio island

    GIuseppe Santomaso at San Giorgio island

    Giuseppe Santomaso at San Giorgio island

    Image For Giuseppe Santomaso, 1930s Paris was the starting point: it was the city in which he encountered the languages that would launch his career as a creative but meditative artist, developing his own personal interpretation.
    After having met Picasso and Braque, therefore Cubism but also Surrealism, Santomaso brought the lessons of the Parisian avant-garde to Italy and to the group Fronte Nuovo delle Arti (New Front for the Arts), with his still-lifes, interiors, and the famous Windows series that he showed at the 1948 Biennale, ten works that are now all included in the exhibition staged at the Cini Foundation.

    The show, commemorating the centenary of the artist’s birth, will run from 12 April to 13 July, on the Isle of San Giorgio, in the halls of the new exhibition centre. The show dedicated to Santomaso and the abstract option, curated by Nico Stringa, in fact inaugurates the venue’s activities.

    Santomaso was not just a painter, but also an innovative and sophisticated publisher. He won considerable success with the prints made for the publication of Grand Air by Paul Eluard, and On Angle by Ezra Pound.
    In the 1950s, when he worked with the “Group of Eight” promoted by Lionello Venturi, he won the Venice Biennale International painting prize, and he laid the foundations for a long friendship with Peggy Guggenheim, who worked hard to publicize her friend’s works in the United States.
    The works that the American collector had the chance to evaluate include those exhibited at the Kassel biennial show, in which the artist took part immediately before travelling to São Paulo in 1953.
    Significant works from that period include: L’ora delle cicale, Ritmi rurali, Ricordo verde and Alba sulle falci.

    by Chiara Casarin | :venews

    Tr. Henry Neuteboom

    April 2008

    «Santomaso e l’opzione astratta»
    From April 12 to July 13
    New exhibition centre - San Giorgio Maggiore island

    Opening April 12, h 11 am.

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    BIENNALE OF VENICE 2008

    Biennale Dance 2008

    Biennale Dance
    BEAUTY - 6th International Festival of Contemporary Dance
    The 6th International Festival of Contemporary Dance by the Venice Biennale will this year “talk about” beauty: with performances, workshops, meetings and a video installation accompanying the event, running from 14th to 29th June in Venice. With Beauty, the title of the Festival, director Ismael Ivo extends his research on the body, which characterised the preceding editions, and creates a new current for exchange between dance and the contemporary world.
    Program
    14th > 29th June 2008
    Tickets
    History
    Biennale Dance
    6th International Festival of Contemporary Dance
    Twelve performances – five of which to be world premiered –, a workshop whose results will be four new creations by young choreographers, and a video-installation visible for the whole duration of the festival: this is Beauty, the Venice Biennale’s 6th International Festival of Contemporary Dance, directed by Ismael Ivo. The festival will take place in the venues of the Venice Arsenale and at the Teatro Malibran. On 14th June, the event will be opened by a symposium in order to debate the theme of beauty with dancers and choreographers, as well as scholars, writers and journalists. On 17th June, the prestigious award for lifetime achievement, the Golden Lion, will be presented to the Prague-born artist Jirí Kylián, the choreographer and creative spirit of the Nederlands Dans Theater.

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    SPECIAL OFFERS FOR A WONDERFUL SUMMER IN VENICE APARTMENTS

    Saint Mark apartmentSaint Mark apartmentSaint Mark apartment

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    Time for a vacation and for some very special days in a great location. From here you will become intimately acquainted with the unique atmosphere of the quainter parts of the city, that escape the hurried tourist.

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    HEINEKEN JAMMIN 2008 FESTIVAL IN VENICE: The Police, Sex Pistols, Linkin Park and Vasco Rossi the stars of this year.

    The Heineken Jammin Festival 2008 is going to be the most important of all editions. As last year, it will take place at San Giuliano Park, in Mestre (Venice mainland). The stars of this year will be the Linkin Park, the Sex Pistols, Vasco Rossi and the Police. There will be also Alanis Morissette, Marlene Kuntz, Iggy P & the Stooges, Counting Crows, Chris Cornell and many others.

    Del 20 June 2008 al 22 June 2008

    Heineken Jammin Festival 2008

    Three days of hard rock at the Parco San Giuliano in Mestre, Venice on June 20, 21 and 22, 2008. The rock gathering was moved from the historic location at the Autodromo of Imola to the Parco San Giuliano in Mestre for the second time this year, a 700 hectare park overlooking the Venice lagoon.

    In 2008, there will be two important reunions, the Police and the Sex Pistols, as well as famous names like Vasco Rossi and Linking Park. The detailed program for the entire festival will be available shortly.

    Friday, June 20, 2008 Sex Pistols - Linkin Park The same day, the winners of the Heineken Jammin’ Festival Contest 2008, Iggy & The Stooges and Chris Cornell will play.

    Saturday, June 21, 2008 Vasco Rossi The same day, the winners of the Heineken Jammin’ Festival Contest 2008, No Conventional Sound, Mattata, Mab and Marlene Kuntz will play.

    Sunday, June 22, 2008 The Police The same day, the winners of the Heineken Jammin’ Festival Contest 2008, the Counting Crows, Baustelle and Alanis Morissette will play.

    Tickets: Tickets are on sale via the Ticketone Call Center 892 101 (Mon-Fri 9:00-20:00 and Sat 9:00-5:30) www.ticketone.it

    Where: Venice Mestre, Parco di San Giuliano.

    For others informations:  Heineken Jammin’ Festival

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    SPECIAL PRICE FOR THE JUNE MONTH IN VENICE APARTMENTS

    smarco5.jpgsmarco3.jpgsmarco2.jpgsmarco1.jpg

    A holiday in Venice in the wintertime allows you to visit the most important sites and monuments of the city without the confusion and crowds of the summer season.What would be a better way to experince these moments?

    WE CAN OFFER WITH DISCOUNT BY 10% FOR A WEEK’S STAY IN THE JUNE MONTH:7  nights/  4 people:

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    The above prices include all utilities, bed linens, towels, and the final cleaning of the property,(until 7 nights stay).
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    THERE ARE NO EXCEPTIONS TO THIS POLICY.
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    VOGALONGA MAY 2008: ROWING TOURNAMENT IN VENICE

    volgalonga-11.jpgThe Vogalonga is a non-competitive 30 km rowing tournament in which boats of all shapes and types can participate, and which each year welcomes thousands of Venetian and foreign rowers. The 2008 edition will take place on Sunday May 11.

    The course winds its way through the most fascinating sites of Venice’s laguna. Any type of row boat can participate, without limitations in weight, size, or number of rowers. On arrival, all competitors who have completed the entire course will receive a commemorative medal and diploma attesting their participation. Founded 31 years ago by a group of Venetian rowing enthusiasts, the Vogalonga has grown continuously in terms of participants, especially foreigners, reaching 1500 registered boats.

    The program: from the early morning hours, a great number of boats of all shapes and sizes gather in Bacino San Marco in front of Palazzo Ducale, waiting for the starting signal to begin a route of approximately 30 km, which winds its way through the islands of the laguna, re-entering Venice through the Rio di Cannaregio, and finally arriving at Punta della Dogana.

    The Vogalonga embraces local history and traditions, but also features an international dimension, bringing amateurs from all over the world together with the locals who spend their time in the lagoon, as well as belong to the lagoon.

    The Vogalonga is born out of the fondness and perseverance of a group of Venetians who, for over thirty years, have keept it alive in a completely non-profit way and thanks to the cooperation of the public administration and with the full support of the world of rowing.

    The 34th edition of Vogalonga will be on may 11th 2008

    Information
    Vogalonga Committee
    Tel. 0415210544
    Fax 0415200771
    info@vogalonga.it

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