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  • Events: Reports

    “Italian Futurism, 1909-1944: Reconstructing the Universe

    The exhibition, “Italian Futurism, 1909-1944: Reconstructing the Universe,” is one of the most important and large Futurist retrospectives that has ever been set up outside of Italy.
     

    The multidisciplinary exhibition, which will open on February 21st and will run until September 1st, examines the historical sweep of the movement from F. T. Marinetti’s first Futurist Manifesto in 1909 to its demise at the end of World War II, encountering as well another movement which developed in 1911: Cubism.

    Four years in the making, the show will include almost 400 works by more than 80 artists, taking up nearly the entire museum space.

    Ascending the ramps that ring the Museum, visitors will follow the entire movement and its historical evolution:  shifting from the fractured spaces of the 1910s to the machine aesthetics (or Arte meccanica) of the ’20s, and then to the softer, lyrical forms of the ’30s. Many of the works have rarely been seen and some of them have never travelled outside Italy.

    Since this is the first exhibition of Italian Futurism ever organized in the United States, it is fitting that the Guggenheim has organized a multidisciplinary show that encompasses painting, sculpture, architecture, design, ceramics, fashion, film, photography, advertising, free-form poetry, music, theater, and performance art.
     

    “Italian Futurism, 1909-1944: Reconstructing the Universe” unfolds chronologically and juxtaposes works in different media bringing together many artistic languages and forms of expressions that have distinguished the Futurists and their experiences during the years.“It’s time to re-evaluate and broaden our notion of what avant-garde means,” said curator Vivien Greene.

    Greene, the Guggenheim’s 19th- and early-20th-century art specialist, has successfully compiled 375 works from European museums and private collections.

    An international committee of eminent scholars from various disciplines provided expertise and guidance in the preparation of this exhibition that explores in deep the Futurist movement, a major modernist expression of which American audiences have known very little.

  • Events: Reports

    La musica della tradizione @ Montclair State University


    In this presentation/workshop, Enzo and Lorenzo Mancuso will share a variety of stories and anecdotes as well as vocal and instrumental techniques to investigate the expressiveness of traditional Sicilian songs in relation to contemporary theatre and music. In the first part (11:30am-12:45pm) the Manucos will play samples of compositions that have marked their international career in music, theatre and film, and illustrate how their musical experience lies between the evocation of ancient Mediterranean cultures and innovative research.


    In the second part (1-2pm) they will concentrate on two specific Sicilian songs and walk the students through a focused appreciation and experience. Essentially, the presentation/workshop is the occasion for an intimate search in which the traditional song becomes one’s own song through the narration of personal feelings. Open to all students at Montclair State University, and especially those of the Cali School and the Italian program, each of the program's two parts can be attended separately. The presentation/workshop will be held in English and interspersed with Italian and Sicilian words.

    About Enzo and Lorenzo Mancuso

    The Mancuso brothers, Enzo and Lorenzo, are originally from the Sicilian province of Caltanissetta. In the mid-1970s, they emigrated to London where they worked for eight years in the metal industry, while keeping the old musical traditions from Sicily alive in contact with various musical environments (jazz, pop). In 1981, they returned to Italy and now reside in Umbria. One of the crucial moments in their career was the encounter with Joaquin Diaz, a Spanish musician with whom they recorded the two CDs Nesci Maria and Romancese se Alla y de Aca. Film director Anthony Minghella used parts of their CD Bella Maria for the soundtrack of the film The Talented Mr. Ripley, where the Mancusos also appear as actors.

    As for theater, they have worked with Emma Dante for the opera Medea and for Teatro delle Albe. Their song “Accussi Va La Barca Al Mari” is included in the CD Italian Musical Odyssey by the Putumayo World Music label. Their live concert La voce nuda (The Naked V‌oice) was recorded by Radio France. The Mancusos have performed in numerous countries in Europe, Asia, Africa, and Latin America.



    Monday, February 3, 2014

    11:30 AM - 2:00 PM (break: 12:50-1 PM)

    Leshowitz Hall, Cali School of Music

    Montclair State University

    RSVP required: click here

  • Events: Reports

    Fred Kuwornu Kicks off ‘New York Black History Month'


    Every year, Black History Month allows United States to remember accomplishments of Americans, despite the hardships and treatment they received during its history.

    Director Fred Kuwornu, an Italian filmmaker of African heritage, tell the story of the accomplishments of the 92nd Buffalo Division during World War II in the documentary “Inside Buffalo (They served America when America was not ready to serve them)”.
     
    With the other documentary “18 Ius Soli” that premiered at BAMcinématek's 2013 New Voices in Black Cinema, he also brilliantly examines race, ethnicity, and national identity in a newly multicultural Italy of the early 21st century.

    An award-winning documentary about 18 young people who, despite having been born in Italy, do not have access to Italian citizenship because their parents came to Italy from Africa, Asia, and the Middle East.

     
    Director Fred Kuwornu , supported by Italian Cultural Institute will attend at all screenings leading  Q&A on WW II and Civil Rights History and on racial identity, migration, and citizenship in contemporary Italy and the United States.


     
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    BIOGRAPHY
    Fred Kudjo Kuwornu, born and raised in Italy, is an Italian-Ghanaian activist-producer-writer-director. He graduated in Political Science . After college, Fred moved to Rome where he began working as a TV show writer for RAI 1. He has produced several works with his production company, Struggle Filmworks. In 2008, after working with the production crew of Spike Lee’s Miracle at St. Anna (2008), Fred decided to research the unknown story of the 92nd Infantry “Buffalo Soldiers” Division, discovering the journey taken by the real 92nd veterans, the African American segregated combat unit which fought in Europe during WW II. Fred Kuwornu founded the non-profit organizatiion Diversity Italia promoting the importance of racial and ethnic diversity in Italy and Europe using film and other arts as tools for building a more inclusive society. His current project ,64, it's a documentary about the U.S. Civil Rights movement.
     
     
    Tour:
    Jan. 29 Rochester, Ny “ Inside Buffalo” at Rochester University at the RiverCampus-Lattimore 201 at 6 p.m. For more information, contact the Nazareth College Casa Italiana a (585) 389-246
     
    Jan. 30 Rochester, Ny “18 IUS SOLI” at the Shults Center Forum at 6 p.m. at Nazareth College, 4245 East Ave., Rochester, NY 14618
     
    Feb. 3 Bronx, NY “ Inside Buffalo” at Fordham University at Rose Hill, flom auditorium, Walsh Library at 5.30 p.m. 441 E. Fordham Road, Bronx, N.Y
     
    Feb. 4 New York, NY “18 IUS SOLI” at Fordham University  LC Campus at Lincoln Center South lounge  at 5.30 p.m. (NW corner of Columbus Avenue at 60th Street -113 West 60th Street, New York, NY 10023)
     
    Feb.5  Boston, MA “18 IUS SOLI “ at Boston University at 5p.m. at718 Commonwealth Avenue Boston , MA.
     
    Feb. 7 Queens, NY “18 IUS SOLI” at Saint Johns Queens Campus at 6p.m. 8000 Utopia Pkwy, Queens, NY 11439
     
    Feb. 10 Staten Island, NY at Black Box Theater at 1.50 p.m . St. Johns Staten Island Campus 300 Howard Ave, Staten Island, NY
     
    Feb. 12 Hempstead, Ny “18 IUS SOLI” at  12:45 p.m. at at Hofstra University Student Center Theater at Sondra and David S. Mack Student Center, North Campus
     
    Feb. 12 Hempstead, Ny “Inside Buffalo” at 3:30 p.m. at at Hofstra UniversityStudent Center Theater at Sondra and David S. Mack Student Center, North Campus
     
    Feb. 23 18 New Brunswick, NJ  “18 IUS SOLI” at Rutgers University at Voorhees Hall 105, 71 Hamilton Street, College Avenue Campus, New Brunswick, NJ 08901
     
    Febr.28 New Haven, CT “Inside Buffalo” at the Department of African American Studies of Yale University. 81 Wall Street New Haven, CT 06511
    March 3 South Orange Village, New Jersey“18 IUS SOLI” at 55 p.m. at Seton Hall University 400 S Orange Ave, South Orange Village, New Jersey
     
    March 4th New Haven, CT “18 IUS SOLI”  Yale University at 5.30 p.m. at Luce Auditorium Henry R. Luce Hall 34 Hillhouse Avenue
     
    March 5 Fairfield , CT “18 IUS SOLI” at 5 p.m. at Fairfield University 1073 N Benson Rd, Fairfield, CT 06824


  • Events: Reports

    The Liberty of Knowledge. Remembering Rita Levi Montalcini



    Rita Levi-Montalcini, the longest living Nobel Prize winner, died on December 30, 2012 at the age of 103. She established her fame by discovering the first nerve growth factor, NGF, in the 1950s. Her finding led to the identification of many growth factors, which have greatly influenced developmental biology, neuroscience, immunology and cancer. NGF and related neurotrophins are associated with learning and memory, pain, neurodegeneration (Alzheimer’s and Huntington’s diseases) and psychiatric disorders.


     
    Rita Levi-Montalcini represented a breed of scientist rarely seen today. Born into a traditional Italian Jewish family, she endured obstacles due to gender, religion and war. As a woman, her family reluctantly allowed her to pursue her studies and career. After medical school at the University of Turin, she became interested in neurology. However, with the promulgation of the fascist racial laws of 1938, Levi-Montalcini was not allowed to work. During the period of 1940-1943, she carried out her research on early chick embryonic development in a makeshift laboratory in her bedroom. She was eventually forced into hiding by the anti-Jewish persecution. From these early efforts, Levi-Montalcini used chick embryos to study the effects of target tissue upon nerve growth, giving rise to methods that made the isolation of NGF possible.  


     
    Rita Levi-Montalcini has been an inspiration for many generations of scientists, due to her exemplary life, as a neuroscientist, leader, politician, prolific writer and her dedication to education.


     

    Rita was a staunch supporter of women in science. She promoted the careers of young women and established a foundation to assist African women with scholarships to further their education.

  • Events: Reports

    The Making of the Guardians - Countdown #4


    The Guardians: Hero and Superhero, by architect and designer ANTONIO PIO SARACINO, are new public sculptures that represent two legendary civic heroes. The pair of 13-foot-high statues, one in marble and the other in mirror polished stainless steel, will be positioned at the north and south ends of the public plaza at 1095 Avenue of the Americas at Bryant Park, between 41st and 42nd Streets.


    The Guardians symbolize past and present. The sculptures will remain on view indefinitely, creating a new landmark in the center of Manhattan.


    Sponsored by ENI - a worldwide energy compan

  • Events: Reports

    Migration and Development


    On 18 December 1990, the General Assembly adopted the International Convention on the

    Protection of the Rights of All Migrant  Workers and Members of Their Families.

    Ten years later, on 4 December 2000, the General  Assembly proclaimed 18 December as

    International Migrants Day.


    Nearly every country is affected by migration. No society can consider its future without

    factoring in the effects of human mobility. Yet too often men and women cannot adequately

    pursue opportunities for decent work and a  better life, the skills and credentials of  migrants go unrecognized and companies and households cannot employ the workers they need. In October 2013, the General Assembly at its High-Level Dialogue on International  Migration and Development, reaffirmed the need to promote and protect effectively the human rights and fundamental freedoms of all  migrants, regardless of their migration status.


    The conversation will focus on the nature of international migration and the co-relation

    between migration and development.

    Seats are limited. To ensure your

    seat, please pre-register by sending an


    e-mail to [email protected]

    (Subject : Migrants Day).


  • Events: Reports

    Niccolò Machiavelli: 500 Years Old and Not Feeling Them!


    The most important theorists who analyzed the role of political power and the role of leaders and leadership in the political community. For many he is the last representative of the ancient political philosophy, while for others he is the founder of the modern concepts of power and politics. Certainly The Prince represents a turning point in scientific analysis of politics: how it is gained, maintained, and lost. The essay first came out on December 10, 1513—500 years ago.

     
    On the occasion of its 500th anniversary, New York will celebrate with a series of events throughout the month of December. This was made possible in part by ENI, Italy’s worldwide energy company, which has been performing the role of “Cultural Ambassador” throughout 2013, sponsoring and supporting some of the most important initiatives of the Year of Italian Culture in the U.S. The objective is to foster an ever stronger collaboration between public and private entities to promote Italian art and culture throughout the world.

     
    The first event in the series celebrating the five centuries of what is still considered one of the most influential political essays in Western literature is the exhibition Niccolò Machiavelli: The Prince and its Era 1513-2013. It was inaugurated on November 11 at the Italian Embassy of Washington and will arrive in New York on December 6 at the Italian Cultural Institute (where it will run until January 6, 2014). The exhibit covers several themes, including the history of The Prince, Machiavelli the man and the influence he later had on the development of modern political thought both in Italy and abroad. During the event, it will be possible to admire several paintings, costumes of the period and also videos and multimedia reconstructions of the city of Florence, which is where Machiavelli lived and served. Also on display will be some of the most famous editions of The Prince, together with the translated versions that transported it around the world.  

     
    Alongside the exhibition, the Italian Cultural Institute has organized a conference, From Machiavell’s the Prince to New European Welfare, during which Niccolo’ Machiavelli’s part in the Italian Renaissance will be discussed, and his roles as a historian, politician, diplomat, philosopher, humanist and writer highlighted. The conference will be divided into three sessions. The first session will be held on December 9, 2013 and the other two on December 10, 2013.

     
    Last but not least, the Italian Academy for Advanced Studies of the Columbia University of New York will celebrate the renowned Italian thinker and his work by hosting one section of the exhibition from December 6 to December 20. On the first two days (December 6 and 7), a special international conference will take place entitled Liberty and Conflict: Machiavelli on Politics and Power. Participants include experts from the most prestigious academic institutions all over the world. The international conference, organized by David Johnston and Nadia Urbinati from the Department of Political Science of the Columbia University of New York, will focus on four major themes: Between Antiquity and Modernity; The Prince; The Prince and Discourses; Reception.
     


  • Art & Culture

    The Making of Bryant Park’s Italian Hero

    For all its simplicity, it is still fascinating and complex.

    The human figure, a statue, an  architectural element made with traditional building blocks—two pilasters and an architrave.

    It’s white, like the pure marble used to make it. The marble comes from a quarry in Danby, Vermont, owned by a citizen of Carrara, the Italian capital of marble. The general manager of the quarry also comes from Carrara, as do many of its workers, and all the equipment is Italian too. The statue stands for Italian character, or Italian-ness.

    The project began as part of the Year of Italian Culture in the US, but it will remain on display indefinitely.

    The sculptor chose to recreate Michelangelo’s David, defender of the city of Florence, the emblem of an ald culture but also an emblem of the timelessness of culture.
     

    To what are we referring? Our “Man of the Year,” The Hero, one of the two Guardians of Bryant Park made by architect and designer Antonio Pio Saracino.

    The 36 year old from San Giovanni Rotondo, Apulia, was in fact entrusted with making two large statues to put on permanent display in Bryant Park Plaza, in the heart of Manhattan.

    The installation was commissioned by Bill Edward, vice director of Equity Office, the owner of the plaza which is located at 1095 Avenue of the Americas and serves as a gateway to Bryant Park.

    A recent $10 million renovation of the plaza was designed by architect Dan Shannon, who approved Saracino’s design. The curator of The Guardians is Helen Varola.

     
    Guardians of past and present
    Two 13-foot-tall sculptures, one a stylized replica of Michelangelo’s David, the other an American superhero.

    The former, Hero, is made of white marble and was commissioned with the support of Eni. The latter, Superhero, is made of stainless steel and was commissioned by Equity Office. Together they’re known as “The Guardians.” The statues symbolize the past and present, but in reality the past and present, you’ll notice, coalesce.

    The 8,000-pound marble Hero gazes uptown from 42nd Street, protector of the past. Its counterpart, Superhero, who dons a cape and is an icon of the present, watches over downtown from 41st Street. Superhero is made of stainless steel and weighs 15,000 pounds. Both sculptures were manufactured in New York.
     

    Hero and Superhero soar upward in layers of planar marble and stainless steel, a nod to the surrounding skyscrapers. The materials are stacked, creating an outline that makes the figures look as if they’re moving in space.

    The idea is the result of the architect’s intuition and digital skills, and sends a powerful, timeless message of resiliency and innovation. On view indefinitely, the statues are a new landmark in a city that morphs and expands year after year.

     
    Inspired by Michelangelo
    As a classic work revisited, Hero is at once a man of the future and the past, or rather, a timeline linking the past to the present. Art and architecture get mixed together; the former human figure evolves into a bit of architectural design.

    The result is the story of how a man embraces his surroundings and fuses with New York.   

    As Saracino explains, “I was asked by the Italian Embassy to look at Michelangelo’s David as an inspiration. Clearly such a momentous reference was daunting.

    Yet I was so honored to create a symbol that could represent a gift from my native Italy to New York that I accepted the extraordinary invitation. I wanted to create two symbolic protectors of New York City that celebrate the superhuman and the inspiration that it channels.

    The two anthropomorphic layered architectural constructions display the universal ability of mankind to cement its own presence in the world with its perennial construction skills.”

    Throughout his career, Saracino has designed buildings, monuments, and modern furniture, and his work is housed in prominent museum collections around the world.


    Follow the story with us

    i-ItalyNY followed the artist every step of the way, from the Dunby quarry, where he selected his marble on one dusk-till-dawn day; to the Precision Stone Studio on Long Island where

    Hero was built; to the Equity Office where engineers, architects, and sponsors met to discuss the details of the installation. It was a fascinating experience.

    We documented this very Italian adventure in 5 episodes for i-Italy TV (airing every Saturday and Sunday on NYCTV-Channel 25). For those who missed it, you can watch it on demand at i-ItalyTV.com

  • L'altra Italia

    “L’Aquila+Taranto” 2014. Un calendario insieme per rinascere


    ROMA - Sarà presentato mercoledì 4 dicembre al Senato della Repubblica - Sala Capitolare, Piazza della Minerva, ore 17:30 - il Calendario solidale “L’Aquila+Taranto” 2014, ideato e promosso dalla giornalista e scrittrice Tiziana Grassi, già autrice di programmi culturali per la Rai.


    Presenteranno la pubblicazione Luigi Romandini, dirigente Provincia di Taranto, i sindaci dell’Aquila e Taranto, Massimo Cialente e Ippazio Stefàno, Toni Saracino, co-curatrice dell'opera con Tiziana Grassi, Michele Picciano, presidente AICCRE - Consiglio Città e Regioni d'Europa, Mons. Pierpaolo Felicolo, della Fondazione Migrantes, e Goffredo Palmerini, Presidente ANFE Abruzzo.
     
    Il Calendario solidale 2014 “L’Aquila+Taranto”, attraverso 53 fotografie in bianco e nero, racconta le ferite e le potenzialità di rinascita delle due Città, con gli scatti del valente fotografo tarantino Luciano Manna (che ha donato le sue opere), e per alcune immagini dell’Aquila anche dei giovani fotografi Chiara Crispi, Daniele De Mattia e Giorgia Moraca, diplomati alla Scuola d’Arte Cinematografica “Gian Maria Volonté” di Roma. L’opera mette a confronto L’Aquila e Taranto,ferocemente colpite da complessi e laceranti drammi di collettiva portata, diversi e simili, mettendo in evidenza sia i problemi attuali, sia le straordinarie peculiarità e vocazioni – artistiche, storiche, culturali, paesaggistiche - che vanno opportunamente valorizzate.
     
    I testi scritti inseriti nel Calendario planning, sono di Tiziana Grassi, Thierry Vissol (Unione Europea), Enza Tomaselli (Taranto)e Patrizia Tocci (L’Aquila), dei sindaci Massimo Cialente e Ippazio Stefano, di Luigi Romandini (Taranto) e Goffredo Palmerini (L’Aquila). I proventi dell’iniziativa saranno destinati, per una parte, all’Istituto Cinematografico dell’Aquila “La Lanterna Magica”, istituzione culturale fondata nel 1981 per la promozione della ‘settima arte’, al fine di contribuire al restauro delle pellicole, danneggiate dal terremoto del 6 aprile 2009, della sua prestigiosa Cineteca, tra le più importanti in Italia. Un’altra parte sarà destinata alla Jonian Dolphin Conservation di Taranto - associazione di ricercatori, docenti universitari, skipper, subacquei professionisti e documentaristi -, che si occupa dal 2009, nelle acque dello Jonio Settentrionale, di condurre programmi di ricerca scientifica per la ripopolazione dei cetacei nel Mar Jonio.
     
    Per aiutare L’Aquila e Taranto, attraverso questo Calendario etico-solidale, è possibile versare un contributo all’Associazione culturale “EU”, senza fini di lucro, (codice iban IT88 C010 0503 2000 0000 0012451 ) motivando la donazione: “Contributo Calendario 2014 L’Aquila+Taranto”.


  • Fatti e Storie

    Primarie PD. Due posti per votare a New York


    Saranno allestiti due seggi a New York per votare le Primarie del Partito Democratico.

    Si voterà dalle 10 di mattina alle 7 di sera 
    a Manhattan, all'Immigration Center, 25 di Carmine Street
    a Queens, all'Auburndale Soccer Club, 25-44 Francis Lewis Blvd, Flushing.

    Chi vuole votare deve portare un documento di identità italiano e 2 dollari di contributo per le spese organizzative (gli iscritti voteranno gratis). Potranno votare a queste primarie tutti i cittadini italiani che hanno compiuto il sedicesimo anno di età.

     
    Per maggiori informazioni sulle attività dei comitati elettorali e sulle liste dei delegati all'Assemblea Nazionale dal Nord America legate ad ogni candidato Segretario, scrivete a:

    Per Cuperlo: Elena Luongo, lista Cuperlo per il Nord America: [email protected]
    Per Renzi: Lucina Di Meco, capolista Renzi per il Nord America: [email protected]
    Per Civati: Pamela Campa dal Canada, capolista Civati per il Nord America:[email protected]


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