Winks
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 2,802
๐๐ป 3,603
April 2016
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by Winks on Oct 27, 2016 19:52:39 GMT 1, You back from Rome Dibbs? Big earthquake today Slept through it (quick nap) woke up and my wife said did you hear that and feel that? I said "Feel what?" Missed the second one as well.ย
So you're wife felt the earth move and you were asleep
:-)
You back from Rome Dibbs? Big earthquake today Slept through it (quick nap) woke up and my wife said did you hear that and feel that? I said "Feel what?" Missed the second one as well.ย So you're wife felt the earth move and you were asleep :-)
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sharky
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 913
๐๐ป 319
January 2012
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by sharky on May 4, 2017 13:25:15 GMT 1, Just to flag this exhibition to all that everyone who will be in Rome between 7 May and 1 October 2017
en.museomacro.org/mostre_ed_eventi/mostre/cross_the_streets
I will be attending the opening and eventually post some pictures
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lux
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 26
๐๐ป 0
November 2010
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by lux on Aug 18, 2017 13:33:33 GMT 1, Hi All, Does anyone know of any photography studios in Rome, Italy that deal with or specialise in photographing original artworks? Or alternatively a place for digital scanning that has a large flatbed scanner. I need hi definition photos or scans of my artworks so I can create prints, thanks.
Hi All, Does anyone know of any photography studios in Rome, Italy that deal with or specialise in photographing original artworks? Or alternatively a place for digital scanning that has a large flatbed scanner. I need hi definition photos or scans of my artworks so I can create prints, thanks.
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wunderkammern
Art Gallery
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 68
๐๐ป 89
September 2012
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by wunderkammern on Oct 5, 2017 10:42:34 GMT 1, Hello everybody!
Get ready for โEternoโ, solo show by the French artists Lek & Sowat.
The exhibition describes the bond between the artists and Rome. For them, the Eternal City is an inexhaustible source, a material full of stimuli, which is used to investigate and re-interpret the multiple layers of the cultural and art-historic substratum of the Eternal City. Resulting artworks are both wall-works and installations: canvasses, as modern paintings, are frames with irregular geometric shapes and they include the re-elaborated memory of walls. Their industrial sculptures are recovered, welded metallic structures, symbol of a renewed destruction which is reintegrated in the city. The art of Lek & Sowat arises from the street, goes through abandoned places in the city, discovers hidden spaces and observes traces of history. Fragments recompose in a synthesis made of signs giving a new face to the urban present, in a continuous dialogue with the past. An artistic evolution, a floating transformation which connects tradition and innovation. The two artists transform the wall into canvas and the word into matter to reclaim the interior and exterior spaces of the city.
When: Saturday, 7th October 2017, 6.30 โ 9.30 pm Where: Wunderkammern Gallery, Via Gabrio Serbelloni 124, Rome Facebook event: www.facebook.com/events/117259552327469/
The collector catalogue is out! Get in touch with us at: wunderkammern@wunderkammern.net
Quick artists info:
Lek & Sowat, aka Frรฉdรฉric Malek (1971) and Mathieu Kendrick (1978), have been working together since 2010. Their research is tied to โUrbexโ or โExploration Urbaineโ, a discipline through which they explore the city looking for modern ruins, basements and abandoned spaces. After their project Mausolรฉe (2012), an artist-in-residency program realized in an abandoned shopping mall in Paris, they were invited at Palais de Tokyo, where they invaded museum spaces which are usually closed to the public. Lek & Sowat go beyond the limits of traditional graffiti, as their in situ experimentations include video, architectonical abstractions, installation and archaeology.
Cheers! Dorothy, Giuseppe, Giuseppe
image host sites
Hello everybody! Get ready for โ Eternoโ, solo show by the French artists Lek & Sowat. The exhibition describes the bond between the artists and Rome. For them, the Eternal City is an inexhaustible source, a material full of stimuli, which is used to investigate and re-interpret the multiple layers of the cultural and art-historic substratum of the Eternal City. Resulting artworks are both wall-works and installations: canvasses, as modern paintings, are frames with irregular geometric shapes and they include the re-elaborated memory of walls. Their industrial sculptures are recovered, welded metallic structures, symbol of a renewed destruction which is reintegrated in the city. The art of Lek & Sowat arises from the street, goes through abandoned places in the city, discovers hidden spaces and observes traces of history. Fragments recompose in a synthesis made of signs giving a new face to the urban present, in a continuous dialogue with the past. An artistic evolution, a floating transformation which connects tradition and innovation. The two artists transform the wall into canvas and the word into matter to reclaim the interior and exterior spaces of the city. When: Saturday, 7th October 2017, 6.30 โ 9.30 pm Where: Wunderkammern Gallery, Via Gabrio Serbelloni 124, Rome Facebook event: www.facebook.com/events/117259552327469/ The collector catalogue is out! Get in touch with us at: wunderkammern@wunderkammern.netQuick artists info: Lek & Sowat, aka Frรฉdรฉric Malek (1971) and Mathieu Kendrick (1978), have been working together since 2010. Their research is tied to โUrbexโ or โExploration Urbaineโ, a discipline through which they explore the city looking for modern ruins, basements and abandoned spaces. After their project Mausolรฉe (2012), an artist-in-residency program realized in an abandoned shopping mall in Paris, they were invited at Palais de Tokyo, where they invaded museum spaces which are usually closed to the public. Lek & Sowat go beyond the limits of traditional graffiti, as their in situ experimentations include video, architectonical abstractions, installation and archaeology. Cheers! Dorothy, Giuseppe, Giuseppe image host sites
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wunderkammern
Art Gallery
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 68
๐๐ป 89
September 2012
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by wunderkammern on Oct 13, 2017 11:14:18 GMT 1, Wunderkammern is proud to announce his participation to YIA Art Fair in Paris with a show by Italian artists Sten Lex and French artist Tilt.
Sten (Rome, 1982) and Lex (Taranto, 1982) are among the most internationally recognized Italian street artists today, and considered as pioneers of the stencil in Italy. They constantly introduced innovations in this technique over time until they invented and started using the โstencil posterโ. Sten Lex work mainly with black and white, but for these new works they enriched their abstract compositions with primary colors. Tilt (Toulouse, 1973) is an reknown graffiti artist. He started with the tags in 1988 and then trained as a writer in the urban landscape all around the world. His works are characterized by the use of a limited range of bright colors and strong, rounded shapes. The artist focuses indeed on โthrow-upโ bubbled lettering, graffiti created through quick lines in one or two colors and designed for fast execution. Both Sten Lex and Tilt will present new artworks produced specifically for the Parisian fair.
YIA Art Fair #11 Le Carreau du Temple, 20 rue Eugรจne Spuller, 75003 Paris Wunderkammern booth: Nยฐ 48
Website: yia-artfair.com/ Opening hours: Friday 20th 12am - 8pm, Saturday 21st 10 am - 8 pm, Sunday 22nd 10am - 6pm
We look forward to seeing you in Paris! Contact: wunderkammern@wunderkammern.net
Cheers! Doroty Giuseppe Giuseppe
Wunderkammern is proud to announce his participation to YIA Art Fair in Paris with a show by Italian artists Sten Lex and French artist Tilt.
Sten (Rome, 1982) and Lex (Taranto, 1982) are among the most internationally recognized Italian street artists today, and considered as pioneers of the stencil in Italy. They constantly introduced innovations in this technique over time until they invented and started using the โstencil posterโ. Sten Lex work mainly with black and white, but for these new works they enriched their abstract compositions with primary colors. Tilt (Toulouse, 1973) is an reknown graffiti artist. He started with the tags in 1988 and then trained as a writer in the urban landscape all around the world. His works are characterized by the use of a limited range of bright colors and strong, rounded shapes. The artist focuses indeed on โthrow-upโ bubbled lettering, graffiti created through quick lines in one or two colors and designed for fast execution. Both Sten Lex and Tilt will present new artworks produced specifically for the Parisian fair.
YIA Art Fair #11 Le Carreau du Temple, 20 rue Eugรจne Spuller, 75003 Paris Wunderkammern booth: Nยฐ 48
Website: yia-artfair.com/ Opening hours: Friday 20th 12am - 8pm, Saturday 21st 10 am - 8 pm, Sunday 22nd 10am - 6pm
We look forward to seeing you in Paris! Contact: wunderkammern@wunderkammern.net
Cheers! Doroty Giuseppe Giuseppe
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berlin20
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 331
๐๐ป 217
April 2014
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by berlin20 on Oct 19, 2017 15:57:24 GMT 1, Bored of f5'ing? Here are some pics from Rome
Bored of f5'ing? Here are some pics from Rome
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berlin20
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 331
๐๐ป 217
April 2014
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by berlin20 on Oct 19, 2017 16:15:43 GMT 1, The bathroom
The bathroom
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wunderkammern
Art Gallery
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 68
๐๐ป 89
September 2012
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by wunderkammern on Nov 22, 2017 13:35:41 GMT 1, Hello everybody!โจโจ
Get ready for โCRYPTOGRAMSโ by French artist L'Atlas.
After LโAtlasโ exhibition Transversal, opened in 2014 at the Rome gallery, Wunderkammern presents in Milan CRYPTOGRAMS. The artistโs cryptograms appear as abstract labyrinths, concealing letters within their geometry and lines. While calligraphy mixes with kinetic art, the artworks play with the viewerโs perception and they explore the line between what is visible and what is apparently invisible.
When: Thursday 23rd November, 6.30 โ 9.30 pm โจWhere: Wunderkammern Gallery, via Ausonio 1A, Milan Facebook event: www.facebook.com/events/110639959660401/
The collector catalogue is out!
Get in touch with us at: wunderkammern@wunderkammern.netโจโจโจ
Quick artist info:โจโจโจ
LโAtlas (France, 1978) lives and works in Paris. He exhibited in important institutions in Paris such as Fondation Cartier (2009), Grand Palais (2009), Palais de Tokyo (2007) and Centre Pompidou (2004). LโAtlas started his artistic path by painting in the streets of Paris in the โ90s. His strong interest for the techniques and the history of calligraphy later brought him to study Chinese, Arabic and Hebrew calligraphy in different countries around the world. He created his own typography and based his work on letters and forms. In his artistic production it is possible to find a combination and a synthesis of elements deriving from Graffiti, Geometric Abstraction, Optical Art and Kinetic Art.
Cheers!โจ Dorothy, Giuseppe, Giuseppe
Hello everybody!โจโจ
Get ready for โCRYPTOGRAMSโ by French artist L'Atlas.
After LโAtlasโ exhibition Transversal, opened in 2014 at the Rome gallery, Wunderkammern presents in Milan CRYPTOGRAMS. The artistโs cryptograms appear as abstract labyrinths, concealing letters within their geometry and lines. While calligraphy mixes with kinetic art, the artworks play with the viewerโs perception and they explore the line between what is visible and what is apparently invisible.
When: Thursday 23rd November, 6.30 โ 9.30 pm โจWhere: Wunderkammern Gallery, via Ausonio 1A, Milan Facebook event: www.facebook.com/events/110639959660401/
The collector catalogue is out!
Get in touch with us at: wunderkammern@wunderkammern.netโจโจโจ
Quick artist info:โจโจโจ
LโAtlas (France, 1978) lives and works in Paris. He exhibited in important institutions in Paris such as Fondation Cartier (2009), Grand Palais (2009), Palais de Tokyo (2007) and Centre Pompidou (2004). LโAtlas started his artistic path by painting in the streets of Paris in the โ90s. His strong interest for the techniques and the history of calligraphy later brought him to study Chinese, Arabic and Hebrew calligraphy in different countries around the world. He created his own typography and based his work on letters and forms. In his artistic production it is possible to find a combination and a synthesis of elements deriving from Graffiti, Geometric Abstraction, Optical Art and Kinetic Art.
Cheers!โจ Dorothy, Giuseppe, Giuseppe
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wunderkammern
Art Gallery
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 68
๐๐ป 89
September 2012
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by wunderkammern on Nov 22, 2017 13:38:01 GMT 1, Hello everybody!โจโจ
Get ready for โCRYPTOGRAMSโ by French artist L'Atlas.
After LโAtlasโ exhibition Transversal, opened in 2014 at the Rome gallery, Wunderkammern presents in Milan CRYPTOGRAMS. The artistโs cryptograms appear as abstract labyrinths, concealing letters within their geometry and lines. While calligraphy mixes with kinetic art, the artworks play with the viewerโs perception and they explore the line between what is visible and what is apparently invisible.
When: Thursday 23rd November, 6.30 โ 9.30 pm โจWhere: Wunderkammern Gallery, via Ausonio 1A, Milan Facebook event: www.facebook.com/events/110639959660401/
The collector catalogue is out!
Get in touch with us at: wunderkammern@wunderkammern.netโจโจโจ
Quick artist info:โจโจโจ
LโAtlas (France, 1978) lives and works in Paris. He exhibited in important institutions in Paris such as Fondation Cartier (2009), Grand Palais (2009), Palais de Tokyo (2007) and Centre Pompidou (2004). LโAtlas started his artistic path by painting in the streets of Paris in the โ90s. His strong interest for the techniques and the history of calligraphy later brought him to study Chinese, Arabic and Hebrew calligraphy in different countries around the world. He created his own typography and based his work on letters and forms. In his artistic production it is possible to find a combination and a synthesis of elements deriving from Graffiti, Geometric Abstraction, Optical Art and Kinetic Art.
Cheers!โจ Dorothy, Giuseppe, Giuseppe
Hello everybody!โจโจ
Get ready for โCRYPTOGRAMSโ by French artist L'Atlas.
After LโAtlasโ exhibition Transversal, opened in 2014 at the Rome gallery, Wunderkammern presents in Milan CRYPTOGRAMS. The artistโs cryptograms appear as abstract labyrinths, concealing letters within their geometry and lines. While calligraphy mixes with kinetic art, the artworks play with the viewerโs perception and they explore the line between what is visible and what is apparently invisible.
When: Thursday 23rd November, 6.30 โ 9.30 pm โจWhere: Wunderkammern Gallery, via Ausonio 1A, Milan Facebook event: www.facebook.com/events/110639959660401/
The collector catalogue is out!
Get in touch with us at: wunderkammern@wunderkammern.netโจโจโจ
Quick artist info:โจโจโจ
LโAtlas (France, 1978) lives and works in Paris. He exhibited in important institutions in Paris such as Fondation Cartier (2009), Grand Palais (2009), Palais de Tokyo (2007) and Centre Pompidou (2004). LโAtlas started his artistic path by painting in the streets of Paris in the โ90s. His strong interest for the techniques and the history of calligraphy later brought him to study Chinese, Arabic and Hebrew calligraphy in different countries around the world. He created his own typography and based his work on letters and forms. In his artistic production it is possible to find a combination and a synthesis of elements deriving from Graffiti, Geometric Abstraction, Optical Art and Kinetic Art.
Cheers!โจ Dorothy, Giuseppe, Giuseppe
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wunderkammern
Art Gallery
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 68
๐๐ป 89
September 2012
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by wunderkammern on Dec 4, 2017 14:06:34 GMT 1, Hello everybody!
We are waiting for you at Wunderkammern Rome for โLong live the revolutionโ, collective exhibition by the artists Tomaso Binga, Paolo Buggiani, Richard Hambleton, Keith Haring and Ken Hiratsuka.
Art revolution: that is the motto Paolo Buggiani has appropriated by indelibly impressing it on his skin with a tattoo. For the Tuscan artist, revolution is a necessary act to change a static situation, an explosive gesture whose final aim is to bring progress. Rebellion, thought as a subversion of a static order, is the driving force for every artist featured in the show. Artworks exhibited in Long live the revolution are connected with each other by a scheme which repeats with different procedures: they are thought to surprise viewers, to astonish them by catching their attention, leading them to a reflection and, in a desirable way, to a felt and deep awareness of the necessity of change. This is present in Buggianiโs New York performances, such as the ones where the artist dressed up as Icarus and roller skated through cars in the traffic causing amazement (and sometimes anger) amongst drivers. Or in Bingaโs works, which aimed to dismantle the hateful aspects of patriarchy, firmly rooted in Italian culture (and not only) by using her body as connecting tool between declaimed words and involved spectators. A similar need for change could be found in interventions full of sociopolitical messages made by Keith Haring on advertising posters in New Yorkโs subway. In the same metropolis, Urban Shadows by Hambleton surprised passers-by in unexpected street corners. The sensation of โnecessary revolutionโ can be felt also in Hiratsukaโs apparently endless lines, which seem to enclose the entire humanity with no distinction of sex, ethnicity or religion, bringing together human beings in a unique, universal form of communication. Historical artworks are exhibited together with recent works.
When: 2nd December 2017 โ 20th January 2018 Where: Wunderkammern Gallery, Via Gabrio Serbelloni 124, Rome Facebook event: www.facebook.com/events/141651693151502/
The collector catalogue is out! Get in touch with us at: wunderkammern@wunderkammern.net
Quick artists info:
Tomaso Binga is the artistic name for Bianca Pucciarelli in Menna, an artist who decided to change her name into a male one as a provocative act pointing out the countless privileges which defined the male world, at a time when women were largely discriminated and feministโs movements were starting.
Paolo Buggiani, born in Castelfiorentino, Florence in the heart of Tuscany, has spent a considerable part of his artistic activity in New York, becoming internationally recognized for his installations of fire sculptures and activities within the Street Art Movement.
Richard Hambleton, called the โgodfather of street artโ, along with his contemporaries Keith Haring and Jean-Michel Basquiat, he is best known for his โShadowmanโ, wherein he painted black paint on hundreds of buildings across New York, with the aim of shocking passersby.
Keith Haring is an American artist that gained prominence in the early 1980s with his graffiti drawings made in the subways and on the sidewalks of New York. Throughout his career, Haring devoted much of his time to public projects, which often carried social messages.
Ken Hiratsuka, born in Shimodate City, Japan, has been living in New York since 1982. Driven by his vision of art transcending the differences of nations and languages, he started creating works characterized by maze-like designs of infinite variation.
Hello everybody!
We are waiting for you at Wunderkammern Rome for โLong live the revolutionโ, collective exhibition by the artists Tomaso Binga, Paolo Buggiani, Richard Hambleton, Keith Haring and Ken Hiratsuka.
Art revolution: that is the motto Paolo Buggiani has appropriated by indelibly impressing it on his skin with a tattoo. For the Tuscan artist, revolution is a necessary act to change a static situation, an explosive gesture whose final aim is to bring progress. Rebellion, thought as a subversion of a static order, is the driving force for every artist featured in the show. Artworks exhibited in Long live the revolution are connected with each other by a scheme which repeats with different procedures: they are thought to surprise viewers, to astonish them by catching their attention, leading them to a reflection and, in a desirable way, to a felt and deep awareness of the necessity of change. This is present in Buggianiโs New York performances, such as the ones where the artist dressed up as Icarus and roller skated through cars in the traffic causing amazement (and sometimes anger) amongst drivers. Or in Bingaโs works, which aimed to dismantle the hateful aspects of patriarchy, firmly rooted in Italian culture (and not only) by using her body as connecting tool between declaimed words and involved spectators. A similar need for change could be found in interventions full of sociopolitical messages made by Keith Haring on advertising posters in New Yorkโs subway. In the same metropolis, Urban Shadows by Hambleton surprised passers-by in unexpected street corners. The sensation of โnecessary revolutionโ can be felt also in Hiratsukaโs apparently endless lines, which seem to enclose the entire humanity with no distinction of sex, ethnicity or religion, bringing together human beings in a unique, universal form of communication. Historical artworks are exhibited together with recent works.
When: 2nd December 2017 โ 20th January 2018 Where: Wunderkammern Gallery, Via Gabrio Serbelloni 124, Rome Facebook event: www.facebook.com/events/141651693151502/
The collector catalogue is out! Get in touch with us at: wunderkammern@wunderkammern.net
Quick artists info:
Tomaso Binga is the artistic name for Bianca Pucciarelli in Menna, an artist who decided to change her name into a male one as a provocative act pointing out the countless privileges which defined the male world, at a time when women were largely discriminated and feministโs movements were starting.
Paolo Buggiani, born in Castelfiorentino, Florence in the heart of Tuscany, has spent a considerable part of his artistic activity in New York, becoming internationally recognized for his installations of fire sculptures and activities within the Street Art Movement.
Richard Hambleton, called the โgodfather of street artโ, along with his contemporaries Keith Haring and Jean-Michel Basquiat, he is best known for his โShadowmanโ, wherein he painted black paint on hundreds of buildings across New York, with the aim of shocking passersby.
Keith Haring is an American artist that gained prominence in the early 1980s with his graffiti drawings made in the subways and on the sidewalks of New York. Throughout his career, Haring devoted much of his time to public projects, which often carried social messages.
Ken Hiratsuka, born in Shimodate City, Japan, has been living in New York since 1982. Driven by his vision of art transcending the differences of nations and languages, he started creating works characterized by maze-like designs of infinite variation.
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wunderkammern
Art Gallery
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 68
๐๐ป 89
September 2012
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by wunderkammern on Dec 4, 2017 14:12:04 GMT 1, Hello everybody!
We are waiting for you at Wunderkammern Rome for โLong live the revolutionโ, collective exhibition by the artists Tomaso Binga, Paolo Buggiani, Richard Hambleton, Keith Haring and Ken Hiratsuka.
Art revolution: that is the motto Paolo Buggiani has appropriated by indelibly impressing it on his skin with a tattoo. For the Tuscan artist, revolution is a necessary act to change a static situation, an explosive gesture whose final aim is to bring progress. Rebellion, thought as a subversion of a static order, is the driving force for every artist featured in the show. Artworks exhibited in Long live the revolution are connected with each other by a scheme which repeats with different procedures: they are thought to surprise viewers, to astonish them by catching their attention, leading them to a reflection and, in a desirable way, to a felt and deep awareness of the necessity of change. This is present in Buggianiโs New York performances, such as the ones where the artist dressed up as Icarus and roller skated through cars in the traffic causing amazement (and sometimes anger) amongst drivers. Or in Bingaโs works, which aimed to dismantle the hateful aspects of patriarchy, firmly rooted in Italian culture (and not only) by using her body as connecting tool between declaimed words and involved spectators. A similar need for change could be found in interventions full of sociopolitical messages made by Keith Haring on advertising posters in New Yorkโs subway. In the same metropolis, Urban Shadows by Hambleton surprised passers-by in unexpected street corners. The sensation of โnecessary revolutionโ can be felt also in Hiratsukaโs apparently endless lines, which seem to enclose the entire humanity with no distinction of sex, ethnicity or religion, bringing together human beings in a unique, universal form of communication. Historical artworks are exhibited together with recent works.
When: 2nd December 2017 โ 20th January 2018 Where: Wunderkammern Gallery, Via Gabrio Serbelloni 124, Rome Facebook event: www.facebook.com/events/141651693151502/
The collector catalogue is out! Get in touch with us at: wunderkammern@wunderkammern.net
Quick artists info:
Tomaso Binga is the artistic name for Bianca Pucciarelli in Menna, an artist who decided to change her name into a male one as a provocative act pointing out the countless privileges which defined the male world, at a time when women were largely discriminated and feministโs movements were starting.
Paolo Buggiani, born in Castelfiorentino, Florence in the heart of Tuscany, has spent a considerable part of his artistic activity in New York, becoming internationally recognized for his installations of fire sculptures and activities within the Street Art Movement.
Richard Hambleton, called the โgodfather of street artโ, along with his contemporaries Keith Haring and Jean-Michel Basquiat, he is best known for his โShadowmanโ, wherein he painted black paint on hundreds of buildings across New York, with the aim of shocking passersby.
Keith Haring is an American artist that gained prominence in the early 1980s with his graffiti drawings made in the subways and on the sidewalks of New York. Throughout his career, Haring devoted much of his time to public projects, which often carried social messages.
Ken Hiratsuka, born in Shimodate City, Japan, has been living in New York since 1982. Driven by his vision of art transcending the differences of nations and languages, he started creating works characterized by maze-like designs of infinite variation.
Hello everybody!
We are waiting for you at Wunderkammern Rome for โLong live the revolutionโ, collective exhibition by the artists Tomaso Binga, Paolo Buggiani, Richard Hambleton, Keith Haring and Ken Hiratsuka.
Art revolution: that is the motto Paolo Buggiani has appropriated by indelibly impressing it on his skin with a tattoo. For the Tuscan artist, revolution is a necessary act to change a static situation, an explosive gesture whose final aim is to bring progress. Rebellion, thought as a subversion of a static order, is the driving force for every artist featured in the show. Artworks exhibited in Long live the revolution are connected with each other by a scheme which repeats with different procedures: they are thought to surprise viewers, to astonish them by catching their attention, leading them to a reflection and, in a desirable way, to a felt and deep awareness of the necessity of change. This is present in Buggianiโs New York performances, such as the ones where the artist dressed up as Icarus and roller skated through cars in the traffic causing amazement (and sometimes anger) amongst drivers. Or in Bingaโs works, which aimed to dismantle the hateful aspects of patriarchy, firmly rooted in Italian culture (and not only) by using her body as connecting tool between declaimed words and involved spectators. A similar need for change could be found in interventions full of sociopolitical messages made by Keith Haring on advertising posters in New Yorkโs subway. In the same metropolis, Urban Shadows by Hambleton surprised passers-by in unexpected street corners. The sensation of โnecessary revolutionโ can be felt also in Hiratsukaโs apparently endless lines, which seem to enclose the entire humanity with no distinction of sex, ethnicity or religion, bringing together human beings in a unique, universal form of communication. Historical artworks are exhibited together with recent works.
When: 2nd December 2017 โ 20th January 2018 Where: Wunderkammern Gallery, Via Gabrio Serbelloni 124, Rome Facebook event: www.facebook.com/events/141651693151502/
The collector catalogue is out! Get in touch with us at: wunderkammern@wunderkammern.net
Quick artists info:
Tomaso Binga is the artistic name for Bianca Pucciarelli in Menna, an artist who decided to change her name into a male one as a provocative act pointing out the countless privileges which defined the male world, at a time when women were largely discriminated and feministโs movements were starting.
Paolo Buggiani, born in Castelfiorentino, Florence in the heart of Tuscany, has spent a considerable part of his artistic activity in New York, becoming internationally recognized for his installations of fire sculptures and activities within the Street Art Movement.
Richard Hambleton, called the โgodfather of street artโ, along with his contemporaries Keith Haring and Jean-Michel Basquiat, he is best known for his โShadowmanโ, wherein he painted black paint on hundreds of buildings across New York, with the aim of shocking passersby.
Keith Haring is an American artist that gained prominence in the early 1980s with his graffiti drawings made in the subways and on the sidewalks of New York. Throughout his career, Haring devoted much of his time to public projects, which often carried social messages.
Ken Hiratsuka, born in Shimodate City, Japan, has been living in New York since 1982. Driven by his vision of art transcending the differences of nations and languages, he started creating works characterized by maze-like designs of infinite variation.
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syprux
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 269
๐๐ป 162
May 2007
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by syprux on Dec 13, 2017 13:24:31 GMT 1, Wish I could be there! The quality of the work of L'Atlas is perfect! Love to see one of those Lithographie on my wall everyday. Have a nice exhibition
Wish I could be there! The quality of the work of L'Atlas is perfect! Love to see one of those Lithographie on my wall everyday. Have a nice exhibition
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hellfo
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,033
๐๐ป 908
December 2017
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by hellfo on Jan 18, 2018 22:00:02 GMT 1, Solo show: www.alicepasquini.com/alice-pasquini-solo-show/
After three years, the artist returns to exhibit in her hometown, selecting PHILOBIBLON GALLERYโs Rome exhibition space to show her new body of work.
THE UNCHANGING WORLD is an introspective journey along the evolutionary path from childhood to adulthood, examining the middle ground as a transitional space. The work explores the thin line between objective and subjective realitiesโand the overlap between these dual realities where illusion, creativity, and gameplay meet.
Inspired by concepts introduced by WINNICOTT, Alice retraces the movement from one state of evolution to another, giving life to the transitional objects children use to help themselves move toward a shared reality without trauma.
With this in mind, an abandoned doll house, consumed by time, is a place/non-place where everyone can delve into their childhood memories and return, for a brief time, to the distant past. Spying through the keyhole, we reflect back on ourselves, conscious of what our psyche has created.
THE UNCHANGING WORLD is an exhibition devoted to the magic of making ourselves. And as such, the artistic objects expressโjust as the transitional onesโa world not faithful either to the internal or external world, but the grey area of illusion. This intermediary area between the subjective and objective dimensions represents in and of itself โillusionโฆthat in adulthood is an intrinsic part of art and religionโ and that the territory where creativity lives is first manifested in gameplay, and later in cultural life.
The exhibition demonstrations that time does not change ourselves and that the architecture we built as children are the same ones we inhabit as adultsโฆ.
Alice is one of the few female exponents of street art working actively in the international arena. Her work can be admired on city walls, as well as in museums and galleries around the world. Sydney, New York, Singapore, Barcelona, Moscow, and Paris to name a few.
Solo show: www.alicepasquini.com/alice-pasquini-solo-show/After three years, the artist returns to exhibit in her hometown, selecting PHILOBIBLON GALLERYโs Rome exhibition space to show her new body of work. THE UNCHANGING WORLD is an introspective journey along the evolutionary path from childhood to adulthood, examining the middle ground as a transitional space. The work explores the thin line between objective and subjective realitiesโand the overlap between these dual realities where illusion, creativity, and gameplay meet. Inspired by concepts introduced by WINNICOTT, Alice retraces the movement from one state of evolution to another, giving life to the transitional objects children use to help themselves move toward a shared reality without trauma. With this in mind, an abandoned doll house, consumed by time, is a place/non-place where everyone can delve into their childhood memories and return, for a brief time, to the distant past. Spying through the keyhole, we reflect back on ourselves, conscious of what our psyche has created. THE UNCHANGING WORLD is an exhibition devoted to the magic of making ourselves. And as such, the artistic objects expressโjust as the transitional onesโa world not faithful either to the internal or external world, but the grey area of illusion. This intermediary area between the subjective and objective dimensions represents in and of itself โillusionโฆthat in adulthood is an intrinsic part of art and religionโ and that the territory where creativity lives is first manifested in gameplay, and later in cultural life. The exhibition demonstrations that time does not change ourselves and that the architecture we built as children are the same ones we inhabit as adultsโฆ. Alice is one of the few female exponents of street art working actively in the international arena. Her work can be admired on city walls, as well as in museums and galleries around the world. Sydney, New York, Singapore, Barcelona, Moscow, and Paris to name a few.
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streetart360
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 138
๐๐ป 224
December 2016
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by streetart360 on Mar 14, 2018 8:55:01 GMT 1, Discover my Dog Sighs new artwork
My Dog Sighs in ROME
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wunderkammern
Art Gallery
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 68
๐๐ป 89
September 2012
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by wunderkammern on Mar 14, 2018 11:45:11 GMT 1, Hello everybody!
We are waiting for you at the special location of Palazzo Velli for โNiente puรฒ fermarmiโ, exhibition by the american artist JonOne.
After his first solo show in the Milanese gallery of Wunderkammern in 2016, JonOne arrives in Rome in the prestigious frame of Palazzo Velli in Trastevere. French by naturalization, JonOne is one of the most important contemporary artists and a key figure in the world of graffiti. His works have been exhibited in famous institutions such as Cartier Foundation and Grand Palais in Paris. He boasts collaborations with international brands such as Lacoste, Perrier, Air France and Guerlain. Hardly definable with a single art movement, his production is the result of the perfect union between graffiti and abstract expressionism, between calligraphy and performative use of color.
โNiente puรฒ fermarmiโ is the first solo show by JonOne in Rome and the first exhibition of Wunderkammern organized to be hosted at Palazzo Velli. Cogito Ergo Sum, as Descartes has said. Scribo Ergo Sum, would say JonOne. It is impossible to understand the nature of the energy that makes a writer to tag on all walls of his city and on walls of all cities in the world. We can only try to imagine that the energy searching for a perfect style, with a nearly monastic commitment - besides challenging laws of the so-called civil society - is something which creates addiction. Pushing to do it. And then re-do it. And then re-do it again. And making you never want to stop. The only strength that can push to do such an extreme, revolutionary, uncalled gesture, is the impelling need to remind everyone, and first of all oneself, that we are there. There and in that moment, and in all moments when any passer-by will read that name.
When: 17th March 2018 โ 14th April 2018 Where: Palazzo Velli, Piazza Sant'Egidio 10, Rome Facebook event: www.facebook.com/events/403072013451832/
The collector catalogue is out! Get in touch with us at: wunderkammern@wunderkammern.net
Quick artist info: JonOne (John Andrew Perello, 1963, New York, USA) is one of the most recognized contemporary artists in France today, and a key figure in the world of graffiti. He has shown in important galleries and in prestigious institutions alike, such as with the group shows Born in the Street at the Fondation Cartier and Le Tag Collection Gallizia at the Grand Palais (both in Paris in 2009). In addition, the artist boasts highly artistic and creative collaborations with renowned companies such as Guerlain, Air France, Lacoste, and Perrier.
Hello everybody! We are waiting for you at the special location of Palazzo Velli for โNiente puรฒ fermarmiโ, exhibition by the american artist JonOne. After his first solo show in the Milanese gallery of Wunderkammern in 2016, JonOne arrives in Rome in the prestigious frame of Palazzo Velli in Trastevere. French by naturalization, JonOne is one of the most important contemporary artists and a key figure in the world of graffiti. His works have been exhibited in famous institutions such as Cartier Foundation and Grand Palais in Paris. He boasts collaborations with international brands such as Lacoste, Perrier, Air France and Guerlain. Hardly definable with a single art movement, his production is the result of the perfect union between graffiti and abstract expressionism, between calligraphy and performative use of color. โNiente puรฒ fermarmiโ is the first solo show by JonOne in Rome and the first exhibition of Wunderkammern organized to be hosted at Palazzo Velli. Cogito Ergo Sum, as Descartes has said. Scribo Ergo Sum, would say JonOne. It is impossible to understand the nature of the energy that makes a writer to tag on all walls of his city and on walls of all cities in the world. We can only try to imagine that the energy searching for a perfect style, with a nearly monastic commitment - besides challenging laws of the so-called civil society - is something which creates addiction. Pushing to do it. And then re-do it. And then re-do it again. And making you never want to stop. The only strength that can push to do such an extreme, revolutionary, uncalled gesture, is the impelling need to remind everyone, and first of all oneself, that we are there. There and in that moment, and in all moments when any passer-by will read that name. When: 17th March 2018 โ 14th April 2018 Where: Palazzo Velli, Piazza Sant'Egidio 10, Rome Facebook event: www.facebook.com/events/403072013451832/The collector catalogue is out! Get in touch with us at: wunderkammern@wunderkammern.net Quick artist info:JonOne (John Andrew Perello, 1963, New York, USA) is one of the most recognized contemporary artists in France today, and a key figure in the world of graffiti. He has shown in important galleries and in prestigious institutions alike, such as with the group shows Born in the Street at the Fondation Cartier and Le Tag Collection Gallizia at the Grand Palais (both in Paris in 2009). In addition, the artist boasts highly artistic and creative collaborations with renowned companies such as Guerlain, Air France, Lacoste, and Perrier.
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Deleted
๐จ๏ธ 0
๐๐ป
January 1970
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by Deleted on Mar 19, 2018 19:18:51 GMT 1,
upload the pictures
just back from Rome, posted location on the 6 Nations thread.
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wunderkammern
Art Gallery
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 68
๐๐ป 89
September 2012
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by wunderkammern on Mar 27, 2018 16:31:02 GMT 1, Hello everybody!
We are waiting for you at Wunderkammern Milan for โTiltโ, exhibition by the american artist Aakash Nihalani.
After the exhibition Vantage inaugurated in 2014 at the Rome gallery, Wunderkammern presents in Milan a new solo show by Aakash Nihalani: Tilt. For this occasion the artist will produce a site-specific work with adhesive tape and painting directly on the gallery walls. Investigating the theme of perception, Aakash Nihalani relates to space to create a unique and immersive experience in which the spectator is called to participate actively. The โtiltedโ disruptions, optical illusions created by the artist with bright colors, foster not only the opening of a playful and ironic three-dimensionality, but also of a deeper space of reflection on the use and consumption of today's digital images, strictly two-dimensional. Aakash Nihalani presents for the exhibition at Wunderkammern, in addition to the site-specific installation, a series of small-format works created with ink and paint on paper.
When: 28th March 2018 โ 28th April 2018
Where: WK Milan, Via Ausonio 1A, Milan
Facebook event: www.facebook.com/events/154510858555831/
The collector catalogue is out!
Get in touch with us at: wunderkammern@wunderkammern.net
Quick artist info:
Aakash Nihalani (USA, 1986) lives and works in New York. In 2008 he obtained a BFA at Steinhardt School, New York University (NYU) and in 2012 he gained a residency from Lisa de Kooning at the Willem de Kooning studio in East Hampton, NY. Known internationally, he has exhibited in solo and group exhibitions in numerous countries including Saudi Arabia, India, United States, England, Italy and Hong Kong. Currently some of his works are visible at the Rose Kennedy Greenway in Boston (2017). The relationship of Aakash Nihalani with the urban architecture of New York was fundamental for his artistic development. The repetitive architecture of the city, its geometric shapes and its dimensions have attracted the artist who has begun to relate to it. The artist has found his meeting point with the public precisely in the universality of geometric language, accessible at every age.
Hello everybody! We are waiting for you at Wunderkammern Milan for โTiltโ, exhibition by the american artist Aakash Nihalani. After the exhibition Vantage inaugurated in 2014 at the Rome gallery, Wunderkammern presents in Milan a new solo show by Aakash Nihalani: Tilt. For this occasion the artist will produce a site-specific work with adhesive tape and painting directly on the gallery walls. Investigating the theme of perception, Aakash Nihalani relates to space to create a unique and immersive experience in which the spectator is called to participate actively. The โtiltedโ disruptions, optical illusions created by the artist with bright colors, foster not only the opening of a playful and ironic three-dimensionality, but also of a deeper space of reflection on the use and consumption of today's digital images, strictly two-dimensional. Aakash Nihalani presents for the exhibition at Wunderkammern, in addition to the site-specific installation, a series of small-format works created with ink and paint on paper. When: 28th March 2018 โ 28th April 2018 Where: WK Milan, Via Ausonio 1A, Milan Facebook event: www.facebook.com/events/154510858555831/The collector catalogue is out! Get in touch with us at: wunderkammern@wunderkammern.net Quick artist info: Aakash Nihalani (USA, 1986) lives and works in New York. In 2008 he obtained a BFA at Steinhardt School, New York University (NYU) and in 2012 he gained a residency from Lisa de Kooning at the Willem de Kooning studio in East Hampton, NY. Known internationally, he has exhibited in solo and group exhibitions in numerous countries including Saudi Arabia, India, United States, England, Italy and Hong Kong. Currently some of his works are visible at the Rose Kennedy Greenway in Boston (2017). The relationship of Aakash Nihalani with the urban architecture of New York was fundamental for his artistic development. The repetitive architecture of the city, its geometric shapes and its dimensions have attracted the artist who has begun to relate to it. The artist has found his meeting point with the public precisely in the universality of geometric language, accessible at every age.
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Charlie
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 246
๐๐ป 409
September 2015
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by Charlie on Jul 25, 2018 9:23:13 GMT 1, Hello peoples,
I am visiting Rome in September for a small city break and looking forward to trying to find some ROA, Blu and Invaders (although I believe they are mostly gone) around the streets.
Have any of you ever been to the 'European Space Centre in Frascati' to flash the Invaders on the premises? If so, can the general public turn up announced, or do you have to book/pay to get in?
I think its about an hour from Rome which I would happily do to see the centre and flash the Invaders.
Cheers, Charlie.
Hello peoples,
I am visiting Rome in September for a small city break and looking forward to trying to find some ROA, Blu and Invaders (although I believe they are mostly gone) around the streets.
Have any of you ever been to the 'European Space Centre in Frascati' to flash the Invaders on the premises? If so, can the general public turn up announced, or do you have to book/pay to get in?
I think its about an hour from Rome which I would happily do to see the centre and flash the Invaders.
Cheers, Charlie.
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by Roman Emperor on Jul 25, 2018 14:54:15 GMT 1, Hi, Charlie!
I live in Rome but I've never been at ESRIN in Frascati.
Anyway the easiest way to reach it is by train. If you take the train to Frosinone or Cassino from Stazione Termini and get off at Tor Vergata station you are just 100 meters from ESRIN. It takes 25 minutes and ticket costs about โฌ2. Here the details: www.esa.int/About_Us/ESRIN/Getting_to_ESRIN
As far as I know, it's not open to the general public, only students are allowed on request. I suggest you to write them an email, contactesrin@esa.int could be the right address.
Cheers
Hi, Charlie!
I live in Rome but I've never been at ESRIN in Frascati.
Anyway the easiest way to reach it is by train. If you take the train to Frosinone or Cassino from Stazione Termini and get off at Tor Vergata station you are just 100 meters from ESRIN. It takes 25 minutes and ticket costs about โฌ2. Here the details: www.esa.int/About_Us/ESRIN/Getting_to_ESRIN
As far as I know, it's not open to the general public, only students are allowed on request. I suggest you to write them an email, contactesrin@esa.int could be the right address.
Cheers
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chichi carter
Junior Member
๐จ๏ธ 1,269
๐๐ป 1,058
February 2011
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by chichi carter on Jul 25, 2018 15:20:19 GMT 1, Hi Charlie. I was there back in early March and came upon some nice pieces by Blu, Sten Lex, Clemens Behr and a couple of Invaders. They were mostly in Garbatella and Testaccio, apart from the odd Invader that is very close to the entrace of the Vatican museum. It was all sheer luck really. My partner is italian and lived in Rome for over a decade. Best tour guide ever. We walked all around the city for four days and the pieces were finding me. I wasn't even on the hunt. Enjoy your stay in Rome!
Hi Charlie. I was there back in early March and came upon some nice pieces by Blu, Sten Lex, Clemens Behr and a couple of Invaders. They were mostly in Garbatella and Testaccio, apart from the odd Invader that is very close to the entrace of the Vatican museum. It was all sheer luck really. My partner is italian and lived in Rome for over a decade. Best tour guide ever. We walked all around the city for four days and the pieces were finding me. I wasn't even on the hunt. Enjoy your stay in Rome!
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Deleted
๐จ๏ธ 0
๐๐ป
January 1970
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by Deleted on Jul 25, 2018 16:04:36 GMT 1, Really cool my dog sighs work just off the main trastevere road, ill find dtls and post them. Also found 1-2 invaders but just by chance.
Really cool my dog sighs work just off the main trastevere road, ill find dtls and post them. Also found 1-2 invaders but just by chance.
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Charlie
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 246
๐๐ป 409
September 2015
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by Charlie on Jul 25, 2018 16:49:25 GMT 1, Hi, Charlie!
I live in Rome but I've never been at ESRIN in Frascati.
Anyway the easiest way to reach it is by train. If you take the train to Frosinone or Cassino from Stazione Termini and get off at Tor Vergata station you are just 100 meters from ESRIN. It takes 25 minutes and ticket costs about โฌ2. Here the details: www.esa.int/About_Us/ESRIN/Getting_to_ESRIN
As far as I know, it's not open to the general public, only students are allowed on request. I suggest you to write them an email, contactesrin@esa.int could be the right address.
Cheers Thanks for your help and the details on the train, thats brilliant..... I have now sent them an email so hopefully I will hear back soon. I'll let you know how it goes.
Hi, Charlie!
I live in Rome but I've never been at ESRIN in Frascati.
Anyway the easiest way to reach it is by train. If you take the train to Frosinone or Cassino from Stazione Termini and get off at Tor Vergata station you are just 100 meters from ESRIN. It takes 25 minutes and ticket costs about โฌ2. Here the details: www.esa.int/About_Us/ESRIN/Getting_to_ESRIN
As far as I know, it's not open to the general public, only students are allowed on request. I suggest you to write them an email, contactesrin@esa.int could be the right address.
Cheers Thanks for your help and the details on the train, thats brilliant..... I have now sent them an email so hopefully I will hear back soon. I'll let you know how it goes.
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Charlie
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 246
๐๐ป 409
September 2015
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by Charlie on Jul 25, 2018 16:51:16 GMT 1, Hi Charlie. I was there back in early March and came upon some nice pieces by Blu, Sten Lex, Clemens Behr and a couple of Invaders. They were mostly in Garbatella and Testaccio, apart from the odd Invader that is very close to the entrace of the Vatican museum. It was all sheer luck really. My partner is italian and lived in Rome for over a decade. Best tour guide ever. We walked all around the city for four days and the pieces were finding me. I wasn't even on the hunt. Enjoy your stay in Rome! Thanks for the info mate. I have found a map on Google that shows where Invaders should be, but whether they are still there or not is the question!
The Blu works look amazing, I am definitely finding them and the ROA ones.
Hi Charlie. I was there back in early March and came upon some nice pieces by Blu, Sten Lex, Clemens Behr and a couple of Invaders. They were mostly in Garbatella and Testaccio, apart from the odd Invader that is very close to the entrace of the Vatican museum. It was all sheer luck really. My partner is italian and lived in Rome for over a decade. Best tour guide ever. We walked all around the city for four days and the pieces were finding me. I wasn't even on the hunt. Enjoy your stay in Rome! Thanks for the info mate. I have found a map on Google that shows where Invaders should be, but whether they are still there or not is the question! The Blu works look amazing, I am definitely finding them and the ROA ones.
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slevin
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 602
๐๐ป 699
December 2015
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by slevin on Jul 25, 2018 18:59:32 GMT 1, Quadraro is always worth a visit for the street art.
Quadraro is always worth a visit for the street art.
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by Roman Emperor on Jul 26, 2018 10:47:07 GMT 1, Hi, Charlie!
I live in Rome but I've never been at ESRIN in Frascati.
Anyway the easiest way to reach it is by train. If you take the train to Frosinone or Cassino from Stazione Termini and get off at Tor Vergata station you are just 100 meters from ESRIN. It takes 25 minutes and ticket costs about โฌ2. Here the details: www.esa.int/About_Us/ESRIN/Getting_to_ESRIN
As far as I know, it's not open to the general public, only students are allowed on request. I suggest you to write them an email, contactesrin@esa.int could be the right address.
Cheers Thanks for your help and the details on the train, thats brilliant..... I have now sent them an email so hopefully I will hear back soon. I'll let you know how it goes. You are welcome, Charlie.
There is a lot to see in the streets, but I understand itโs not easy without a car! Garbatella and Testaccio are good areas, in the latter you will find the famous Roa's Jumping Wolf made in 2014 in Via Galvani. By the way its location is not accidental. She-wolf suckling Romulus and Remus is the emblem of Rome and also the emblem of AS Roma football club. And very near to that mural there was Campo Testaccio, where AS Roma played until 1953.
Another place where you can see many works in Tor Marancia area, where entire buildings in a former council housing complex are covered with graffiti, under a project called โBig City Lifeโ: www.turismoroma.it/cosa-fare/i-murales-a-tor-marancia
Some other links you may find interesting to look at:
www.romeing.it/street-art-in-rome/ www.bigcitylife.it/
www.cosafarearoma.it/street-art-tor-marancia-roma/
www.google.com/culturalinstitute/beta/partner/street-art-rome
theculturetrip.com/europe/italy/articles/top-10-places-to-admire-street-art-in-rome/
Hi, Charlie!
I live in Rome but I've never been at ESRIN in Frascati.
Anyway the easiest way to reach it is by train. If you take the train to Frosinone or Cassino from Stazione Termini and get off at Tor Vergata station you are just 100 meters from ESRIN. It takes 25 minutes and ticket costs about โฌ2. Here the details: www.esa.int/About_Us/ESRIN/Getting_to_ESRIN
As far as I know, it's not open to the general public, only students are allowed on request. I suggest you to write them an email, contactesrin@esa.int could be the right address.
Cheers Thanks for your help and the details on the train, thats brilliant..... I have now sent them an email so hopefully I will hear back soon. I'll let you know how it goes. You are welcome, Charlie.
There is a lot to see in the streets, but I understand itโs not easy without a car! Garbatella and Testaccio are good areas, in the latter you will find the famous Roa's Jumping Wolf made in 2014 in Via Galvani. By the way its location is not accidental. She-wolf suckling Romulus and Remus is the emblem of Rome and also the emblem of AS Roma football club. And very near to that mural there was Campo Testaccio, where AS Roma played until 1953.
Another place where you can see many works in Tor Marancia area, where entire buildings in a former council housing complex are covered with graffiti, under a project called โBig City Lifeโ: www.turismoroma.it/cosa-fare/i-murales-a-tor-marancia
Some other links you may find interesting to look at:
www.romeing.it/street-art-in-rome/ www.bigcitylife.it/
www.cosafarearoma.it/street-art-tor-marancia-roma/
www.google.com/culturalinstitute/beta/partner/street-art-rome
theculturetrip.com/europe/italy/articles/top-10-places-to-admire-street-art-in-rome/
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Charlie
New Member
๐จ๏ธ 246
๐๐ป 409
September 2015
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Visit ROME ๐ฎ๐น Italy Street Art, Galleries, Events, by Charlie on Jul 26, 2018 12:15:32 GMT 1, You sir, are a diamond :-)
You sir, are a diamond :-)
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