Visualizzazione post con etichetta VisitMantua. Mostra tutti i post
Visualizzazione post con etichetta VisitMantua. Mostra tutti i post

[#CaliforniaDreamBig] Why VisitMantua wants to Visit California...


Andrea Mantegna, The Adoration of the Magi, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, California

When asked about their Californian dream, many people answer describing great venues on the seaside, the Walk of Fame, the exciting clubs in San Francisco, or the stunning Natural Parks. 
And of course, they would love to pay a visit to the famous locations of the many TV series which have "Charmed" [this is an intentional reference] entire generations of fans: from the soap-opera "Santa Barbara" to "The Bold and the Beautiful", from "Bewitched" to "Baywatch", from "Beverly Hills 90210" to "The O.C.", from "Private Practice" to "The Big Bang Theory", just to name a few. 
Not many people, however, will describe art, museums and galleries as "good reasons" for dreaming of California.  
Many Italian – and European – visitors are usually convinced that there is not much art to be found on the other side of the ocean. But this is not true. 
As an art historian, I have been spending years wandering through many countries, visiting art galleries and museums, and I can assure you that art and culture also have their American homes. 
I had such wonderful experiences in the great museums of the East Coast, and since then I have been dreaming of going west: the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles and Malibu, the Hearst Castle in San Simeon and the Norton Simon Museum of Pasadena are on my wish list, from the days of yore. 
I am mostly interested in two paintings, strongly connected with my research: a Noble Lady by Giulio Campi in Hearst Castle, once thought to be a portrait of Isabella d’Este, Marchioness of Mantua, and an Adoration of the Magi by Andrea Mantegna in the J. Paul Getty Museum of Los Angeles. 
Both these paintings, now in California, are from Mantua, the town where I was born, where I live and where I have been showing around visitors (mostly Americans) for the past ten years.
So, this is my #CalifoniaDreamBig: an art trip to California, offering me the chance of meeting so many masterpieces face to face (and heart to heart).





Giulio Campi, Portrait of an Italian Noblewoman (maybe Isabella d’Este), Hearst Castle, San Simeon, California
Indian Art, Shiva in the Fierce Form of Bhairava, Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, California
Anthony van Dyck, Portrait of Henrietta Maria of France, Queen Consort of England, Scotland and Ireland, The San Diego Museum of Art, San Diego California
Burmese Art, Gilded Buddha from Sagaing, The Fowler Museum at UCLA, Los Angeles, California
William-Adolphe Bouguereau, A Young Girl Defending Herself against Cupid, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, California
Greek Art, Kouros, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Malibu, California
Raphael, Madonna and Child with a Book, The Norton Simon Museum of Art, Pasadena, California
Music: California Dreamin’, performed by Scala & Kolacny Brothers

"Torta di San Biagio": a winter delight halfway between Mantua and Lake Garda.



“Hiersera arrivassimo quì in Capriana, 
per una via sassosa et aspra, 
pure assai dilettevole per la bellissima vista 
di colline et campagne piene d’amandoli, et olivi”.

“Last evening we arrived here, in Cavriana, travelling along a way that was stony and rough, but also delightful for the beautiful view of hills and fields, full of almond and olive trees”.
These words, from a letter written by Isabella d’Este in 1535, describe one of the many visits of the Marchioness to the Lake Garda Hillside.

The letter was sent from Cavriana, a small village on the mantuan hills, close to the Lake. Here Isabella had one of her leisure residences: you can still see the name of Isabella carved on a fireplace architrave in the local museum.

On the hills of Cavriana – today as in the times of Isabella – many almond trees grow, and almonds are the main ingredient of a very special cake, which is cooked every year in Cavriana, on the occasion of the feast of the local patron saint: San Biagio (Saint Blaise).

The "Torta di San Biagio" ("Cake of Saint Blaise") is a tart, stuffed with an almond-filling, and made with a special pastry, which has not eggs, but white wine in. The filling is composed with almonds, eggs, chopped chocolate, anise and sugar. The top of the cake is decorated with a grill made of pastry, cut in lozenges, which shows the interior filling.

Every year, on February 3rd, an enormous "Cake of Saint Blaise" - with more of 3 meters of diameter - is cut on the main square of Cavriana.



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