In the summer of 1992, following the carnage at Capaci that slew judge Giovanni Falcone, his wife Francesca Morvillo and police officers Rocco Dicillo, Antonio Montinaro and Vito Schifani, and the blast in Via D'Amelio in which judge Paolo Borsellino and his five bodyguards Agostino Catalano, Emanuela Loi, Vincenzo Li Muli, Walter Eddie Cosina and Claudio Traina lost their lives, a group of women in Palermo felt the need to do something, to react in some way. Their highly symbolic action took the shape of a hunger strike in the main square of the city, an act which still comes across as courageous even today. Twenty-two years on, those women, some of whom were no more than girls at the time, have come together again in the work of Francesco Francaviglia, on display in the Uffizi Gallery in Florence.

“DARKLANDS – VOLTI DELLA MEMORIA”, DI FRANCESCO FRANCAVIGLIA ALL’OPERA DI ROMA IL 23 MAGGIO

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La Rivoluzione Gentile di Loredana Galante alla Biennale di Malta

Il progetto artistico La Rivoluzione Gentile, di Loredana Galante, sarà presentato nell’ambito Public Program della …

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