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  • Arte e Cultura

    Protecting Our Heritage!

    L’Italia a Washington pone al centro delle attività degli istituti di cultura europei la protezione del patrimonio culturale dell’umanità. Si chiama Protecting our Heritage il programma proposto dalla rete “EUNIC” (European National Institutes of Culture), di cui il nostro Paese detiene per tutto il 2016, nella capitale degli Stati Uniti (attraverso il nostro Istituto di Cultura), la presidenza di turno.

    L’iniziativa, che gode del patrocinio dell’UNESCO ed è sostenuta anche dalla Delegazione dell’Unione europea a Washington, ha due obiettivi: accrescere la consapevolezza dell’opinione pubblica e rafforzare la rete di soggetti internazionali – amministrazioni, musei, università, fondazioni, centri di restauro – che operano per fare fronte ai rischi che corre il patrimonio culturale dell’umanità. Dal terrorismo alla criminalità, dai cambiamenti climatici al semplice oblio. In questo spirito, per tutta la sua durata il programma resterà aperto a contributi di idee e progetti da parte delle organizzazioni potenzialmente interessate. E i temi proposti si presentano sotto forma di interrogativi aperti.

     Come lavorare insieme per riscoprire l’eredità culturale del passato e renderla rilevante anche per la nostra identità presente? Come stabilire delle regole e degli standard comuni per migliorare il livello di tutela? Cosa è possibile fare per salvare i beni culturali a rischio nelle aree di conflitto? Questi alcune delle domande elencate nel manifesto dell’iniziativa.

    “La protezione del patrimonio culturale dell’umanità è un tema che sta molto a cuore all’Italia, attorno al quale stiamo riscontrando forte entusiasmo anche qui a Washington” ha commentato l’Ambasciatore Claudio Bisogniero. “Sfrutteremo questa occasione per dare il nostro contributo a una causa globale, per aiutare a coalizzare la comunità internazionale attorno all’impegno – che è un imperativo per tutti – di tutelare ad ogni costo la nostra memoria comune. Lo faremo attraverso eventi commemorativi, per ricordare il sacrificio di coloro che hanno messo a rischio persino la propria vita per proteggere l’arte, dai monuments men della seconda guerra mondiale, agli “angeli del fango” intervenuti per salvare le bellezze di Firenze esattamente cinquant’anni fa, agli archeologi che oggi lavorano in aree di crisi. Ma lo faremo soprattutto cercando di condividere esperienze, catalizzare energie e progetti, esplorare assieme nuove metodologie di lavoro”.

    Il programma  e' stato inaugurato all’Ambasciata d’Italia a Washington con la mostra “Passaggi” del fotografo-archeologo Massimiliano Gatti, con la partecipazione di Jonathan Green, Fondatore e Direttore del complesso culturale ARTSBlock presso l’Università della California, Riverside, e di Alexander Nagel, archeologo della Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History. Proseguirà per tutto il 2016 con conferenze, seminari, mostre, proiezioni e concerti organizzati in partnership con alcune tra le più importanti organizzazioni americane ed europee specializzate nel settore.

  • Life & People

    Eight California Residents Receive NIAF Scholarships


    (WASHINGTON, D.C. – February 3, 2016) Eight university students who reside in California have received National Italian American Foundation (NIAF) Scholarships. The students are: Gian Paul Bergeron of Sausalito; Alexander Bologna of Rancho Palos Verdes; Tristan Curnow of Fallbrook; Max Galassi of Redondo Beach; Neal Huddon-Cossar of Novato; Michael Law of Glendale; Ashley Robertson of Pinole; and Alissa Wilson of San Martin.



    Since NIAF’s inception 40 years ago, the scholarship program has grown from four scholarships of $250 each to dozens of annual scholarships ranging in value from $2,000 to $12,000, each in the Italian language and culture, medicine, engineering, business, law, music, and other specialized fields. Last year, the average scholarship to students in the United States was worth more than $6,000.



    "Since 1975, NIAF has awarded millions of dollars in merit-based scholarships and cultural grants to undergraduate, graduate, post graduate, medical and law students from across the country. NIAF values the importance of education and the role it plays in helping deserving Italian American students build promising futures,” said Anita Bevacqua McBride, co-chair of the Foundation’s Education and Grants Committee.




    Scholarship applicants must be a NIAF member or have a parent or guardian who is a member of the Foundation. Applicants must be enrolled in or entering an accredited college or university in the United States in the fall of 2016. Students must be of Italian descent, with at least one ancestor who has emigrated from Italy. Additionally, applicants must be U.S. citizens or permanent resident aliens. NIAF scholarship recipients are selected based on academic merit and have an average GPA of 3.5 out of 4.0 to apply.



    Contributors to the NIAF scholarship program include individuals, corporations and organizations throughout the United States and Italy.


    Apply online for a 2016-2017 NIAF scholarship at www.niaf.org/scholarships.



    Application deadline is March 1, 2016. NIAF scholarship winners will be notified May 2, 2016.


    For more information on establishing a NIAF scholarship, contact NIAF Director of Programs Gabriella Mileti at gmileti@niaf.org.



    The National Italian American Foundation (NIAF) is a non-profit organization based in Washington, D.C., and dedicated to preserving the heritage of Italian Americans. Visit www.niaf.org





    NIAF SCHOLARSHIPS TO STUDENTS IN CALIFORNIA


    · Gian Paul Bergeron of Sausalito has received the NIAF Jack Valenti Scholarship. Bergeron attends Yale University and is pursuing a degree in American Studies with an emphasis in film and literature.




    · Alexander Bologna of Rancho Palos Verdes has received the NIAF Jack Valenti Scholarship. Bologna attends the University of Southern California and is pursuing a degree in Cinematic Arts and Critical Studies.




    · Tristan Curnow of Fallbrook has received the NIAF Jim Cantalupo Scholarship. Curnow attends Point Loma Nazarene University and is pursuing a degree in business management.




    · Max Galassi of Redondo Beach has received the NIAF Jack Valenti Scholarship. Galassi currently attends Art Center College of Design in Pasadena and is pursuing a degree in film. Galassi was nationally recognized while in high school for his work in cinematography and directing, and has had films screened in film festivals in Connecticut, New York and Washington.




    · Neal Huddon-Cossar of Novato has received the Norman R. Petterson Scholarship Fund. Huddon-Cossar attends John Cabot University and is pursuing a degree in international affairs with a minor in economics.




    · Michael Law of Glendale has received the Filomena J. Peloro Scholarship. Law attends the University of California Los Angeles and is pursuing a degree in business economics.




    · Ashley Robertson of Pinole has received the NIAF Jim Cantalupo Scholarship. Robertson attends the University of California Santa Barbara and is pursuing a degree in global and international studies and Italian studies.




    · Alissa Wilson of San Martin has received the NIAF Jim Cantalupo Scholarship. Wilson attends Santa Clara University and is pursuing a degree in biology with a minor in Italian.




    ---



    The National Italian American Foundation (NIAF)

    1860 19th Street NW

    Washington, DC 20009

    Direct: 202/939-3106

    Main: 202/387-0600

    Fax: 202/387-0833

    Cell: 703/727-8479

    E-mail: elissa@niaf.org

    On the web at www.niaf.org



    NIAF MEMBERS CAN NOW PURCHASE NEW YORK GALA TICKETS BY FEBRUARY 7, AND RECEIVE 10% OFF THE ORIGINAL PRICE! JOIN US THURSDAY, APRIL 28, 2016, AT THE LEGENDARY CIPRIANI 42ND STREET. VISIT WWW.NIAF.ORG/NYC

  • Events: Reports

    Design the Car of Your Dreams and Learn Italian!


     




    The Italian luxury sport car manufacturer Ferrari is hosting a few classes of Italian, in partnership with the Italian American Committee on Education (IACE). High-school students who study Italian in one of the schools supported by IACE’s grants in the tri-state area of New York, New Jersey and Connecticut will have the opportunity to learn that Italy is excellent non only in Food, Fashion and Furniture, but also in technology & industrial design. Ferrari’s people will talk about the history of the brand, show the engines and the cars, explain the technology breakthroughs behind the different models. Then the students will be able to design their own Ferrari on the configurator that is used by regular clients to personalize their car.


    The first class will be on February 9, at 10 am, with students from the Syosset High-school, Nassau County, New York. The second class will be onFebruary 23. The Ferrari showroom is on the corner of Park Avenue and 55th street.


    The initiative is part of the efforts by IACE to promote the study of the Italian language and culture in American schools. IACE is a New York based non-profit organization that operates under the supervision of the Consulate General of Italy in New York. Other initiatives include: “Tutti all’Opera!”, special performances for students at the New York City Opera; “Mangia sano e parla Italiano” (Eat Healthy & Speak Italian”), cooking classes at Eataly and at Academia Barilla Restaurants in Manhattan; special events with speakers such as Lidia Bastianich.





    More information >>>



     

  • Events: Reports

    THIS WEEKEND On i-ItalyTV / NYC Life


     

  • Facebook Embedded Posts



     

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    Back stage pics! This weekend on i-ItalyTV Fettuccine al ragu' with De Cecco pasta!channel 22 or 25

    Posted by i-Italy on Saturday, May 3, 2014

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    Ancora foto... non vi scocciate vero? Pics by Carlotta Caruso

    Posted by i-Italy on Saturday, April 18, 2015

  • Events: Reports

    Renzo De Felice's The Jews in Fascist Italy: An Historical Appraisal


     



    On the occasion of the paperback reprint of Renzo De Felice's The Jews in Fascist Italy, this panel will explore the genesis of the book and its place in contemporary historiography.


    Commissioned by the Union of the Italian Jewish Communities and published in 1961, it was the first study of the anti-Jewish persecution in Italy to reach a general audience. It was also a young historian's first book on the Fascist era. This glance into a chapter of national history, that Italy had been quick to bury, set De Felice on a path to become one of the leading and most controversial scholars of Fascism.


    How was his attempt to capture an unsettling past received at the time of the book's publication? What place does this book have in the current scholarship when many of its conclusions have been overturned after five decades of research on Italian state-sponsored anti-Semitism? And to which degree have the studies of Fascism and of the persecution of the Jews shed light on one another?


    Panelists: Ernest Ialongo, Hostos Community College, CUNY (chair and moderator); Frank Hugh Adler, Macalester College; Stanislao Pugliese, Hofstra University; Alexander Stille, Columbia University School of Journalism; Guri Schwarz, University of Pisa.


    This event is presented by the John D. Calandra Italian American Institute and Enigma Books as part of the program series co-organized in connection with "Giorno della Memoria" by the Consulate General of Italy, Centro Primo Levi, Casa Italiana Zerilli Marimò at NYU, the Italian Academy for Advanced Studies in America at Columbia University, and the Italian Cultural Institute in New York.


    A special thanks to Enigma Books and the Centro Primo Levi.


    This event is free and open to the public, but please RSVP to 212-642-2094.





    John D. Calandra Italian American Institute

    Queens College, CUNY

    25 West 43rd Street, 17th floor

    New York, NY 10036

  • Facts & Stories

    Westchester County District Attorney Janet M. DiFiore Confirmed Chief Judge of New York Court of Appeals



     
    Attribute to John M. Viola, National Italian American Foundation (NIAF) President
    “On behalf of the National Italian American Foundation’s Board of Directors, we congratulate Westchester County District Attorney Janet M. DiFiore on her confirmation as chief judge of the New York Court of Appeals, the state’s highest court.  DiFiore was nominated in December by Governor Andrew Cuomo and confirmed by the New York Senate Judiciary Committee on Thursday, January 21, 2016. DiFiore is the second woman to become chief judge in the history of the court.


     
    “Her career as both a county judge and prosecutor is a source of pride for the Italian American community. Her commitment and dedication serve as an inspiration for all of us. Special thanks to Governor Cuomo for making such an extraordinary decision. We know that she will serve the citizens of New York State well as chief judge.


     
    “We are extremely proud of her distinguished career as a public servant.  She has supervised criminal courts for the ninth Judicial District in the lower Hudson Valley and chairs the Joint Commission on Public Ethics in the State of New York.


     
    “Last year at the NIAF New York Gala, Governor Cuomo joined the more than 500 guests to present the inaugural Mario M. Cuomo Award in Public Service to DiFiore. The award recognizes Italian American public servants who are known for their passion, conviction, and dedication to serving the Italian American community.
    “Her integrity, hard work, and passion serve as an inspiration to all in the legal profession and beyond.
    “Congratulazioni Janet!”


     
    The National Italian American Foundation (NIAF) is a non-profit organization based in Washington, D.C., dedicated to preserving the heritage of Italian Americans. Visit www.niaf.org.
     

     

  • Opinioni

    Quel gioiello di Santa Maria del Colle

    Il volume sarà presentato martedì 26 gennaio alle ore 17,30 nel Palazzo Altieri a Roma. L’incontro sarà moderato dal giornalista Guido Alferj ed interverranno Giovanni Sabatini (Direttore generale ABI), Gaetano Basti (Direttore editoriale Menabò), Lucia Arbace (Direttore Polo Museale dell'Abruzzo), Maria Giulia Picchione (Soprintendente Belle Arti e Paesaggio dell'Abruzzo) Anna Colangelo (Funzionario storico dell'arte Soprintendenza Belle Arti e Paesaggio) Luciano D’Angelo (Fotografo) Mauro Vitale (Fotografo) Roberto Sciullo (Sindaco di Pescocostanzo) Pasquale del Cimmuto (già Sindaco di Pescocostanzo) Angelo Spina (Vescovo di Sulmona Valva) Francesco Sabatini (Presidente Emerito dell’Accademia della Crusca) Giovanni Legnini (Vice Presidente CSM).

    La presentazione del libro (che segue quella di Pescocostanzo e Milano) rappresenterà un'ulteriore occasione per approfondire gli aspetti storici, artistici e culturali che rendono la Basilica di Santa Maria del Colle a Pescocostanzo (L'Aquila), uno dei capolavori d’arte presenti in Abruzzo, “risultato dell’aspirazione al bello – così descritta da Sabatini – che una intera comunità ha coltivato nei secoli, sin da quando, posta sulla via di collegamento tra le capitali dei due Ducati longobardi di Spoleto e Benevento rientrò nell’ottica di Montecassino che, proprio intorno ad una primitiva cella di Santa Maria, fondata sul pesculum che dà il nome all’abitato, vi iniziò una attenta riforma agraria, tesa a far emergere fruttuosamente le potenzialità economiche del territorio. Il ceto dirigente, robusto economicamente ed evoluto culturalmente fu in grado di attrarre quelle compagnie di artigiani dell’edilizia, dell’intaglio, del ferro battuto, dei marmi, degli stucchi, i cosidetti mastri lombardi, che lasciarono notevoli tracce in tutta la regione e che costituirono un vero caposaldo nella piccola ma ricca Pescocostanzo”.

    Le preziose opere d’arte presenti nella Collegiata sono sapientemente illustrate dalle splendide immagini che descrivono ogni particolare e rappresentano il corredo che arricchisce l’apparato testuale del lavoro, curato da Anna Colangelo, al quale ha collaborato Lucia Arbace che traccia un quadro culturale della Città, Adriano Ghisetti Giavarina che descrive le fasi costruttive della Collegiata, Marta Vittorini che analizza insieme agli aspetti artistici anche le forme del secolare culto verso la preziosa effige “La Madonna del Colle”. Floriana Conte ricostruisce l’esegesi, la committenza e le varie collocazioni del dipinto della “Madonna di Costantinopoli” di Tanzio da Varallo e Vittorio Casale evidenzia gli esiti raggiunti dalle cosiddette arti applicate che trovarono a Pescocostanzo scuola ed interpreti di prim’ordine.
     

  • Events: Reports

    Celebrate Italian Genius! THIS WEEKEND On i-ItalyTV / NYC Life


     

  • Events: Reports

    INTERNATIONAL REMEMBRANCE PROGRAM


     Events in New York City

     
    January 25 at 6:00 pm
    Istituto Italiano di Cultura, 686 Park Avenue, New York
    Book discussion: Primo Levi, The Friend by Bianca Guidetti Serra (CPL Editions, 2015)
    Opening remarks: Giorgio Van Straten (Italian Cultural Institute)
    Guri Schwarz (Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa), Alessandro Cassin (Centro Primo Levi). Stella Levi (Centro Primo Levi) will read from the book.
     
    January 26 at 6:00 pm
    NYU Casa Italiana Zerilli Marimo’, 24 West 12th Street 
    Film Screening: Oro Macht Frei (2013) by Jeffrey Bonna and Catherine Campbell
    Opening remarks: Stefano Albertini. Post screening discussion: Catherine Campbell  
     
    January 27 between 9 am and 3 pm
    Consulate General of Italy, 689 Park Avenue
    Ceremony. Readings of the names of the Jews deported from Italy and the Italian territories. 
    Opening remarks: Consul General Natalia Quintavalle and Alessandro Di Rocco (President, Centro Primo Levi)
    Excerpts from Primo Levi's writings will be read during the ceremony by guest and by the students of the Italian high school Guglielmo Marconi. 
     
    January 28 at 6:00 pm
    John D. Calandra Italian American Institute, 25 West 43rd St, 17th Floor
    Book discussion. Renzo De Felice’s book The Jews in Fascist Italy (Enigma, 2006, 2015)
    Frank Adler (Macalester College), Stanislao Pugliese (Hofstra University), Alexander Stille (Columbia University), Guri Schwarz (Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa), Ernest Ialongo (Hostos Community College)
     
    February 1 at 6:00 pm
    NYU Casa Italiana Zerilli Marimo’, 24 West 12th Street  
    Book presentation: "L'Eclisse dell'Antifascismo” (Laterza, 2015) by Manuela Consonni.
    Opening remarks: Stefano Albertini and Natalia Indrimi (Centro Primo Levi)
    Manuela Consonni (Hebrew University of Jerusalem) and Michael Livingston (Rutgers University)
     
    February 4 at 5:30 pm
    Italian Academy, Columbia University, 1161 Amsterdam Avenue 
    Panel: Being a Child during the Holocaust
    Patricia Heberer Rice (US Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington DC) and Emily Langer (Washington Post)
     
    Events in other boroughs
     
    January 24 
    Garibaldi-Meucci Museum, 420 Tompkins Ave, Staten Island, NY 
    Book presentation: The Italian Jewish Exiles in America by Gianna Pontecorboli
    Speakers: Luigi Leonini and David Mercaldo (writer)
     
    Events in other cities
     
    Washington D.C. - January 27 at 6:00 pm
    Italian Embassy, 3000 Whitehaven Street, N.W.
    Panel: Primo Levi’s Complete Works. With Joan Acocella (The New Yorker) and Stefania Lucamante (Catholic University)
     
    Boston - January 24 at 12 noon
    Boston University, Photonics Building, 8 St. Mary’s St, Boston, MA 
    Film screening and book presentation: The Concentration Camp of Fossoli and the Deportation of Italian Jews
    The Jews of Fossoli by Ruggero Gabbai and Liliana Picciotto (CDEC)
    Gemma Vitale Servadio,  I am Counting on You, on EveryoneEight Letters from Fossoli (CPL Editions 2015) 
    With Nancy Harrowitz (Boston University), Alessandro Cassin (Centro Primo Levi) and Mirella Bedarida
     
    Ottawa - January 27 at 6:00 pm
    Library and Archives Canada, 395 Wellington Street Ottawa
    Presented by the Italian Cultural Institute
    Film screening: The Island of Roses by Rebecca Samonà
    Post screening discussion

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