Until October 30, Poland lands in Rome, in the Trastevere and Testaccio districts, with an urban art project, in an exhibition entitled FRAMMENTI DI POLONIA. The aim is to raise awareness of its cities in the south, Krakow, the best known, and Wroclaw, an emerging city. An exhibition in collaboration with the Roman agency Sbagliato, an artistic project founded by three friends Roman architects and designers, who from significant shots of the two Polish cities have created very suggestive giant posters that can be admired in the two Roman neighborhoods.
The artists, through their sensitivity, have been able to grasp the most characteristic aspects of Krakow and Wroclaw, letting themselves be inspired by their young, creative and constantly fermenting atmosphere. While not neglecting the rich historical, artistic and architectural heritage of the two cities, the work of the Roman artists is based on the desire to generate interference in the urban fabric, creating “openings” within the rigid order composed of the architectures, through the ” use of posters, an ideal means of communication due to its ephemeral nature and mimetic attitude, distinctive features of the group’s poetics.
The exhibition highlights the architectural uniqueness of Krakow and Wroclaw where styles blend with modernism and contemporary works, creating a new and vibrant environment. And therefore the Roman districts of Testaccio and Trastevere are enriched with Polish suggestions, giving all passers-by evocations of a Poland in continuous evolution, which wants to show its most creative and alternative soul through the language of contemporary art.
“This is a new promotional tool for Poland – points out Barbara Minczewa, Director of the Polish National Tourist Board in Italy – but it also wants to be an open dialogue with the public spaces of the city of Rome, and it is thanks to to this dialogue that the artists of Sbagliato, after identifying the Roman spots, have selected among the numerous shots taken in Poland, those that best represent the most artistic and significant elements of the two Polish cities, thus creating a glimpse of Poland in the capital “.
It must be said that the ancient cities of Krakow and Wroclaw were both European capitals of culture and both UNESCO heritage sites. They are cities in constant cultural ferment, where art becomes an integral part of a past rich in history, and underlines its cosmopolitan vocation. of cultural exchange and friendship between peoples.
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