Expositions
One hundred photographs divided into three sections documenting the history of the city built on sand dunes overlooking the Mediterranean Sea. The first section features photographs of Abraham Soskin (1881-1973) describing the Tel Aviv from 1906 to 1936, the second presents images by Rudi Weissenstein, the only photographer invited to document the founding of the state of Israel from 1936 to 1970. The last section features photos by Viviana Tagar showing the contrast between the ancient and the contemporary city.
As part of the International Biennial of Culture "Vie della Seta" (The Silk Road), 100 giant posters signed by popular photographers, illustrating the beauty, attractions and contradictions of one of the most important cities of the world: Beijing.
In cinema, suspense represents an unresolved conflict, an obscure situation, an accumulation of dark anguish. This mode of narration arose in the years following World War II, and almost immediately acquired a new meaning in the context of the second wave of European existentialism, wonderfully adapting itself to portraying the irrational melancholy that pervaded the world in the aftermath of the war.
The exhibition aims to provide a historical and iconographic interpretation of the Risorgimento through the works of art and creativity published in newspapers and magazines of the time by the most talented Italian illustrators.
The exhibition aims to present the work of Pino Settanni (1949 - 2010), one of the most important Italian photographers of our century.
The exhibition aims to raise awareness of the artistic work of Ernesto Che Guevara in the field of photography, a unique opportunity to learn about the artistic side of a revolutionary iconic figure through his own eyes.
The exhibition celebrates a particular "exotic wedding" between seemingly distant cultures, highlighting their little known relationship, through the lives of the many figures, from Columbus to the present day.
The annual World Press Photo Exhibition is the best known of World Press Photo's activities and is a leading event in the organization's calendar.
Every year following the World Press Photo Contest, the winning images go on tour. In April, the exhibition is officially opened in Amsterdam and can be seen at venues around the globe until March of the next year. The tour program takes in approximately 100 cities in 45 countries and is still expanding.
The exhibition is a showcase for creativity in photojournalism and a platform for developments in the profession, part of World Press Photo's aim of encouraging and stimulating the work of press photographers around the world. The show also attracts a broader public and, because of the wide-ranging focus of the contest, forms an eyewitness record of world events from the previous year.
An exhibition dedicated to these cats and mice - mysterious and fascinating the first, disturbing and controversial the other second- both have inspired writers, musicians, illustrators, poets, artists. The exhibit is divided into several sections, collects old and new materials: paintings, drawings, sculptures, furnishings and decor, books, newspapers, magazines, comic books, collections.
The exhibition presents 130 vintages from the CRAFarchives and is dedicated to Italian photography between 1945 and early 1960s, when Mario Giacomelli introduced a new figurative language.
The artist captures the disturbing and mysterious appearance of the sirens. Ulysses had the chance to listen to their songs without being drawn th them.
The exhibition aims to investigate in depth the relationship between two Masters of International Photography: Paul Strand and Walter Rosenblum, adding further significant insights to their works.




