11 August 2025

If You Have Never Wanted to Visit the Dolomites, You Will After You Watch This

The Dolomites are one of those places that once seen are never forgotten.   Located in northeastern Italy, they form a part of the Southern Limestone Alps and they were recently visited by filmmaker Michael Shainblum.  The aerial shots are by shot by Andrew Studer.  Together these very talented men perfectly capture the changing weather conditions around these most mystical, enigmatic of mountains.

23 November 2024

Dolomites Timelapse

During a brief yet immersive road trip through the breathtaking Dolomites, filmmaker Christopher Dormoy captured a series of mesmerizing timelapses, showcasing the natural rhythms of this majestic mountain range. His primary focus was on the fluid, dynamic motion of clouds as they danced across the rugged terrain, highlighting the interplay between the sky and the dramatic landscape below.

The Dolomites, known for their stunning geological formations and ever-changing weather, offered Dormoy a canvas of surprises and visual splendor. Through his lens, the movements of air and clouds appear almost alive - organic, fluid, and harmoniously intertwined with the contours of the mountains. These shifting patterns of nature, both rapid and intense, reveal a timeless relationship between the elements and the environment.

Dormoy’s work doesn’t just document a location; it captures an essence. By isolating these fleeting moments in motion, he transforms the Dolomites into a dynamic spectacle, a vivid reminder of the beauty and power of the natural world. His timelapses are more than a visual treat—they are a celebration of the mountains' ever-changing character, offering viewers a glimpse into the breathtaking synergy of earth and sky. It’s hard not to agree that Dormoy has immortalized a vision of extraordinary beauty, making the Dolomites feel both untamed and profoundly serene.

12 February 2024

The Portonaccio Sarcophagus - Amazing Relic of Rome

It is strange to think that this sarcophagus is eighteen hundred years old, so vivid are the carvings on its sides.  Who was buried inside is unknown, but there are facts that can be gleaned from the study of the ornate sculpting.  Housed in the National Museum of Rome, the sarcophagus is displayed in a darkened room under spotlights which show its decorative figures beautifully.

It was discovered in 1931 near Via Tiburtina, in the eastern suburbs of Rome. Its front depicts a symbolic picture of a battle which is on two levels.  The carving remains to this day an incredible achievement – the dark and light contrast beautifully to produce a veritable chiaroscuro effect. This skill involved was superlative.

1 January 2022

Craco - The Abandoned Town


Back in 1963 massive landslides made the inhabitants of the hilltop town of Craco in Italy shrug their shoulders one last time and move elsewhere.  As no one wished to (or could…) move in the place was left to nature.  Today although the local authorities have made attempts to rehabilitate the town as a tourist attraction it remains eerily abandoned.  If a town could have a beautiful corpse this is it, as amply demonstrated by Walter Molfese’s amazing film.

28 October 2021

Alberobello – Hobbiton on the Mediterranean

One glance at the Italian village of Alberobello and you know that you have stumbled across something unique.

Neat rows of whitewashed dwellings like something out of a fairy-tale.

It is almost as if the Hobbits of Middle-earth had set up a Mediterranean colony.

These strange but charming dwellings are known as trulli.  They are built without using mortar, part of a drywall culture of construction which predates written history in this part of Italy.  Many of the trulli pictured here are around six hundred years ago – the large slabs of limestone from which they are built was gathered from fields in the area.

20 September 2020

If You Have Never Wanted to Visit Rome, You Will After You Watch This


It is difficult to catch the spirit of a city on film especially one as enigmatic as the capital of Italy, Rome.  However, cinematographer Alex Soloviev achieves just that in this short portrait of this most energetic of cities.  If you like to people watch as much as sight-see then you should thoroughly enjoy this as Soloviev not only captures the places but that which brings them alive - the people.

28 April 2019

The Garden of the Monsters

In sixteenth century Italy the nobility would often leave testimony of their greatness through the form of religious art.  Not so Pier Francesco Orsini.  He wanted to be remembered in an entirely different way – through his Park of the Monsters. He did not want his monuments to please – he wanted them to astonish.

Tucked away in Bomarzo almost seventy kilometers from Rome, the gardens are located in a section of woodland near to the bottom of the valley in which the Orsini family castle was built.  Here, after a career as a mercenary, the latest of the Orsini line settled in to a life of middle-aged Epicureanism.  The park is perhaps holds a mirror to his imagination (or even state of mind) after a lifetime of political and social turmoil.

18 November 2018

Torre Guinigi: The Tower with Oak Trees on the Top

The city of Lucca in Tuscany, Italy, is famous for its medieval architecture and intact city walls.  Yet among all of its exquisite buildings one stands out.  The Torre Guinigi or Guinigi Tower in English towers over the city.

At the top of the 44.5 meter high tower is something of a surprise – a garden containing, of all things, oak trees.

High above the city this small wood has provided a haven of peace for centuries.

The tower was built in the fourteenth century when there were over 250 in the city. Although that number has, over the centuries, dramatically decreased, this one has survived.  It was built by the Guinigi, then the most powerful and influential family in the city. The tower represented the prestige of the family and was the largest in the city even when the economic boom of the late fourteenth century meant that towers were springing up all over Lucca.

21 January 2018

The Monumental Cemetery of Staglieno

One of the largest cemeteries in Europe, the Cimitero monumentale di Staglieno in Genoa, Italy covers more than a square kilometer.  It opened in 1851 and since then has gained a reputation for its monuments to those buried there. And what monuments they are.  It is a place for contemplation, for reflection on human frailty and the short-lived nature of our time on earth. Today we will let the pictures speak for themselves...

28 August 2016

The Floating Piers Hyperlapse


Take a Hyperlapse trip down The Floating Piers Art Installation on Lake Iseo, Italy by artist Christo and Jeanne-Claude. Over 8,900 still images, photographed every second for nearly 2 miles, were combined together to create this moving piece of art. Film produced by Dorian Iriabrren owner of Motion Filmworks.  However, don’t rush off to Lake Iseo – the installation has now finished its run and you will need a boat instead!

23 January 2013

Blue and Joy – The Superficial Essence of a Deep Appearance

You may remember in May that we featured the work of Blue and Joy – once seen not forgotten.  Their new exhibition is currently underway at the Artra Gallery in Milan, Italy. They have been kind enough to give us permission to share these pictures with you, just in case Milan is a little too far for a trip for you at short notice.

Altogether, the installation is made up of four million pills.  A million of them make up enormous mosaics on the wall and the other three million (or so, did they count them all?) make up the floor’s multi-colored carpet. Blue and Joy is the creation of a duo of Italian born Berlin based artists. Fabio La Fauci and Daniele Sigalot joined forces at the end of 2005 and since then have been making something of a name for their immense media project.

31 December 2012

Rita Levi-Montalcini Dies at 103

April 22 2013 would have seen the one hundred and fourth birthday of a remarkable woman. Born in 1909 and the oldest living recipient of a Nobel award, she worked past her centenary and put her remarkable longevity down to her own discovery – NGF (Nerve Growth Factor).

So astonishing was her vitality beyond her hundredth year that many asked the question – did this woman have the secret of eternal life? On 30 December 2012 Levi-Montalcini departed this world so we know the answer to that particular question - but what times she had seen...and made. Here is a glimpse in to the life of one of the most astonishingly gifted people of her time, Rita Levi-Montalcini

As a Jewish European woman her own life took many dramatic turns in the times of Hitler and Mussolini - and beyond.

It was a life which, if depicted in a movie, would have many people incredulous that the makers would think they could get away with something quite so unbelievable.

24 September 2012

Concordia – Research Station at the End of the World

These pictures could easily be publicity stills from a new science fiction blockbuster set on an ice bound planet circling a distant sun. It is, however, the Concordia Research Station which is located on the Antarctic Plateau in Antartcica – the largest desert in the world.  It is one of only three research stations on the plateau to operate permanently on a year round basis.

27 November 2011

Venezia


If you have never before been to Venice then watch this five minute film made by filmmaker FKY and you really needn’t bother! Seriously, this footage is some of the most evocative of the city I have ever seen – truly one of Europe’s pearls.  As well as seeing the areas where tourists flock you also get to feel a sense of the real Venice – one which sadly seems to be disappearing as the city’s permanent population declines.

As Arthur Symons, the British poet, once said - A realist, in Venice, would become a romantic by mere faithfulness to what he saw before him.  Having watched this gorgeous footage I can thoroughly agree with his sentiments!


The music, incidentally is On the Nature of Daylight by Max Richter.

26 November 2011

Isola San Giulio – Italy’s Fairy Tale Island

Isola San Giulio is like something out of a fairy tale. The island situated on Lake Orta in the Piedmont region of northwestern Italy is tiny – a mere 275 meters in length by 140 meters wide. A beautiful collection of lay and religious houses cram its tiny confines. It is so picturesque that it makes the jaw drop, almost in disbelief. It has an interesting story too.

Legend has it that St Guilio (or Julius of Novara in English) founded his one hundredth church here in the fourth century AD. It is just west of the charming village of Orta San Giulio (also named after Julius of Novara). The island was the lair of a giant serpent, which used the island as a launch pad to attack local villages. Yet St Guilio arrived and with his ability to command the waves he journeyed over the water on his cloak and banished the creature from the island.

Since then the island has always been connected with religion.  After St Giulio’s death a small chapel was erected on the island in the fifth century (this was after the Christian religion was decriminalized by the powers that be in Rome and persecution had ended). Archeology has revealed a much bigger church there in the sixth century.

A baptistery was also established in the middle of the island at about the same time. Yet in the nineteenth century a seminary was built there, erasing any record of its existence.  For the last three decades it has been a Benedictine monastery. There is an air of peace over the entire island, perhaps because of the presence of this contemplative institution.

Almost all who visit this miniature island are enthralled, but there is more to take pleasure in and admire here than stunning views and the appeal of an ancient Italian village. The church is a treasure house of art works covering a number of centuries. Plus the boat fare to the island is inexpensive.  Little wonder that many Italian couples choose this fairy tale destination to be the scene of their wedding.

17 October 2011

The Invisible Cities


Invisible Cities (Le città invisibili) was written by Italo Calvino in 1972 – a novel made up of prose poetry. It was a description of over 50 cities, given by Marco Polo to the aging Kubla Khan.  This striking animation by Mario Brioschi is inspired by that wonderful novel.

I think it encapsulated the novel very well.  As a result of its approach to the inventive potentialities of cities, Calvino’s work has been used by architects and artists to envisage how cities can be their secret folds, where the human imagination is not necessarily limited by the laws of physics or the limitations of modern urban theory.

It offers an alternative approach to thinking about cities, how they are formed and how they function.

23 December 2010

The Astonishing Art of Arcimboldo

Rudolf II - Holy Roman Emperor - Wikimedia
You meet them sometimes: people who just seem to have been born out of their time, somehow not quite at home or comfortable in the time period in which they find themselves. As far as his art is concerned, this is certainly the case with Giuseppe Arcimboldo (left).

You might, unless you know his work already, think that the above was created at some point in the twentieth century.


Reversible Head with Basket of Fruit, c 1590 - Wikimedia
Yet Arcimboldo was born in 1527. His conventional works have fallen in to oblivion but what survive are his masterful and imaginative portraits which are made from objects, such as fruit, flowers, fish, books and vegetables. These everyday items are arranged so that they become recognizable as something quite different.

Air, c 1566 - Wikimedia
Arcimboldo (sometimes spelled with an i at the end instead of the o) was born in to a family already steeped in the world of Renaissance art. His father was Biagio, known for his work on the Duomo in Rome. Arcimboldo would himself work at the Duomo in his early twenties and then later at the cathedrals of Monza and Como.

Fire, c 1566 - Wikimedia
It is believed that a great early influence in his life was that of his great uncle, Gianangelo, the Archbishop of Milan. It was at his house that the young artist met many scholars and artists who would help to lay the groundwork for the later defining moment in Arcimboldo’s own career – the switch from normal portraiture to something altogether more eccentric.

Earth, c 1566 - Wikimedia
It was also likely that Arcimboldo knew many of the host of German artists working at Milan Cathedral (and for the infamous Medicis) at the time. He would most likely have spoken their language as well as Italian – the boldo at the end of his name indicates a family origin somewhere in southern Germany.

Water, c 1566 - Wikimedia
He found royal patronage. In 1562 Ferdinand I, the Holy Roman Emperor requested his services as the court portraitist. Later in life he would perform the same duties for Maximilian II, King of Bohemia and later the Holy Roman Emperor.

Spring, 1573 - Wikimedia
By the time he left Milan he was already well known for his stranger work as well as for his more commercial efforts.  His close friend Paulo Morigia noted in his journal "This is a painter with a rare talent, who is also extremely knowledgeable in other disciplines; and having proved his worth both as an artist and as a bizarre painter, not only in his own country but also abroad, he has been given the highest praise, in that word of his fame has reached the Emperor's court in Germany".

Summer, 1573, Wikimedia
Yet the court portraits he would produce at the court of the Emperor are not what Arcimboldo is remembered for. His series of human heads made up from plant matter, sea creatures, roots and branches – fascinating and occasionally even a little disturbing. They were hugely well-liked at the time and were greatly admired by his generation as well as standing the test of time and remaining a source of captivation today.

Autumn, 1573 - Wikimedia
Little is known of the artist as a man and so that allows a debate to rage. Critics wonder whether or not these paintings of his were the result of the Renaissance attraction to brainteasers and challenges, nothing more than whimsical puzzles. At the same time they still wonder out loud whether or not he was stark staring mad.

Winter, 1573 - Wikimedia
Most people accept that Arcimboldo was most likely not deranged but catering (expensively so) for the tastes of his time. As well as a master artist then, this would also make him a very canny businessman. Riding the zeitgeist, he made himself a small fortune.

Flora, 1591 - Wikimedia
Arcimboldo retired to Italy after his service to the Hapsburgs and died in Milan in 1593 at the grand old age (at least at that time) of 66. The Register of Milan, the place of his death, records that he died from the retention of urine and kidney stones, which does not sound like a terribly pleasant way to shake off one’s mortal coil. However, the Register takes pains to point out that he did not die from the plague – which was possibly worse.

The Librarian, 1570 - Wikimedia
At his death his various artistic successes were feted by his contemporaries. Yet his reputation arose to new heights in the twentieth century when he was rediscovered by and influenced artists such as Dali, Fukuda and Ocampo.

The Greengrocer - WIkimedia

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The most recent homage paid to Arcimboldo by a contemporary artist can be found in the National Gallery of Art in Washington DC.  It is by Philip Haas and it is inspired by Arcimboldo's Winter, which you can see above.

You can see more of Haas' fibre glass sculpture here.