Culture in dictatorial regimes: between propaganda and free art
Sala della Musica "M. Tremaglia" - Teatro DonizettiProject around the play King Lear died in Moscow Dictatorships often use different artistic languages (Cinema, Visual Art and Music) in their subjugation of populations, instrumentalizing them for their own propaganda. The play King Lear is Dead in Moscow shows how dictatorial regimes, in this case Stalin's, fear cultural freedom, which is why the protagonists of Moscow's Jewish theater were killed, ending an experience recognized throughout Europe. In the meetings, curated by experts in the individual fields, a reflection on artistic languages during dictatorships will be proposed with the aim of offering historical knowledge, but also of giving tools for decoding and reading about languages and the messages they can convey. Project realized in collaboration with ISREC - Istituto Bergamasco per la Storia della Resistenza e Dell'Età Contemporanea. Wednesday, December 4, 2024, 6 p.m. Sala della Musica "M. Tremaglia" - Donizetti Theater Art in the service of the regime. The regime in the service of art Continuity and Discontinuity of Cinema between Fascist Propaganda and the Early Post-War Period curated by Isrec – speakers Luciana Bramati (Isrec) and Giorgio Giovanetti (Ferruccio Parri National Institute). During the meeting, we will analyze how cinema, from being the main tool for building consensus for the regime, becomes a vehicle for constructing the memory of the struggle for freedom. The cases of some directors will help to develop the theme. Book your seat here Wednesday, Dec. 11, 2024, 6 p.m. Music Room "M. Tremaglia" - Donizetti Theater On the Notes of a Song The cases of the Song of the Deportees, Frida Misul's Sad Songs and Whistles the Wind by Isrec - speakers Elisabetta Ruffini and Angelo Bendotti (Isrec) Inside the violence of a lager, facing the fascist violence that hunts the partisans in the mountains, singing together becomes a moment to become aware of the experience one is living by finding the horizon to think about tomorrow. The speakers will present some cases of songs that became an expression of the collective and exceptional dimension of the camp and the partisan struggle. Book your seat here Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2024, 6 p.m. Sala della Musica "M. Tremaglia" - Donizetti Theater Art and Regime The Power of Aesthetics curated by Maria Grazia Recanati (Politecnico delle Arti di Bergamo - Accademia Carrara di Belle Arti) Art has always had relations with power. In the sense of compromise, dissent, collaboration. The 20th century has recorded two historically significant episodes in particular: the two totalitarian regimes of Nazi Germany and the communist Soviet Union. What were the attitudes of artists toward these regimes as they occurred? How did the two regimes react to the new artistic research that the historical avant-gardes were presenting? Through some emblematic cases, we will address the oh-so-sensitive topic of the relationship between art and the regime, which is intended to condition human consciousness in an overall and total way. Book your seat here All meetings are free admission by reservation on EventBrite (reservations open beginning November 18, 2024)
NOMADI Sessanta – Live Tour 2024
Teatro DonizettiIN 2023 NOMADS CELEBRATE 60 YEARS OF MUSIC Nomadi, celebrating 60 years of music, concert organized by Vincenzo Berti and Gianluca Bonanno for Ventidieci. It is the longest-lived band in Italy and before them, in the world, only the Rolling Stones. It was the early 1960s when between Modena and Reggio Emilia Beppe Carletti and Augusto Daolio decided to form their own band. The debut takes place in 1963. The name NOMADI was chosen somewhat by chance but it characterized their spirit: the stages of their endless tours touch from small towns to the big stages of major Italian cities without distinction. To date, the Emilian group discographically has 52 works, including studio records, live albums and collections for a total of more than 15,000,000 copies sold. There are over a hundred fan clubs scattered throughout Italy and even more recognized Cover Bands. Theirs is a transgenerational audience. Music has always been combined with humanitarian commitment and has seen Nomadi as promoters of many solidarity initiatives in Italy and around the world.