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Archive for August 22nd, 2008

Art of Italy: Prehistory and Italic Art

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Italy holds within its borders an immense artistic heritage, a huge museum that over the centuries has increasingly enriched thanks to the great civilizations and the genius of artists who today are celebrated worldwide.

A travel to Italy offers the chance to start exploring the countless number of monuments and works preserved both in large art cities such as Rome, Florence and Venice as in each of the other cities of the peninsula: every region of Italy is able to offer pleasant surprises to their visitors, with marvels in all the various fields where it can be divided art (architecture, sculpture, painting but also music, literature and filming).

From prehistoric times until today, Italy has always been one of the most active areas with regard to culture and art. Following a historic route you can start from prehistoric Italian art (up to the Bronze Age) and what is called Italic Art, produced by the many civilizations that lived in the Italian peninsula during the period proto-historic, namely between the beginning of Iron Age (around the twelfth century BC) and the complete domination of Rome (first century BC), these must be added the testimonies of Magna Graecia and the particular case represented by Etruscan art.

The traces of prehistoric art in Italy are concentrated in two main areas: the Po Valley, in contact with the northern Europe and Danube area, and the central-southern area overlooking the Mediterranean. Admirable are the examples of rock art of civilization Camuna (in the Val Camonica in Lombardy), terracotta vases of civilization Villanovian (from Villanova near Bologna), elegant ornaments on metal pots of civilization Atesina (from Este in the province of Padua ).

Among the most typical examples of Italic art there are the magnificent limestone statues and tombstones produced by populations allocated along the coasts of the Adriatic Sea (such as Piceni and Daunians), as the “warrior of Capestrano” (preserved in the National Archaeological Museum of Abruzzo, Chieti) or “stele of Siponto” (in northern Puglia).