Pop culture and war. The Palestinian struggle.
Caterina Panetta Caterina Panetta

Pop culture and war. The Palestinian struggle.

I traveled to Israel some years ago and saw Banksy’s murals in Bethlehem, on the Israeli-West Bank barrier. Magnificent murals that were screaming the decades-old pain of Palestinians. The paintings reminded me of Belfast in the 1990s. Scenes of bomb explosions, arrests, weapons, and the sorrow that follows loss were made even more striking by vibrant colors. A visual language as old as Warhol’s Campbell’s Soup Cans evolved to express Palestinians’ hate towards injustice.

Read More
The appearance of choral music in the churches: a Roman story.
Caterina Panetta Caterina Panetta

The appearance of choral music in the churches: a Roman story.

Humans sing in groups since they started gathering around the fire at night, chasing away obscure enemies back in the woods. That is, since the beginning of time. Choirs accompany rituals and festivals as they used to thousands of years ago. Singing is essential in every culture. The chorus is found in Greek theater, the Iliad, the synagogues of ancient Israel, and among the Pygmies, whose highest cultural exhibition it represents.

Read More
About art and wine: two worlds that meet.
Caterina Panetta Caterina Panetta

About art and wine: two worlds that meet.

In Italy, there are around 144 native, often ancient grape varieties from which countless good and excellent wines are made, either purely varietal or by blending several types of grapes (Bordeaux style). As early as the Greek and Roman age, wine was consumed at Bacchanalia, with the result that the consequent euphoria led men and women to uncontrolled sexual conduct and cruel ritual murders for several days. Those rites celebrated Dionysus, the god of lifeblood, the primordial element of the cosmos, the frenetic current of life that pervades everything. Dionysus embodies the primordial, instinctive spark that is present in every living being.

Read More
Diocletian’s Baths: The Museum of Rescued Art
Caterina Panetta Caterina Panetta

Diocletian’s Baths: The Museum of Rescued Art

In a 19th century neighborhood, just a few steps away from Piazza della Repubblica and Michelangelo's Church of S. Maria degli Angeli, a new section of the National Roman Museum has opened on June 15, 2022, called Museo dell Arte Salvata (Museum of Rescued Art). The new museum is located inside an ancient Roman hall belonging to the Baths of Diocletian; an exhibition of art objects and archaeological findings that were retrieved and returned to the Italian State by the Carabinieri Unit for the Art & Heritage Protection after they had been looted and taken out of the country in the past years.

Read More