The Province of Palermo (Italian: provincia di Palermo; Sicilian: pruvincia di Palermu) was a province in the autonomous region of Sicily, a major island in Southern Italy. Its capital was the city of Palermo. On August 4, 2015, it was replaced by the Metropolitan City of Palermo.
Restaurants in Province of Palermo
5.0 based on 113 reviews
Beautiful architectural detail - definitely worth taking a walk around the back of the cathedral to see this.
5.0 based on 28 reviews
5.0 based on 36 reviews
Putia was a small sicilian shop for the sale of goods, including food, or a place used as an handicraft workshop. Today Putia is a cultural and commercial project, which aims to weave a small network of local artisan producers, enhancing the specifity and amplifying the commercial potential, so as to supply the tourism industry with quality merchandise and 0 km.
5.0 based on 4 reviews
RizzutoGallery is a contemporary art gallery based in Palermo, founded in 2013 from an idea of Giovanni Rizzuto and Eva Oliveri. Focused on the most contemporary expressions of visual arts, the gallery develops projects involving and supporting artists whose research - regardless of the artistic media - demonstrates predisposition to experimentation and research.
4.5 based on 273 reviews
Historic building of the fifteenth century, with frescoes and furnishings of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. It displays around 300 works of art from the 12th to the 19th century in 12 rooms. 11 rooms belong to "Le Stanze dei Vescovi", the noble floor of the Archbishop's Palace, with the Alcova of Cardinal Gravina and the Sala Borremans entirely freshly painted in 1733.
4.0 based on 89 reviews
This neo-Gothic castle dating from 1488 houses the Regional gallery of Sicily, the largest museum in Palermo exclusively devoted to art, whose majority of work dates from the medieval and Renaissance periods through the eighteenth century.
4.0 based on 145 reviews
Palermo's Modern Art Gallery is hosted by the exquisite Palazzo Bonet, exhibiting artworks from the 19th and 20th Century. The exhibition is well organized and starts in opera style with the dramatic painting I Vespri Siciliani by Erulio Eroli. It's a good opportunity to admire masterpieces from various modern art currents that alternated in Italy at the beginig of 20th Century, including Futurismo, Novecento, Arte Povera and Metaphisical Art among others. There's also a hall dedicated to Sicilian Novecento, for a more local flavor. The gran-finale is ensured by masterpieces signed by Guttuso, Pippo Rizzo and Sironi. The only downside during my visit was the lighting in the gallery, which was very poor in some of the halls, ironically in the ones displaying the bright Lojocano's landscapes.
The Adalberto Catanzaro artecontemporanea gallery is an exhibition space that is born in the eighteenth century Villa Casaurro then moved into a building in the heart of the old town of Bagheria; the same land that gave birth to Renato Guttuso, Giuseppe Tornatore, Ignazio Buttitta and Ferdinando Scianna. The exhibition space was founded in 2014 by the passion for contemporary art of its founder and current artistic director, Adalberto Catanzaro which from the beginning was aimed to consolidate the image of the latter, dedicated to the promotion of cultural exhibitions with artists renowned for engaging an audience of more and more demanding users. Through numerous meetings, institutional exhibitions, fairs, conferences, one can understand the energy and desire to succeed the latter distinguished by dynamism, quality, professionalism, elegance and continuous research of important known artists, who made art history.
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