While crowds of tourists fill Venice, Florence and Rome, Bologna remains relatively quiet in comparison. This medieval university town is charming, historic and fun to explore… and you'll find Bologna's local cuisine is light-years away from the American deli meat bearing the city's name.
Restaurants in Bologna
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Pallavicini Palace was built on the tradition of the Bolognese Fifteenth century, when under the Bentivoglio dominion it belonged to the Sala family (1493) then in time was owned by the Volta, the Marsili and the Isolani counts, who in 1680 renovated it “in the senatorial architecture” (cf. Giudicini). They entrusted, the architect, Paolo Canali with the task, who projected and built the monumental staircase and the hall with a lantern shape ceiling, the highest of the city together with the one in Ranuzzi Palace, whereas in 1690 the halls were embellished with Giovanni Antonio Burrini’s paintings.
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Belloni Palace hosts art and culture exhibitions of art with a format that makes the visitor the protagonist of the visit, stimulating interaction and participation in all the way. From 24 November 2017 to 6 May 2018, Palazzo Belloni hosts the exhibition "The WALL". The exhibition depicts the concept of the wall: from symbol of incommunicability and exclusion to its use as a cultural operation that opens to multiple perspectives. Each of these dimensions is explored through interactive installations that have been specially created for the exhibition and with themed artwork by artists of different ages, from Piranesi to Arnaldo Pomodoro, from Fontana to Christo, and from Pink Floyd to the young Japanese artist Hitomi Sato. The journey of exploration goes around and inside the wall, on a historical itinerary from the walls of Jericho to the Berlin Wall, and to the walls of the modern day depicted in the exhibition. The exhibition is curated by con-fine Art.
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