Residenza San Marco

Residenza San Marco Residenza San Marco: Luxury Signature Apartments for Your Awesome Holiday Experience, Venice, Italy!

14/10/2022

The Dogs of Venice

The Venice Redentore 2018 awaits you on Saturday 14th and Sunday July 15th… Events, parties and fireworks to celebrate t...
07/07/2018

The Venice Redentore 2018 awaits you on Saturday 14th and Sunday July 15th… Events, parties and fireworks to celebrate the most anticipated weekend of the year!

Following a fascinating tradition that combines more than 400 years of history and folklore, the date of the feast of the Redeemer takes place on the third weekend of July. Make a note of the Redentore Venice dates and hurry to book your stay in the Venice lagoon: the Redentore Festival 2018 promises like every year to be one of the most acclaimed events of the Venetian calendar!

Exclusive Redentore boat parties or in the elegant buildings of the historic centre enliven the night of the Redeemer’s feast in Venice Italy: dances and celebrations of all kinds will continue until dawn, pausing only around 11.30pm to watch the incredible Venice Redentore fireworks: a display of 40 minutes of pure magic that enchants the entire world and represents the most awaited event of the entire weekend! The Redentore fireworks festival 2018 will light up the entire city with cascades of coloured lights, reflections on the water and the play of shadows and lights that stand out on the facades of buildings and famous monuments.

April 25 – Festa di San Marco and the Boccolo. April 25 is a busy day on the Venetian calendar.Saint Mark, Venice's patr...
25/04/2018

April 25 – Festa di San Marco and the Boccolo. April 25 is a busy day on the Venetian calendar.

Saint Mark, Venice's patron saint, is feted on this day with a gondoliers' regatta, with commemorations of the saint at Saint Mark's Basilica, and festivities in Saint Mark's Square. Tradition also holds that the Saint Mark's Day is the day on which men give their wives or girlfriends the "bocolo," the bloom of the red rose. (It is not uncommon for Venetian boys to give a single rosebud to their mothers on April 25.). Sometimes a giant red rose is formed by humans wearing red (or green for the stem) in Saint Mark's Square, which is very beautiful when viewed from above.

‘THE WORLD THAT WAS NOT THERE. PRE-COLUMBIAN ART IN THE LIGABUE COLLECTION’ AT PALAZZO LOREDANThe art exhibition that ha...
20/03/2018

‘THE WORLD THAT WAS NOT THERE. PRE-COLUMBIAN ART IN THE LIGABUE COLLECTION’ AT PALAZZO LOREDAN
The art exhibition that has already enchanted Florence, Rovereto and Naples lands in Venice

From 12 January 2018 to 30 June 2018
The exhibition

A visit to 'The world that was not there' will unveil the world of pre-Columbian civilizations to you. These fascinating cultures are still poorly understood. They were crushed and subjugated for years by the Conquistadores who, attracted only by their treasures, were responsible for massacres and looting without equal. Centuries passed after the discovery of America before the Western world became aware of the grandeur of the cultures and art of this new world.

According to the anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss, the discovery of America is perhaps the most important event in the history of mankind, an epoch-making event that undermined the way the world was perceived at the end of the fifteenth century. Christopher Columbus, however, thought he had landed on the islands off the coast of Japan ... It was Amerigo Vespucci who realized a Mundus Novus had been discovered, which was dubbed precisely 'America' after his name. A few decades after the landing of Columbus, the Aztecs and Inca were crushed with weapons and subjected to slavery whilst the Taino suffered complete annihilation... Moreover, the quest for gold - which led Spaniards and adventurers to the Andes, in search of the legendary El Dorado - and the diseases brought by the Europeans contributed to the end of these very ancient civilizations.

As part of the Ligabue collection exhibition in 2018 you will admire the rare stone masks of Teotihuacan - the first real city in central Mexico and one of the largest in all of Mesoamerica; Mayan vases of the classical era that, rich in inscriptions and decorations, offer precious testimonies on the civilization and writing of these cultures; the anthropomorphic statues of the Olmeca culture that greatly fascinated painters like Diego Rivera, Frida Kahlo and several surrealists; the enigmatic and mysterious Mezcala sculptures that were collected by André Breton, Paul Eluard and the sculptor Henry Moore; polychrome ceramic hollow statues of the Chupicuaro culture, which reached its apex between 400 and 100 BC .; cinerary urns of the Zapoteca culture with often anthropomorphic effigies from 200 BC at 200 AD; splendid Aztec sculptures, among which the most valuable examples are the Ecuadorian Venuses of Valdivia, and further Inca objects, fabrics and vases of Nazca, artefacts of the Moche culture and excellent objects in gold.

The pre Columbian art exhibition in Venice will offer visitors much food for thought, to help them capture the different aspects of the life and the cultures of Mesoamerica, and to understand how our world is still indebted to these civilizations... It suffices to consider that foods like cocoa, tomatoes and potatoes appeared on our tables after the discovery of America, thanks to the mediation of the kitchens of the Spanish Court; football itself, a tradition deeply rooted in the culture and ritual of these civilizations, as can be seen from the works and illustrations on display, has come to Europe from the New World. A special mention should be given to sweetcorn. Imported into Venice from Spain - according to Ramusio its cultivation in the Polesine area dates back to 1554 – sweetcorn became the main ingredient of polenta, which was cooked without using the techniques of the native Americans causing the endemic spread of pellagra.

While distancing itself from the race to the new continent, Venice managed to conquer those distant lands thanks to the power of its own collective imagination. In many chronicles of the time many cities built on water were compared or even named with references to Venice, such as the Aztec capital of Tenochtitlan, often called 'another Venice'. The leading role of Venetian printers - the number of texts on the Americas published in the sixteenth century by Venice was surpassed only by Paris - allowed the Serenissima to become one of the driving forces of the so-called 'literary discovery' of the Americas, so much so that some Venetian texts are still considered the most ancient sources on the New World, as the original texts have been lost.

Carnevale begins with some special events commemorating the Carnevales of the past. One of them is a local favorite, the...
28/01/2018

Carnevale begins with some special events commemorating the Carnevales of the past. One of them is a local favorite, the "Festa delle Marie."

As far back as the 10th century, the city of Venice consecrated all marriages including those of 12 young humble Venetian girls, on February 2, the day of the Purification of Mary. These 12 young women were given sumptuous dresses and adorned in beautiful jewels. In 973, pirates supposedly abducted these 12 girls and their jewels. They were rescued along with their jewels. The Festa della Marie originated to commemorate this event. In those days, 12 poor local girls were selected, dressed in finery by the Venetian aristocrats, and traveled in a procession around the city from church to church. People went to the churches to admire the girls. City officials, angered by this, quickly replaced the girls with wooden effigies. In turn, the people, angry that the real girls weren’t paraded anymore, took to throwing vegetables at the wooden statues. In 1379 the whole thing was abolished.

Nowadays, in the weeks leading to Carnevale, 12 local young women are selected through a series of interviews to portray the 12 Marias. The winners of this competition are revealed in the newspaper just prior to the start of Carnevale, and the girls make their first public appearance at the Festa della Marie the first official event of the season
The Festa delle Marie, always held on the first day of Carnevale and is a walking parade which begins at San Pietro di Castello consisting of groups historical societies from surrounding cities all dressed in period costume, along with the twelve Marias. The Marias, dressed in beautiful gowns and jewels, are born by twelve teams of litter bearers. The parade proceeds up Via Garibaldi, along the Riva degli Schiavoni and ends in St. Mark’s square where the Marie’s are presented to the Doge and the awaiting public.

The twelve Marias make public appearances at masked balls and public events throughout the Carnevale season. During this time votes are submitted to select the winning “Maria”. At the end of Carnevale, the winner is announced. This lucky young woman will be “the Angel” at the next year’s Flight of the Angel, where she will “fly” on a cable between the top of the Campanile in St. Mark’s square down to a stage at the opposite end of the square. The Flight of the Angel takes place on the second day of Carnevale.

We are becoming famous!
16/11/2017

We are becoming famous
!

Feast your eyes on these dreamy vacation rentals. These lavish houses, located around the world, will offer a one-of-a-kind getaway great for groups.

Indirizzo

Calle Gregolina
Venice
30124

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