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  • Art & Culture

    Chelsea Art Museum. The First Terna Prize Honors Contemporary Italian Artists

    Terna, Italy’s major Energy Transmission Operator and primary owner of the Italian National High-Voltage Electricity Transmission Grid, and the Chelsea Art Museum announced an exhibition of artwork by Italian artists that were awarded the first Terna Prize for Contemporary Art.  Transmitting Energy: A Contemporary Metaphor - Winners of the Terna Prize for Contemporary Art, on display at the Chelsea Art Museum June 25th – July 12th, 2009, features the 16 winning works united in the Prize’s theme of connectivity but diverse in subject and media.  

    The goal of the Terna Prize is to open new avenues of discourse between culture and commerce, and to provide artists with a platform from which to be recognized by the global arts community.  The Prize winners include artists of all ages, some internationally renowned and others relatively still unknown.  The works, including nine photographs, three paintings and four mixed media works, were first exhibited at the Palazzo delle Esposizioni, Rome’s largest interdisciplinary exhibition venue, in November 2008.

    In establishing the Prize, Terna worked closely with independent curator and contemporary art critic Gianluca Marziani and contemporary art advisor and curator Francesco Cascino.  “The Terna Prize is not only a contest, but a cultural project that encourages dialogue and serves as a catalyst for the transmission of values among generations,” said Terna Prize Curator Gianluca Marziani.  “Exhibiting these works in New York enables us to begin to internationalize the Prize and to share with new audiences the many ways in which this award connects artists through their energy and experiences.”

    "Terna has created a unique platform through which a highly talented generation of contemporary Italian artists can be appreciated on an international scale,” said Sam Bardaouil, Chelsea Art Museum curator. “The quality and diversity is fascinating and we are delighted to play a role in introducing these artists to the New York arts community."
    “The first Terna Prize winners reveal a fascinating range of work being produced in Italy today,” said Julián Zugazagoitia, Terna Prize jury member and Director of El Museo del Barrio in New York.  “The exhibition is a wonderful opportunity to see these artists in the U.S., many for the first time.”
    The Terna Prize for Contemporary Art was awarded in three categories: Terawatt, for established

    artists invited to participate, and Gigawatt and Megawatt, for emerging artists under and over the age of 35, respectively.  One artist was selected as the first prize winner in each category; six additional artists were recognized and received monetary awards in the Gigawatt and Megawatt categories. The winning artists were selected by a jury of art professionals and chosen from a shortlist of 124 nominations from a total of more than 3,000 entries.  The Terawatt winner received €100,000 Euros (approximately $130,000 U.S.) and, in a joint agreement with Terna, the full prize will be donated in the artist’s name to the MAXXI, the future Italian Museum of the Arts of the 21st Century.  (When the MAXXI opens in Rome in November 2009, it will be the largest contemporary art museum in Europe, dedicated to collecting, preserving, studying and presenting important examples of 21st century art and architecture.) Also, one Online Award winner was chosen by the public from the entire pool of entries via the Terna Prize website and received a monetary award.  All winning artworks in the Gigawatt, Megawatt and Online Award categories will be purchased by Terna and will become part of the Company’s contemporary art collection. 

    Highlights of Transmitting Energy include Terawatt Award winner Luigi Ontani (b. 1943) for Electricthrone, a large lenticular print comically depicting the artist being shocked by an electric chair; Gigawatt Award winner Francesco Arena (b. 1978) for Split Panel with Nietzsche’s Head, a sheetrock panel containing a bust of Nietzsche peering out from within; and Megawatt Award winner Andrea Chiesi (b. 1966) for Kali Yuga 57, a graphic, oil-on-linen rendering of a derelict steel plant.  Other artists on view include Riccardo Albanese (b. 1977), Elena Baldelli (b. 1983), Gabriele Bonato (b. 1980), Gabriele Giugni (b. 1980), Giovanni Ozzola (b. 1982), Davide Eron Salvadei (b. 1973), Giovanni Albanese (b. 1955), Davide Bertocchi (b. 1969), Laura Cantrarella (b. 1972), Rocco Dubbini (b. 1969), Raffaela Mariniello (b. 1961), Antonio Riello (b. 1958), and Hôtel de la Lune (Gian Maria Tosatti, b. 1980 and Elisabetta Mancini, b. 1980), winner of the online-voted People’s Choice Award.

    TERNA AWARD JURY
    The Terna Prize Honorary Committee was chaired by the Italian Minister for Cultural Heritage and Activities, Sandro Bondi, and included Domenico De Masi, President of the Ravello Foundation; Massimiliano Fuksas, architect; Emma Marcegaglia, President of Confindustria, the Italian confederation of industries; and Fernanda Pivano, contemporary Italian art writer

    and essayist. The competing works were evaluated by a jury headed by Luigi Roth, Chairman, and Flavio Cattaneo, CEO of Terna, and including prominent representatives from the art and economic worlds: Julián Zugazagoitia, Director of El Museo del Barrio in New York; Alberto Alessi, of Alessi Design; Davide Blei, Director of Contemporanea-Associazione Collezionisti Milano; Silvia Evangelisti, Art Director of the Bologna Fair; Giovanni Giuliani, President of Macro Amici; Gianfranco Maraniello, Director of the MAMBO Museum in Bologna; Cristiana Perrella, Curator of the Contemporary Arts Programme of the British School in Rome; Thaddaeus Ropac, owner of art galleries in Paris and Salzburg; Paolo Sorrentino, movie director; and Beatrice Trussardi, President of the Nicola Trussardi Foundation.

    CATALOGUE
    A full color, bilingual catalogue is available at the Chelsea Art Museum and from Silvana Editoriale.

    ABOUT THE TERNA PRIZE FOR CONTEMPORARY ART
    The first Terna Prize for Contemporary Art was launched in July 2008 in Rome at the building site of the MAXXI, the future Italian Museum of the Arts of the 21st Century, a symbol of the need for innovation and of the new role that contemporary art has in Italian society. The competition was open to Italian artists and to artists of other nationalities working in Italy. In October 2008, Terna signed a three-year Memorandum of Understanding with the Italian Ministry of Cultural Heritage and Activities aimed at promoting and enhancing Italian contemporary art; it is the first agreement between a private company and the Ministry on contemporary art to create permanent value for all of Italian society. Terna’s main goal is to support contemporary art and artists and to establish a new relationship among companies, the art world and the government by interconnecting culture, economics, public and private entities.

    The second annual Terna Prize will be launched in Rome on May 26th, 2009 when the jury for the prize and other details about the next competition are announced.  To broaden the international scope of the award, the second competition will include a new, fourth category, which will be open to all artists of any nationality working in New York City. The Terawatt, Gigawatt and Megawatt categories will remain open to all artists of any nationality working in Italy. Terna plans to award two three-month residencies in New York for the Megawatt and Gigawatt First Prize winners and the sole winner in the New York category will receive a three-month residency at the American Academy in Rome.

    ABOUT TERNA
    Terna is Italy’s major Energy Transmission Operator and primary owner of the Italian National High-Voltage Electricity Transmission Grid.  The publicly held company operates more than 98 percent of the country’s electricity infrastructures, for a total of about 58 thousand kilometers of

    grid.  Terna is also responsible for the transmission and dispatching of energy throughout the entire country, and ensures the safe management and supply of power year-round.


    ABOUT THE CHELSEA ART MUSEUM
    Founded in 2002, the Chelsea Art Museum (CAM) seeks to present important, but relatively unexplored dimensions of 20th and 21st century art, showcasing primarily the work of artists that have been less exposed in the United States rather than in their home countries.  CAM is home to the Jean Miotte Foundation, which is dedicated to archiving, preserving, presenting and making available for exhibitions the work of abstract expressionist painter Jean Miotte (b. 1926) and to providing new scholarship and research on L’Informel (Informal Art). Through his painting, Miotte strove to build a bridge between cultures and transcend national boundaries to form a truly international artistic language. In keeping with this spirit, the museum’s exhibitions and public programs seek to reflect contemporary human experience across a broad spectrum of cultural, social, environmental and geographical contexts and demonstrate a commitment to creativity, community and cultural exchange. Rotating selections of Miotte’s work are shown on a regular basis, as are selections from the Museum’s permanent collection which includes rare holdings of works by artists such as Pol Bury, Mimmo Rotella, and J.P. Riopelle. Located in the heart of Chelsea’s gallery district and alongside the Hudson River Park, the Chelsea Art Museum is housed in a historic 19th-century warehouse that has been restored to incorporate contemporary style while preserving its original architecture.

    The Chelsea Art Museum
    556 West 22nd Street (at 11th Avenue), New York NY 10011

    Phone: 212.255.0719 
    Hours: Tue-Sat 11am-6pm, Thurs 11am-8pm

    Admission: $8 adults, $4 students and seniors,

    free for members and visitors 16 and under

  • NYC. Summer Fancy Food Show. Indulge in the Flavors of Italy

    New Yorkers get ready to taste the world! And Italy!  The country's largest specialty food and beverage event, the NYC Summer Fancy Food, will take place at the Javits Convention Center (655 W 34th St, New York ) on June 28-30. In its 55th edition, this year’s Summer show will cover a space of approx. 330,000 square feet and will feature more than 2,400 exhibitors coming from 75 countries. Around 24,000 attendees are expected including importers, cooking schools, consulates, press representatives, food experts, distributors, producers, brokers, restaurants, caterers, and hotel restaurant representatives.

    The Italian presence at the show, coordinated by the Italian Trade Commission, will feature over 250 exhibiting companies – between them representing over 30 Italian regions, export consortia, and Italian Chambers of Commerce – in an area measuring 24,100 square feet. In particular, a delegation from Regione Calabria, will introduce to the

    American and foreign audience the extraordinary and ancient culinary traditions of its territories, also offering food and wine degustation.

    As in the past, Italian participation at the show will be higher, in both dimension and in number of participants, than any other official international presence. Italy’s attendance will serve two

    purposes: to consolidate those positions on the local market gained by Italy’s most internationally competitive products, and to expand the range of Italian-made products in an ever more qualified and diversified a manner. The range of products presented by the Italian exhibitors will be wide and varied, offering a truly panoramic taste of the best in Italian food and wine production.

    Ranking among the top five in exports to the U.S., Italian food and beverage producers continue to benefit from a number of culinary trends, including greater demand for authenticity, quality, and health benefits. U.S. retail sales of gourmet, specialty and premium foods and beverages are growing at much faster rates than those of the overall food and beverage industry, according to New York-based industry research firm Packaged Facts. Sales of Italian foods in particular are on the rise because of the continued reversal of diets in favor of healthy, natural, Mediterranean eating. “Great Italian cooking relies heavily on the use of authentic Italian ingredients, and the Fancy Food Show is the best opportunity to find typical products from the many regions of Italy,” says Chef Cesare Casella, Dean of The Italian Culinary Academy and chef of Salumeria Rosi in Upper West Side. “Classics may ebb and flow, but they never go out of style.”

    Italian vendors will present a wide spectrum of products—from traditional favorites such as olive oil, prosciutto, pasta, cheese, coffee and wine,  to  innovative and interesting products like  organic  honey and jams, chocolates and candies, juices and sodas,  preserved  vegetables and spreads, and countless more. 

    Aniello Musella, Trade Commissioner and Executive Director for the USA, explains that “Italian producers are  proudest when asked to present the richness of their culture and traditions in connection with the best food and wine Italy has to offer.  The Fancy Food show does just that: it allows the companies to showcase Italy's climate, geography, territories and history from North to South, with a taste of the distinct regional delicacies. Today's world needs what Italy brings to the table in its unique way and with its unique mark ‘Made in Italy’". 

    The Italian Trade Commission organized for the occasion two educational seminars.

     
    The first one (June 28, 4:30- 6pm  - Jacob Javits Convention Center, New York, Room 1E03)
    takes the name of “IL MADE IN ITALY A TAVOLA: INGREDIENTI SALUTARI, QUALITA' DEL CIBO E TUTELA GIURIDICA DEI PRODOTTI TIPICI NEGLI USA"

    (Made in Italy: healthy ingredients, quality of food, and juridical protection of Italian traditional products in the US). The seminary is divided into two sessions: in the first one Dr. Katherine McManus - Director of Nutrition Dept., Brigham Hospital, Boston – will talk about the healthy aspects of Mediterranean diet and Italian organic products; the second one, organized by the Italian Intellectual Property Rights Desk in New York, is dedicated to Italian importers in the US. Members of Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe, LLP Law Office will talk about the juridical protection of Italian food products in the US .

     The second seminar (June 29, 4:30pm - Jacob Javits Convention Center, New York, Room 2D08), titled “WHY IS ITALIAN FOOD THE BEST DURING ECONOMIC HARD TIMES?”, will be presented by Fred Plotkin, author of the best seller “Italy for the Gourmet Traveler”. The renowned Italian culinary expert writes for the New York Times, and for the trade journals "Gourmet" and "Bon Appetit",

    For further information, visit the official website of the Italian Trade Commission

     

  • Dining in & out: Articles & Reviews

    NYC. Summer Fancy Food Show. Indulge in the Flavors of Italy

    New Yorkers get ready to taste the world! And Italy!  The country's largest specialty food and beverage event, the NYC Summer Fancy Food, will take place at the Javits Convention Center (655 W 34th St, New York ) on June 28-30. In its 55th edition, this year’s Summer show will cover a space of approx. 330,000 square feet and will feature more than 2,400 exhibitors coming from 75 countries. Around 24,000 attendees are expected including importers, cooking schools, consulates, press representatives, food experts, distributors, producers, brokers, restaurants, caterers, and hotel restaurant representatives.

    The Italian presence at the show, coordinated by the Italian Trade Commission, will feature over 250 exhibiting companies – between them representing over 30 Italian regions, export consortia, and Italian Chambers of Commerce – in an area measuring 24,100 square feet. In particular, a delegation from Regione Calabria, will introduce to the

    American and foreign audience the extraordinary and ancient culinary traditions of its territories, also offering food and wine degustation.

    As in the past, Italian participation at the show will be higher, in both dimension and in number of participants, than any other official international presence. Italy’s attendance will serve two

    purposes: to consolidate those positions on the local market gained by Italy’s most internationally competitive products, and to expand the range of Italian-made products in an ever more qualified and diversified a manner. The range of products presented by the Italian exhibitors will be wide and varied, offering a truly panoramic taste of the best in Italian food and wine production.

    Ranking among the top five in exports to the U.S., Italian food and beverage producers continue to benefit from a number of culinary trends, including greater demand for authenticity, quality, and health benefits. U.S. retail sales of gourmet, specialty and premium foods and beverages are growing at much faster rates than those of the overall food and beverage industry, according to New York-based industry research firm Packaged Facts. Sales of Italian foods in particular are on the rise because of the continued reversal of diets in favor of healthy, natural, Mediterranean eating. “Great Italian cooking relies heavily on the use of authentic Italian ingredients, and the Fancy Food Show is the best opportunity to find typical products from the many regions of Italy,” says Chef Cesare Casella, Dean of The Italian Culinary Academy and chef of Salumeria Rosi in Upper West Side. “Classics may ebb and flow, but they never go out of style.”

    Italian vendors will present a wide spectrum of products—from traditional favorites such as olive oil, prosciutto, pasta, cheese, coffee and wine,  to  innovative and interesting products like  organic  honey and jams, chocolates and candies, juices and sodas,  preserved  vegetables and spreads, and countless more. 

    Aniello Musella, Trade Commissioner and Executive Director for the USA, explains that “Italian producers are  proudest when asked to present the richness of their culture and traditions in connection with the best food and wine Italy has to offer.  The Fancy Food show does just that: it allows the companies to showcase Italy's climate, geography, territories and history from North to South, with a taste of the distinct regional delicacies. Today's world needs what Italy brings to the table in its unique way and with its unique mark ‘Made in Italy’". 

    The Italian Trade Commission organized for the occasion two educational seminars.

     
    The first one (June 28, 4:30- 6pm  - Jacob Javits Convention Center, New York, Room 1E03)
    takes the name of “IL MADE IN ITALY A TAVOLA: INGREDIENTI SALUTARI, QUALITA' DEL CIBO E TUTELA GIURIDICA DEI PRODOTTI TIPICI NEGLI USA"

    (Made in Italy: healthy ingredients, quality of food, and juridical protection of Italian traditional products in the US). The seminary is divided into two sessions: in the first one Dr. Katherine McManus - Director of Nutrition Dept., Brigham Hospital, Boston – will talk about the healthy aspects of Mediterranean diet and Italian organic products; the second one, organized by the Italian Intellectual Property Rights Desk in New York, is dedicated to Italian importers in the US. Members of Orrick, Herrington & Sutcliffe, LLP Law Office will talk about the juridical protection of Italian food products in the US .

     The second seminar (June 29, 4:30pm - Jacob Javits Convention Center, New York, Room 2D08), titled “WHY IS ITALIAN FOOD THE BEST DURING ECONOMIC HARD TIMES?”, will be presented by Fred Plotkin, author of the best seller “Italy for the Gourmet Traveler”. The renowned Italian culinary expert writes for the New York Times, and for the trade journals "Gourmet" and "Bon Appetit",

    For further information, visit the official website of the Italian Trade Commission

     

  • Events: Reports

    Open Roads. The Best of Italian Cinema in New York


    Now at its ninth edition, Open Roads: New Italian Cinema has become one of the tent poles of the Walter Reade Theater calendar.  The past year has been especially rewarding, with the great international success of Silvio Soldini (Days and Clouds), Matteo Garrone (Gomorrah), and Paolo Sorrentino (Il Divo), all veterans of Film Society programs. In addition, Ferzan Ozpetek, an Open Roads regular with four films premiered here, received a wonderful mid-career retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art and returns to Open Roads this year with A Perfect Day.


    This year’s Open Roads adds a number of exciting new debut directors to this list. Marco Amenta offers a remarkable portrait of courage in The Sicilian Girl, while screenwriters turned directors Dino and Filippo Gentili present a genre-bending comedy/noir/thriller, I Am Alive. Among the returning Open Roads veterans are Edoardo Winspeare (Brave Men), Daniele Vicari (The Past is a Foreign Land), Mimmo Calopresti (The Germans’ Factory), and Gabriele Salvatores (As God Commands). Veteran director Pupi Avati offers his finest film in years, Giovanna’s Father, and, as a very special feature of this year's Open Roads slate, Italian rock star Jovanotti will introduce a tribute to the great Italian singer-songwriter Fabrizio De André, whose death from cancer in 1999 robbed the world of a great artist much too soon.

     

    Many of the directors and other special guests are aspected to attend the series including: Marco Amenta (director, The Sicilian Girl), Donatella Finocchiaro (actress, Brave Men), Silvio Orlando (actor, Giovanna’s Father), Dino Gentili (director, I Am Alive), Maria Sole Tognazzi (director, The Man Who Loves), Filippo Timi (actor, As God Commands), Ursula Ferrara (director, Animated Passions), Teresa Marchesi (director, Effedia), and Sandra Petraglia (writer, A Perfect Day).

    -----

    From Lincon Center and  Walter Reade Theater website

    Open Roads: New Italian Cinema

    June 4 – 11, 2009


    Open Roads Series Pass: $40 public/$30 Film Society members. Admits one person to five titles in the series, except the Opening Night screening, on Thu June 4 at 7pm, of Brave Men. Purchase in person only at the Walter Reade Theater box office (cash only); may not be combined with any other ticket offer. Individual screening tickets and series passes subject to availability.


    We expect many of the directors, actors and other special guests to attend the series. For film descriptions click on the pictures. To purchase tickets online click on the SHOWTIME under Buy Tickets .
     

    Admission:

    $11 public

    $8 seniors (62+)

    $7 Film Society members, students (with ID) and children (6-12, accompanied by an adult)

    Online service charge: $1.25 per ticket ordered. Cash only at the box office.

    Click for details


    Brave Men / Galantuomini

    Edoardo Winspeare, Italy, 2008; 100m

    OPENING NIGHT
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Thu Jun 4: 7*

    *Opening Night screening excluded from the series pass
    Fri Jun 5: 4
    Sat Jun 6: 1

    Click for details


    As God Commands / Come Dio comanda

    Gabriele Salvatores, Italy, 2008; 103m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Fri Jun 5: 9
    Tue Jun 9: 3:15

    Click for details


    Effedià: On My Awful Way / Effedià – Sulla mia cattiva strada

    Teresa Marchesi, Italy, 2008; 85m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Sun Jun 7: 6:45
    Wed Jun 10: 6:15

    Click for details


    The Germans’ Factory / La fabbrica dei tedeschi

    Mimmo Calopresti, Italy, 2008; 90m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Mon Jun 8: 8:50
    Wed Jun 10: 2:15

    Click for details


    Giovanna’s Father / Il papà di Giovanna

    Pupi Avati, Italy, 2008; 104m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Sat Jun 6: 7
    Tue Jun 9: 1

    Click for details


    I Am Alive / Sono viva

    Dino Gentili and Filippo Gentili, Italy, 2008; 87m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Fri Jun 5: 2
    Sun Jun 7: 9

    Click for details


    Lecture 21 / Lezione 21

    Alessandro Baricco, Italy/UK, 2008; 92m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Sat Jun 6: 9:20
    Wed Jun 10: 4:15

    Click for details


    The Man Who Loves / L’uomo che ama

    Maria Sole Tognazzi, Italy, 2008; 108m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Sat Jun 6: 4:30
    Wed Jun 10: 8

    Click for details


    The Past is a Foreign Land / Il passato è una terra straniera

    Daniele Vicari, Italy, 2008; 120m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Sun Jun 7: 4
    Mon Jun 8: 4:15

    Click for details


    A Perfect Day / Un giorno perfetto

    Ferzan Ozpetek, Italy, 2008; 95m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Mon Jun 8: 6:40
    Thu Jun 11: 2

    Click for details


    The Sicilian Girl / La Siciliana ribelle

    Marco Amenta, Italy, 2008; 110m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Fri Jun 5: 6:30
    Mon Jun 8: 2

    Click for details


    We Can Do That / Si può fare

    Giulio Manfredonia, Italy, 2008; 111m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Sun Jun 7: 1:30
    Tue Jun 9: 9

    Click for details


    ANIMATED PASSIONS: THE FILMS OF URSULA FERRARA

    approx. 30m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    SAT JUN 6: 3:15

     

  • Art & Culture

    Open Roads. The Best of Italian Cinema in New York


    Now at its ninth edition, Open Roads: New Italian Cinema has become one of the tent poles of the Walter Reade Theater calendar.  The past year has been especially rewarding, with the great international success of Silvio Soldini (Days and Clouds), Matteo Garrone (Gomorrah), and Paolo Sorrentino (Il Divo), all veterans of Film Society programs. In addition, Ferzan Ozpetek, an Open Roads regular with four films premiered here, received a wonderful mid-career retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art and returns to Open Roads this year with A Perfect Day.


    This year’s Open Roads adds a number of exciting new debut directors to this list. Marco Amenta offers a remarkable portrait of courage in The Sicilian Girl, while screenwriters turned directors Dino and Filippo Gentili present a genre-bending comedy/noir/thriller, I Am Alive. Among the returning Open Roads veterans are Edoardo Winspeare (Brave Men), Daniele Vicari (The Past is a Foreign Land), Mimmo Calopresti (The Germans’ Factory), and Gabriele Salvatores (As God Commands). Veteran director Pupi Avati offers his finest film in years, Giovanna’s Father, and, as a very special feature of this year's Open Roads slate, Italian rock star Jovanotti will introduce a tribute to the great Italian singer-songwriter Fabrizio De André, whose death from cancer in 1999 robbed the world of a great artist much too soon.

     

    Many of the directors and other special guests are aspected to attend the series including: Marco Amenta (director, The Sicilian Girl), Donatella Finocchiaro (actress, Brave Men), Silvio Orlando (actor, Giovanna’s Father), Dino Gentili (director, I Am Alive), Maria Sole Tognazzi (director, The Man Who Loves), Filippo Timi (actor, As God Commands), Ursula Ferrara (director, Animated Passions), Teresa Marchesi (director, Effedia), and Sandra Petraglia (writer, A Perfect Day).

    -----

    From Lincon Center and  Walter Reade Theater website

    Open Roads: New Italian Cinema

    June 4 – 11, 2009


    Open Roads Series Pass: $40 public/$30 Film Society members. Admits one person to five titles in the series, except the Opening Night screening, on Thu June 4 at 7pm, of Brave Men. Purchase in person only at the Walter Reade Theater box office (cash only); may not be combined with any other ticket offer. Individual screening tickets and series passes subject to availability.


    We expect many of the directors, actors and other special guests to attend the series. For film descriptions click on the pictures. To purchase tickets online click on the SHOWTIME under Buy Tickets .
     

    Admission:

    $11 public

    $8 seniors (62+)

    $7 Film Society members, students (with ID) and children (6-12, accompanied by an adult)

    Online service charge: $1.25 per ticket ordered. Cash only at the box office.

    Click for details


    Brave Men / Galantuomini

    Edoardo Winspeare, Italy, 2008; 100m

    OPENING NIGHT
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Thu Jun 4: 7*

    *Opening Night screening excluded from the series pass
    Fri Jun 5: 4
    Sat Jun 6: 1

    Click for details


    As God Commands / Come Dio comanda

    Gabriele Salvatores, Italy, 2008; 103m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Fri Jun 5: 9
    Tue Jun 9: 3:15

    Click for details


    Effedià: On My Awful Way / Effedià – Sulla mia cattiva strada

    Teresa Marchesi, Italy, 2008; 85m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Sun Jun 7: 6:45
    Wed Jun 10: 6:15

    Click for details


    The Germans’ Factory / La fabbrica dei tedeschi

    Mimmo Calopresti, Italy, 2008; 90m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Mon Jun 8: 8:50
    Wed Jun 10: 2:15

    Click for details


    Giovanna’s Father / Il papà di Giovanna

    Pupi Avati, Italy, 2008; 104m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Sat Jun 6: 7
    Tue Jun 9: 1

    Click for details


    I Am Alive / Sono viva

    Dino Gentili and Filippo Gentili, Italy, 2008; 87m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Fri Jun 5: 2
    Sun Jun 7: 9

    Click for details


    Lecture 21 / Lezione 21

    Alessandro Baricco, Italy/UK, 2008; 92m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Sat Jun 6: 9:20
    Wed Jun 10: 4:15

    Click for details


    The Man Who Loves / L’uomo che ama

    Maria Sole Tognazzi, Italy, 2008; 108m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Sat Jun 6: 4:30
    Wed Jun 10: 8

    Click for details


    The Past is a Foreign Land / Il passato è una terra straniera

    Daniele Vicari, Italy, 2008; 120m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Sun Jun 7: 4
    Mon Jun 8: 4:15

    Click for details


    A Perfect Day / Un giorno perfetto

    Ferzan Ozpetek, Italy, 2008; 95m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Mon Jun 8: 6:40
    Thu Jun 11: 2

    Click for details


    The Sicilian Girl / La Siciliana ribelle

    Marco Amenta, Italy, 2008; 110m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Fri Jun 5: 6:30
    Mon Jun 8: 2

    Click for details


    We Can Do That / Si può fare

    Giulio Manfredonia, Italy, 2008; 111m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    Sun Jun 7: 1:30
    Tue Jun 9: 9

    Click for details


    ANIMATED PASSIONS: THE FILMS OF URSULA FERRARA

    approx. 30m
    Read more...


    Buy Tickets
    SAT JUN 6: 3:15

     

  • Events: Reports

    2008 Economic Crisis. How Devastating is “The Perfect Storm”?

    How deep is this economic crisis? How long will it last? How is it going to affect our future, and how can we prevent other economic downturns?

    These and many other questions are tormenting our minds in this tough moment of recession, questions to which we cannot find any answer on our own. We are affected by this economic crisis in every possible way, our friends and relatives are losing their jobs, our favorite brands are disappearing, the banks, when they do not go bankrupt, don’t grant loans as easily as before. What to do?

    We have to ask experts, and trust their opinions. Make our own decisions based on their advice. We need to know what is going to happen.

    The Italian American Chamber of Commerce is promptly responding to this demand by organizing a series of encounters with the major experts in the field for its members. “In this particular moment, we feel the need to reinforce our activities and offer our members a reference point where they can find valuable advice and support”, explained Prof. Ammendola to us. Prof. Amendola teaches International Business at New York University.

    The conference “The 2008 Financial Crisis-The Perfect Storm”, held on May 19 at IACC’s Headquarters in Midtown Manhattan, saw the Italian-American business leader Joseph Grano in conversation with Prof. Giuseppe Ammendola, IACC Economic Advisor. They debated before a wide audience, made up of some of the major representatives of the Italian-American business world in New York. Many members of the directory board of IACC were also there, among whom President Alberto Comini and Secretary General Franco de Angelis. With them Rino Gradassi, economic expert at the Italian Consulate General in New York; and Marco Martella, Director of the North American branch of Banca d’Italia

    Frank D. Desiderio, Tariffs & Trade Law Advisor at IACC, introduced Mr. Joseph Grano listing his numerous qualifications and briefly tracing his long career. Chairman and CEO of Centurion Holdings LLC, a company that advises private and public enterprises, Mr. Grano is a member of the Council for the United States and Italy, and a member of the City University of New York’s Business Leadership Council.  Moreover, from 2001 to 2004, Mr. Grano was Chairman of UBS Financial Services Inc. and served as Chairman of the Board of Governors of the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD).

    Together with Prof. Ammendola, he put forth a number of issues of common interest, defining the current crisis as “the perfect storm”, one that can sweep away the pillars on which the contemporary world economy is based. 

    We will briefly summarize what Mr. Grano had to say about the current down-turn, looking at its causes and consequences on America as a world power

    “Next to the crash of 1986, this crisis is the worst I have ever seen. It is the result of a combination of different political decisions, the first one of which dates back to 1999, when our Congress decided to lower credit standards, allowing institutions to grant mortgages to people that otherwise would not be able to buy a home”. After these first considerations, Mr. Grano went on explaining the other circumstances that brought us to this final crash, from the terrorist attacks of 9/11 that shocked the American financial markets, to the costs associated with our military engagements of the last years.

    How do we get out of this? That is the question we all asked ourselves after his deep analysis. Mr. Grano answered by saying “If Obama’s stimulus package will bring 2 to 3 million Americans back to work, we will slowly come out of this crisis, and our GDP will soon grow by 2-3%. But if it will not, we have ahead of us another couple of years of great recession, with a percentage of unemployment equal to 10%”. He thus offered us a double perspective, two opposite destinies for the American superpower. However, he concluded showing optimism for the upcoming future: “this recession will never be comparable to the Great Depression and the United States will remain the strongest economic power in the world. Believe it or not, the dollar will get stronger, not weaker”.

    His greatest concern? The current administration’s strong intervention in the economic life of the country: “I am a little bit concerned about this. Yes, I am persuaded that there should be greater control than the one we had with the

    former President, but I don’t think that nationalizing companies is the solution we should look for.” Instead, he suggested, we should promote the reduction of of commercial banks in the country from 8.000 to at least 4.000 and allow a more extensive control over their activities, avoiding an excessive deregulation of the financial markets.

    And what about the real market? Americans have carried on an extremely expensive life style that has ultimately increased the foreign National debt - a situation to which the government responded by “creating” money by selling Treasury bonds to Japan and China. The situation, as Mr. Grano explained, is difficult to manage and can menace the stability of the American economy on the long run. This especially if we look at the empowerment of three other currencies: the euro, which has acquired more stability than it was ever thought it would; the yen; and the petrodollar in Middle East.

    Is the growth of new powers dangerous for America’s economic hegemony? According to Mr. Grano, if America wants to maintain its control on the world market, it must learn to accept the growth of new economic centers, even if these do not respect or adhere to “the American model” of free market and democratic policies. This has been the greatest mistake made by the past Administration, and has weakened the National “soft power” and, consequently, its “hard power”. Obama is now trying to offer the world a new profile of the American foreign economic policies, while the Bush administration was perceived as going, transforming America in an “arrogant” hegemonic power.  The growth of these powers, however, could also result in an  advantage for American exporters. China, as an example, is slowly becoming a capitalist economy, although it still has a very controlled agenda. The so called phenomenon of “growing expectations” will transform the Chinese population in millions of potential consumers, with a consequent growing demand of goods from abroad: “I see potential benefits coming from the ascendance of new economic powers as the United States could find new markets where to export, thus benefiting our manufacturing sector”.

    After he offered us his vision on the current economic situation, Mr. Grano responded to questions posed by the audience. In particular, President Comini asked him to share with us his opinion on the recent merge between Fiat and Chrysler. He showed optimism, stressing that Fiat will find in the United States a great demand for its models, remarkable for both design and technology. “Fiat is becoming a world leader in its field. It is now in negotiation to buy Germany’s Opel too. We will witness an increasing specialization in the manufactory industry, with the different economic regions producing a narrow range of products, of which they will detain almost a monopoly. Italy, of course, will contribute to the reinforcement of the Euro region with excellent realities such as Fiat in the automobile sector”.

    Finally, Mr. Grano dedicated his final words to the role Italians have played in the growth of

    America as a world power. “We have been essential contributors to the enforcement of this economic engine. We should be much more compact as a group, we should become a strong community. I am committed to founding a new Italian-American museum in New York, a tribute to our ancestors. Every other ethnic group in this city has a big one, we deserve it too”.

    Mr. Grano believes that a good part of his success in life is due to the values his Italian parents have passed down to him, and thus he believes in the importance of spreading and teaching them to the new generations. He has transformed this belief in a goal to achieve, and pursued it throughout his life. In 1996, indeed, he received the “Bellissima America” award for his leadership role in preserving the heritage of Italian-Americans.

    We had the occasion to talk to him right after the debate  ended and we discussed the effects of the crisis on the Italian economy. Although the Italian National Product has decreased by 5.9 points, he showed great respect and appreciation for the economic policies implemented by the Italian government. He stressed that Berlusconi is “the right man at the right time, he has the character and charisma to stand up. He has done for the country more than anybody had done before”. To him, he is a businessman that can run Italy as an enterprise: “the point is that politics nowadays is a lot about economy”.

    We finally talked to Professor Ammendola who explained to us how he sees his responsibilities as the Economic Advisor of IACC evolving. “It is hard to make exact previsions on the length and real incidence of this recession and its future impact on the world economy. But our commitment is to closely analyze its evolution and do my best to offer advise and support to our members. The IACC is doing much in this regard: at our seminars our members can hear eminent speakers such as Mr. Grano and experience significant intellectual stimuli by interacting with them”. 

  • Facts & Stories

    Live from New York. Italy's National Holiday



  • Italian Referendum - A Video Message from the Consul General of Italy in New York


    Pursuant to Presidential Decree dated April 30th, 2009 a Referendum have been scheduled for June 21, 2009. 

     

    The Referendum concerns the reform of the current Italian electoral system for the Chamber of Deputies and for the Senate.

     

    The three questions are as follow:

    - “Majority premium to the most voted list – Chamber of Deputies”

    - “Majority premium to the most voted list – Senate”

    - “Abolition of multiple candidacies in different constituencies”

     

    Italian citizens who are at least 18 years old at the date of the Referendum and whose name is in the electoral list will vote.

     

    Italian citizens residing abroad and registered to vote in their foreign diplomatic jurisdiction can participate by Absentee Vote. No later than June 3rd, the Consulate will send each voter residing abroad, who has not opted to vote in Italy by May 10th, 2008, a kit containing:

     

    -         An information sheet explaining how to vote;

    -         An electoral certificate;

    -         Three ballots (one for each question)

    -         A blank envelope;

    -         A pre-stamped envelope with the address of this Consulate.

     

    Any potential voter who has not received the kit by June 7th should contact this Consulate to verify the status of his/her voter registration and, if necessary, request a duplicate kit.

     

    Using the pre-stamped envelope, and carefully following the instructions contained on the information sheet, the voter must send the electoral ballot in WITHOUT DELAY in such a way as to ensure its arrival at this Consulate no later that 16:00 PT on June 18th.

     

    The absentee vote is private and confidential and it is forbidden to vote more than once or to vote for someone else. Any violation of these rules is punishable by law.

     

    Residents in this Consular jurisdiction (New York, Connecticut) that need further information may contact this Office at:

    Website: www.consnewyork.esteri.it  

    E-mail: [email protected]

    Fax: 212 249 4945

    Tel. 212 439 8667

     

     

     

  • June 1. Italian National Holiday. Live with i-Italy


     The Italian National Holiday falls on June 2. This year the Consulate General of Italy in New York organized a full calendar of events to celebrate the 63rd Anniversary from the foundation of the Italian Republic, established with a referendum in 1946.  

    The celebrations will find their apex on June 1, with a Gala to be held at Cipriani Wall Street (55 Wall Street, New York, NY, 10005) at 6 pm.
     
    I-Italy will be there too, and will live broadcast this special event organized in collaboration with the Permanent Representation of Italy to the UN, the Italian Trade Commission, the Italian Cultural Institute, the Italian Tourism Board and the Regions of Veneto and Puglia.  
    Before and after the gala, the events scheduled will involve Italian citizens living in the area in a wide range of activities, from concerts to conferences and movie screenings. 
    The full program follows: 
    Sunday May 31 (4 pm):
    La notte della taranta” (The night of Taranta) – Organized by the Consulate General in collaboration with the Region of Puglia
    Where: Snug Harbor Cultural Center (Staten Island)
    1000 Richmond Ter # 11, Staten Island, NY‎  

     
    Wednesday June 3 (6 pm):
    Conferenza sull’ebraismo in Veneto e in Puglia – (Conference on Hebraism in Veneto and Puglia). Organized by the Italian Cultural Institute of New York and the Primo Levi Center. Sponsor partners: Veneto e Puglia
    Where: Italian Cultural Institute (686 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10065)  
    Friday June 5 (6 pm)
    Movie screening:Focaccia Blues” – Organized by the Italian Cultural Institute in collaboration with the Consulate General and the region of Puglia  
    Where: Italian Cultural Institute (686 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10065)  

     
    Thursday June 11 (7 pm):
    Movie screening: “Pane amaro” – Organized by the Consulate General.
    Where: Auditorium La Guardia College (31-10 Thomson Avenue, Long Island City, NY 1110, Western Queens)  
    The Consulate of Italy in Newark will hold its own celebrations for the Italian National Holiday on June 2 2009.

     

  • Referendum 2009. Messaggio video del Console Generale a New York



    I quesiti referendari (disponibili in versione integrale sul sito www.gazzettaufficiale.it) sono così denominati:

     

    - “Premio di maggioranza alla lista più votata – Camera” 

    - “Premio di maggioranza alla lista più votata – Senato”

    - “Abrogazione candidature multiple”

     

    I cittadini italiani maggiorenni alla data del voto e regolarmente iscritti nelle liste elettorali saranno ammessi al voto.

    All’estero, i cittadini italiani ivi stabilmente residenti, iscritti nelle liste elettorali, possono partecipare alle elezioni votando PER CORRISPONDENZA.

     

    A ciascun elettore residente all’estero, che non abbia optato per il voto in Italia entro il 10 maggio, questo Consolato Generale invierà per posta, entro il  3 Giugno, un PLICO contenente:

     

    -          un foglio informativo che spiega come votare;

    -          il certificato elettorale;

    -          tre schede elettorali (una per ogni quesito referendario);

    -          una busta piccola che dovrà contenere le schede votate;

    -          una busta già affrancata recante l’indirizzo di questo Ufficio consolare.

     

    L’elettore che alla data del 7 Giugno non avesse ancora ricevuto il plico elettorale, potrà rivolgersi a questo Consolato per verificare la propria posizione elettorale e chiedere eventualmente un duplicato.

    L’elettore, utilizzando la busta già affrancata e seguendo attentamente le istruzioni contenute nel foglio informativo, dovrà spedire SENZA RITARDO le schede elettorali votate, in modo che arrivino presso questo Ufficio entro e non oltre le ore 16.00 ora locale del giorno 18 Giugno.

     

     Il voto è personale e segreto ed è fatto divieto di votare più volte e inoltrare schede per conto di altre persone. Chiunque violi le disposizioni in materia elettorale, sarà punito a norma di legge.

     

    Gli elettori registrati presso questo Consolato Generale e gli iscritti all’A.I.R.E. residenti negli Stati di New York e Connecticut potranno rivolgersi per verificare la loro iscrizione nelle liste elettorali e per qualsiasi ulteriore informazione riguardante le elezioni ai seguenti recapiti:

     

    Website: www.consnewyork.esteri.it  

    E-mail: [email protected]

    Fax: 212 249 4945

    Tel. 212 439 8667

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