Preparations for End-of-Semester Exhibit, Launching Online Dec 5

Preparations are ongoing for our end-of-semester projects at the Siena Art Institute, looking forward to our End-of-Semester Exhibit, launching online Dec 5th 2020 here at sienaart.blog, together with our students’ live broadcast on the Siena Art Institute‘s FB page at 6pm Siena/noon NYC sharing highlights of the show!

Our Fall 2020 Show will feature our students’ interdisciplinary projects, creative writing, photography, digital multimedia and more!

Our students have been absolute champions, working with energy and creativity despite challenging pandemic restrictions. We can’t wait to share their impressive work with you.

On occasion of the AMACI – Associazione dei Musei d’Arte Contemporanea Italiani Day of Contemporary Culture #GiornataDelContemporaneo

The participation of our Greek students during the Fall 2020 semester is thanks to the collaboration of the Stavros-Niarchos Foundation in supporting our SNF-SART scholarships.

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Fall 2020 end-of-semester projects underway

Our students are making progress on end-of-semester projects at the Siena Art Institute, lots of exciting work is underway!

For more info about our current participants’ work within the Art & Society course, visit their individual pages:

The participation of our Greek students during the Fall 2020 semester is thanks to the collaboration of the Stavros-Niarchos Foundation in supporting our SNF-SART scholarships.

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Exciting developments in our garden!

There are lots of exciting developments in our garden, including new crops of winter vegetables, setting up a “greenhouse”, clearing and planting new spaces, and much more!

Here is a selection of some recent snapshots to give you a glimpse of some of the work underway. 

Under the guidance of faculty member Bernardo Giorgi, and thanks to the help of our community collaborators, we are following permaculture approaches to sustainable agriculture. 

You can find more information about the sustainability initiatives of our partner program, the Siena School for Liberal Arts at this link: https://www.sienaschool.com/Academics/Sustainability/

Studio work and advising

Studio advising with our Digital Multimedia teacher Irene Lupi, speaking with our students about their current work-in-progress.

For more info about our current participants’ work within the Art & Society course, visit their individual pages:

The participation of our Greek students during the Fall 2020 semester is thanks to the collaboration of the Stavros-Niarchos Foundation in supporting our SNF-SART scholarships.

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Laboratorio a Villa Brandi #EternoPresente

(Testo in Italiano sotto) On Oct 17th the Siena Art Institute organized a story-telling workshop for children in collaboration with the Pinacoteca Nazionale Museum of Siena. The kids were captivated in an experience of narrating images searching for details at Villa Brandi and the surrounding garden, telling the history of the villa and the experience of the visit.

Our intern Aurora shares her experience in the post below (the photographs were made by the children during the workshop).

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Il 17 ottobre 2020 il Siena Art Institute ha organizzato un laboratorio di “Storytelling” per bambini in collaborazione con la Pinacoteca Nazionale di Siena all’interno del progetto “Eterno Presente”.
I ragazzi si sono cimentati in un’esperienza di narrazione per immagini alla ricerca di particolari di Villa Brandi e del giardino che raccontassero la storia della villa e l’esperienza della visita.

La nostra tirocinante Aurora racconta l’esperienza nel suo post (Le immagini sono state scattate dai bambini durante il laboratorio):

October 17th, a Saturday morning, the fog was so thick it could be cut with a butter knife, and it embraced Busseto Street winding its way up to the height of Villa Brandi, covering everything with a cold and impalpable blanket.

Since my childhood, I’ve never loved fog: I perceived it as something unusual, something odd that sparked my curiosity; but the feeling of being totally blind, that feeling which grew having dived into that grey blanket, shot inside my veins an odd and annoying sensation of anxiety. I’ve always thought that there is something quite frustrating only being able to see what’s immediately in front of you; and I guess it was the same sensation felt by all the children who came to Villa Brandi with their parents that morning. At the beginning, they were as disorientated as me but, at the same time, they were also full of that childish sparkling and vital curiosity. Becoming a kid again, I entered with them into a microcosm made of art and nature, isolated from the city but also just steps away from it, like an absurd character jumping from one of Mirò’s canvases into Monet’s water-lilies.

After a brief guided tour through the mansion, where children felt part of the environment they would explore a few moments later, the Siena Art Institute’s instructors Jeff Shapiro and Jackie Tune skillfully created their own new dimension inside an ex-wine vault, a room where they cozily welcomed the little audience. From the adults’ world, gathered in a distancing circle outside the room, talking about DPCMs, coronavirus and adults’ topics, the cittini dove into a universe of storytelling and fun, animated by short and interesting videos explained by Jeff and Jackie, showing them various points of view: 

  • an eagle whose wings are cleaving clouds.
  • two snails embracing and cuddling each other.
  • Tom and Jerry, seeming to be the main characters of our reality until they run behind a skyscraper that’s actually a shy chair.

One of the best tactics to draw children into an oniric world and make them feel interested is creating atmosphere while introducing an activity: their tiny, constantly-evolving minds feed on dreams. The signs of fulfilling this purpose are the light sparkling in their eyes, the interest with which they answer various kinds of questions -also easy ones- and their effort finding the correct words exploring their almost empty lexicon.

“They’re nim… min… minuscule!” said with a very tiny voice a little girl pointing at two little ladybugs in a video.

After Jeff and Jackie’s basic explanations about storytelling, the next step was to explore every single corner of Villa Brandi, looking for shootable foreshortening, as they were telling lots of stories.

Becoming a kid again, all my body was scoured by an incredible itching as I thought to throw off my bag and my dad’s adult-like denim jacket to enjoy the adventure of the others and discover what I would find out; and so helping Samuel, a very curious and cute adventurer, was sooo amazing. We became cats and then beetles, haunting the fastest lizards of the mansion; then we changed by morphing into feathery magpies attracted by sparkling fragments of glass and by the dew on the grass; we looked into the darkness inside wells and crevices, the blinding sunlight beyond the leaves of a tree and also the shadow spots beneath a pergola; we also found out that a furrow on the ground could be as interesting as a snail’s shell rooted on a wall kissed by rays of sunlight.

Play, nature, art: three key ingredients composing the recipe for narrating a charming story, perfect for the amusement of children and adults and also able to create a non-stop exchange between those two worlds, everlastingly linked to each other like a rainbow-scaled ouroboros; but two worlds which are often forced to be divided.

How many times have you heard these words: “You can’t do it, you’re too young!”

So, thinking back to my childhood, I’ve finally realized that, when they told me that, it would have been better if I answered back in this way, “Ah-ah! You can’t do what I’m doing right now anymore, ‘cause you’re too old!”

Aurora Angiolini

MY BIO

Hi! My name is Aurora. My Contrada is the Istrice and, obviously, I’m from Siena. I was born here, in this breathtaking medieval city, and I’ve also decided to attend university in Siena: I’m studying at the University for Foreigners of Siena, where my studies include English, Chinese and other courses about the history and structure of languages, but also History, Art History, Geography, etc.

I really love every kind of art, especially painting, writing and also cinema (I draw and paint on canvas and silk in my spare time; I also love writing -I have some work-in-progress), and this is the reason why I chose to do my internship here at SART!

#EternoPresente #Mibact #direzionemuseitoscana #museitaliani #ItalianMuseum #visittuscany #regionetoscana #pinacotecanazionalesiena

Mid-Term Critique

Our Fall 2020 students presented their mid-term projects, impressive interdisciplinary work reflecting their dedication and initiative from the first half of the semester. The artwork sparked a lively discussion in our group critique, with students and teachers in attendance.

We’re looking forward to see what our students develop for their final projects!

For more info about our current participants’ work within the Art & Society course, visit their individual pages:

The participation of our Greek students during the Fall 2020 semester is thanks to the collaboration of the Stavros-Niarchos Foundation in supporting our SNF-SART scholarships.

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Tartuca contrada Museum

Exploring the many layers of history, traditions, and symbolism, we visited the museum of the Tartuca contrada. Each of Siena’s 17 contrade have a museum dedicated to their neighbourhood’s proud traditions and regalia from previous Palio races, an amazing network of micro-communities within the city center, which makes Siena a truly unique place.

The participation of our Greek students during the Fall 2020 semester is thanks to the collaboration of the Stavros-Niarchos Foundation in supporting our SNF-SART scholarships.

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Visiting the Fisiocritici Museum

We found inspiration in the cabinets of curiosities at Siena’s Natural History Museum, the Museo di Storia Naturale dell’Accademia dei Fisiocritici. For information about the museum, you can visit their website: https://www.fisiocritici.it/en/

The participation of our Greek students during the Fall 2020 semester is thanks to the collaboration of the Stavros-Niarchos Foundation in supporting our SNF-SART scholarships.

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Viewing students’ Guidebooks

This week we viewed the artistic guidebooks created by our Fall 2020 students, going beyond a touristic perspective to offer a personal and artistic exploration of the city.

For more info about our current participants’ work within the Art & Society course, visit their individual pages:

The participation of our Greek students during the Fall 2020 semester is thanks to the collaboration of the Stavros-Niarchos Foundation in supporting our SNF-SART scholarships.

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