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	<title>Archivio Palazzo DucaleVENICE, THE JEWS AND EUROPE 1516-2016 Archivi - Archivio Palazzo Ducale</title>
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		<title>Exhibition</title>
		<link>https://archivio-palazzoducale.visitmuve.it/en/mostre-en/archivio-mostre-en/major-exhibition-dogespalace/2016/05/17279/venice-the-jews-and-europe/</link>
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				<category><![CDATA[VENICE, THE JEWS AND EUROPE 1516-2016]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The exhibition "Venice, the Jews and Europe", organised to mark the fifth centenary of the institution of the Venice Ghetto, describes the circumstances that underlie the origins, creation and transformations of the first ‘enclosure’ for Jews in the world.  The exhibition aims to provide the many visitors to the lagoon city with an increased awareness of the cultural diversity that existed in cosmopolitan Venice at the beginning of the sixteenth century, including the combination of knowledge, skills and traditions that still remain its most important heritage. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>June 19 &#8211; November 13, 2016</strong><br />
<strong>Venice, Palazzo Ducale, Doge&#8217;s Apartment</strong></p>
<p><strong>Press preview</strong><br />
<strong> Friday, June 17, 10 am &#8211; 3 pm</strong><br />
<strong> entrance from Porta della Carta</strong></p>
<p><strong>_</strong></p>
<p><em>“</em><em>The </em><em>area</em><em> was </em><em>defined</em><em> by two </em><em>gates</em><em> which, as pointed out</em><em> by</em><em> the Senate </em><em>on 29 </em><em>March, 1516, would be opened in the morning to the sound of</em><em> the “Marangona”(the bell in St. Mark’s belfry</em><em> that </em><em>established</em><em> the</em><em> city’s daily timetable</em><em>) and closed at night </em><em>at </em><em>midnight by four Christian keepers, paid by the Jews and required to reside </em><em>on</em><em> site with</em><em>out their </em><em>family in order to </em><em>be </em><em>better </em><em>able to fulfil their supervisory duties. Moreover,</em><em> two high walls</em><em> were to have been built (but were</em><em> never </em><em>constructed</em><em>) to </em><em>enclose</em><em> the area on the side of canals surround</em><em>ing it</em><em>, walling up all the banks </em><em>on said canals</em><em>. Two Council of Ten boats with guards paid by the new </em><em>“</em><em>castl</em><em>e-dwellers” would cruise along the canal around the island</em><em> at night to ensure its security. On </em><em>the following </em><em>1 April, th</em><em>e “</em><em>grida</em><em>” (“declaration”)</em><em> was proclaimed in Rialto and </em><em>from </em><em>the bridges </em><em>in every</em><em> city district </em><em>in which</em><em> Jews</em><em> resided.”</em></p>
<p>Organised on the occasion of the <strong>fifth centenary of the </strong><strong>creation</strong><strong> of Venice</strong><strong>’s</strong><strong> Ghetto, curated by Donatella Calabi with </strong><strong>the scientifi</strong><strong>c coordination of Gabriella Belli and the contribution of a large pool of scholars</strong>, the “<em>Venice, the Jews and Europe 1516 &#8211; 2016</em>” exhibition aims to describe the processes that led to the creation, implementation and transformation of the first “fence” for Jews in the world.</p>
<p>At the same time, the exhibition expands to a wider horizon, embracing the relations established with the rest of the city and with other Jewish (and other) districts in Italy and Europe, to emphasise the <strong>fruitful</strong><strong> relations between Jews and Venice and between Jews and civil society in the different periods of their long stay in the lagoon, in the Veneto area and in Europe and</strong><strong> the Mediterranean</strong>. The intention is to establish a greater awareness of the cultural diversity present in <strong>cosmopolitan Venice at the </strong><strong>beginning of the sixteenth century</strong> and the mix of knowledge, skills, customs that still comprise its most important legacy.</p>
<p><strong>The task has thus not</strong><strong> only </strong><strong>been one of</strong><strong> survey</strong><strong>ing the special area of th</strong><strong>e three ghettos</strong> (<em>Nuovo</em>, <em>Vecchio</em> and <em>Nuovissimo</em>), <strong>but also </strong><strong>one of refl</strong><strong>ection on the cultural and linguistic exchanges, the </strong><strong>fine </strong><strong>craftsmanship and trades that the Jewish community has shared with the Christian population and other minorities</strong> living in this extraordinarily important mercantile city. The time span considered goes beyond the fall of the Republic and the opening of the doors at the behest of Napoleon: the exhibition will also showcase the role of Jews in the age of assimilation and during the twentieth century.</p>
<p><strong>Important paintings </strong><strong>– by Bellini and Carpaccio, Foraboschi, Hayez and Poletti, Balla and </strong><strong>Wildt to Chagall </strong><strong>–</strong><strong> architectural drawings</strong><strong> of the </strong><strong>period, volumes </strong><strong>in</strong><strong> very rare original editions, archival documents, liturgical objects and furniture, </strong><strong>together with </strong><strong>multimedia reconstructions</strong> will enable the visitor to learn about a long-term relationship that was marked also by permeability, close contacts and cultural exchange.</p>
<p>The project’s initial premise is that the history of the institution of the Ghetto in Venice should be studied as part of the more general picture of the Venetian Republic’s administration of national, ethnic and religious minorities living in the city, capital of a “world economy”, as the historian Fernand Braudel called it. But it also sets out to explain how these relationships gradually broadened to a much vaster geographical area and have persisted over time, adapting to political, social and cultural changes.</p>
<p><strong>In the early decades of the sixteenth century the Venetian Republic </strong><strong>implemented a deliberate</strong><strong> strategy of welcome, </strong><strong>simultaneously </strong><strong>offering guarantees and surveillance</strong>, which was more or less rigid with respect to the various national and religious communities; this welcome was extended to those communities that were important for the republic’s economic activities, such as North Europeans (with the Fondaco dei Tedeschi), the Orthodox Greeks (with a concession to build a church and a college at their expense) and, over the years, Albanians, Persians and Turks.</p>
<p>The Jews, like the other minorities, were “precious” for the Serenissima (as we read in some documents): its judiciary, some nobles, Doge Leonardo Loredan himself, who was “Prince” at the time of the founding decree (29 March, 1516), were well aware of this.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, Venice, which had permitted the Jews in their territory to enter the city as war refugees – at at time when Europe was expelling them from Spain (1492) and Portugal (1496) – in the wake of the dramatic consequences of the league of Cambrai and the defeat of Agnadello, soon posed itself the question of how to treat the Jewish minority.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>“At stake was the defence of fundamental cultural values ​​for their perception of themselves. Namely”, according to Robert Bonfil, “all those values ​​that “the myth of Venice” deemed to be most essential of all: justice, freedom and prosperity, all rooted in good governance and not least in the defence of Christian ethics, without which neither justice nor prosperity were conceivable”.</p>
<p>The <strong>decision</strong><strong> not to expel the Jews but to keep them inside the ghetto was seen as the lesser evil and </strong><strong>their enclosure, in itself an</strong><strong> overt discrimination, </strong><strong>ended up</strong><strong> also becom</strong><strong>ing</strong><strong> a useful defen</strong><strong>ce</strong>, because the Jews, a politically weak entity outside the walls, became autonomous within them, almost masters of their own actions,  and in many cases far freer than many other of Europe’s inhabitants and subjects who lived at the complete mercy of a doge, prince, pope or king. In Venice, this <strong><em>Hazzer</em></strong> (a Hebrew word to define the fence), <strong>the </strong><strong>Ghetto – adopted as</strong><strong> a negative </strong><strong>model</strong><strong> throughout Europe as a physical reality and term </strong><strong>–</strong><strong> was gradually transformed into an</strong><strong> independent</strong><strong> institution</strong>, “a shield” as writes Riccardo Calimani, “which, despite the then rampant insecurity and despite all, offered powers and privileges that allowed it to be heard and to negotiate with the authorities outside, with a freedom of initiative that is in some cases surprising”.</p>
<p><strong>Cosmopolitan within</strong> – the Ghetto was home to German and Italian Jews, Levantine, Western and Portuguese Jews –<strong> it </strong><strong>was therefore a</strong><strong>lso a</strong><strong> highly permeable </strong><strong>space</strong><strong>, in constant interaction with the outside world and,</strong> <strong><em>in primis</em></strong><strong> with the city</strong><strong> of Venice</strong>, itself extraordinarily multinational and multiethnic, either by conviction or pragmatism.</p>
<p>The exhibition at the Doge’s Palace, which takes us on a <strong>fascinating journey through art, history and culture, thus </strong><strong>illustrates</strong><strong> the distribution of Jewish settlement</strong><strong>s</strong><strong> in Europe after 1492; the establishment of the first real ghetto in the world; the debate about its location; </strong><strong>its </strong><strong>growth and </strong><strong>the </strong><strong>urban and architectural shap</strong><strong>ing</strong><strong> of successive expansions</strong> (the <em>Ghetto Novo</em>, the <em>Vecchio</em> and the <em>Novissimo</em>); <strong>relations with the rest of the city</strong> (the workshops at Rialto, the cemetery, the excavation of the Canale degli Ebrei), <strong>twentieth-century </strong><strong>reintegration</strong>.</p>
<p>The <strong>exhibition</strong><strong> highlight</strong><strong>s the</strong><strong> rules </strong><strong>and</strong><strong> also</strong><strong> the</strong><strong> prohibitions, abuse</strong><strong>, conflicts</strong><strong> and exchanges</strong>; it describes <strong>society in</strong><strong> the Ghetto</strong>, made up of <strong>communities</strong><strong> differing in</strong><strong> religious ritual, languages </strong><strong>​​</strong><strong>spoken, eating habits</strong>; and also the <strong>rich Jewish cultural production</strong> of the area. Alongside the narrative of the events marking the physical space of the Ghetto, the exhibition offers a meeting with important figures, as well as travel accounts and an overview of literature, music and theatre.</p>
<p>Divided into <strong>ten</strong><strong> thematic and chronological sections</strong> in the rooms of the Doge&#8217;s apartments – <em>Before the Ghetto</em>, <em>Cosmopolitan Venice</em>, <em>The cosmopolitan Ghetto</em>, <em>Synagogues</em>, <em>Jewish </em><em>c</em><em>ulture and the </em><em>role of women</em>, <em>T</em><em>rade between the seventeenth and eighteenth century</em>, <em>Napoleon: the opening of the gates and assimilation</em>, <em>T</em><em>he merchant of Venice</em>, <em>C</em><em>ollecting, collectors, the twentieth century</em> – the exhibition is also accompanied by breathtaking multimedia systems and innovative technology, developed by Studio Azzurro.</p>
<p>“<em>Venice, the Jews and Europe, 1516 -2016</em>” is promoted by the City of Venice and by the Fondazione Musei Civici di Venezia, with the support of “I 500 anni del Ghetto di Venezia” Committee, the Jewish Community of Venice and the Union of Italian Jewish Communities, with the contribution of the Veneto Region, Save Venice Inc, the Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation, Venetian Heritage, the David Berg Foundation New York, and the Fondazione Ugo e Olga Levi. The multimedia projects been realised in cooperation and with the support of the Fondazione di Venezia. The catalogue published by Marsilio Editori offers texts by a variety of authors.</p>
<hr />
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>Produced by</strong><br />
Comune di Venezia e Fondazione Musei Civici di Venezia</p>
<p><strong>Partners</strong><br />
Comitato &#8220;I 500 anni del Ghetto di Venezia&#8221;<br />
Comunità Ebraica di Venezia</p>
<p><strong>In collaboration with</strong><br />
Regione del Veneto<br />
Venetian Heritage<br />
David Berg Foundation, New York<br />
Save Venice Inc<br />
The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation<br />
Fondazione Ugo e Olga Levi</p>
<p><strong>Multimedia contents are offered in collaboration with  and with support of </strong><br />
Fondazione di Venezia</p>
<p><strong>Scientific coordination</strong><br />
Gabriella Belli</p>
<p><strong>Curated by</strong><br />
Donatella Calabi</p>
<p><em><strong>Research group</strong> </em>(Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, IUAV, Università degli Studi di Padova)<br />
Shaul Bassi<br />
Elisa Bastianello<br />
Ludovica Galeazzo<br />
Alessandra Ferrighi<br />
Gianmario Guidarelli<br />
Simon Levis Sullam<br />
Martina Massaro<br />
Stefano Zaggia</p>
<p><strong><em>with the collaboration of</em></strong><br />
Sistema dei laboratori dell’Università Iuav di Venezia – CIRCE Laboratorio di cartografia e GIS<br />
Caterina Balletti</p>
<p>ICEA department research group (Università degli Studi di Padova)<br />
Andrea Giordano</p>
<p>BBC /Scam Lab</p>
<p>Archivio di Stato di Venezia<br />
Raffaele Santoro</p>
<p><strong><em>together with</em></strong><br />
Fondazione Musei Civici di Venezia<br />
Alberto Craievich, Museo Correr<br />
Elisabetta Barisoni, Ca’ Pesaro<br />
Alberto Craievich, Ca’ Rezzonico</p>
<p>Fondazione Querini Stampalia Onlus<br />
Marigusta Lazzari</p>
<p>Centro Classica (Università Iuav di Venezia)<br />
Monica Centanni</p>
<p><strong>Special thanks</strong><br />
Corvallis spa</p>
<p><strong>Multimedia and video production</strong><br />
Studio Azzurro</p>
<p><strong>Catalogue</strong><br />
Marsilio</p>
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