Summertime David Lean. 1955
Falling in the canal Campo San Barnaba 30100 VE Venice, Italy See in map
See in imdb
Bonus: Also in this location
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Summertime David Lean. 1955
Falling in the canal Campo San Barnaba 30100 VE Venice, Italy See in map
See in imdb
Bonus: Also in this location
San Barnaba ~ Venice
via Libreria Toletta.
Palazzo Venier dei Leoni a Venezia, la casa di Peggy Guggenheim. Photo by Gianni Berengo Gardini. 1966.
From 1910 to c. 1924 the house was owned by the flamboyant Marchesa Luisa Casati, hostess to the Ballets Russes, and the subject of numerous portraits by artists as various as Boldini, Troubetzkoy, Man Ray and Augustus John.
Palazzo Venier dei Leoni was probably begun in the 1750s by architect Lorenzo Boschetti, whose only other known building in Venice is the church of San Barnaba. It is an unfinished palace. A model exists in the Museo Correr, Venice. Its magnificent classical façade would have matched that of Palazzo Corner, opposite, with the triple arch of the ground floor (which is the explanation of the ivy-covered pillars visible today) extended through both the piani nobili above. We do not know precisely why this Venier palace was left unfinished. Money may have run out, or some say that the powerful Corner family living opposite blocked the completion of a building that would have been grander than their own. Another explanation may rest with the unhappy fate of the next door Gothic palace which was demolished in the early 19th century: structural damage to this was blamed in part on the deep foundations of Palazzo Venier dei Leoni. (x)
Photo by Ennio Lago
Campo San Barnaba with the grocery's boat and Ponte dei Pugni
Pietra di Barnaba è il nome di una pietra cara ai Milanesi, dall’antichità. È conosciuta anche come “El tredesin de Marz” - 13 marzo in dialetto meneghino.
#13marzo, ovvero #EltredesindeMarz e la #Pietra di #Barnaba; quest'ultima è una pietra cara ai #Milanesi, sin dall’#antichità. È conosciuta anche come El #tredesin de #Marz, il 13 marzo in #dialetto #meneghino.
Pietra di Barnaba è il nome di una pietra cara ai Milanesi, dall’antichità. È conosciuta anche come “El tredesin de Marz” - 13 marzo in dialetto meneghino.
#Pietra di #Barnaba e “El tredesin de Marz” - #13marzo in dialetto meneghino; è il nome di una pietra cara ai #Milanesi, custodita dall’antichità fino a oggi.