(ANSA) - ROMA, 13 DIC - Yesterday in Canberra, the Australian National Museum's exhibition dedicated to Pompeii, 'the lost city' - now a Unesco cultural heritage site -, destroyed and made immortal by the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 A.D.
Embellished with ninety objects from the Archaeological Park of the famous Italian site and from the Grand Palais Immersif in Paris, the exhibition recounts fragments of life (aggregated and intimate), rituals and social norms of the time when Pompeii was, in its multicultural nature, a crossroads for the circulation of goods, people and knowledge in the Mediterranean. An immersive itinerary, which stimulates the senses through light and sound and re-proposes to the visitor (at regular intervals) the destructive and creative energy of that volcanic eruption that marked the destiny of the Neapolitan city. The Italian Embassy has also contributed to the production of the series of events that will accompany the exhibition, and will soon host a scientific-dissemination panel dedicated to Pompeii at the Residence.
"It is an honour and an immense pleasure for me to inaugurate the exhibition at the National Museum, supported by the Embassy of Italy: a unique opportunity to capture the essence of Pompeii in its grandeur, eternity and fragility," said Ambassador Crudele. "Pompeii's frescoes, statues and mosaics restore to us an originality and artistic richness that owe much to the Greco-Roman influence. But Pompeii is also an architectural and social model that transcends the ages and has left its mark on the urban design of many contemporary cities. Through this extraordinary occasion of cultural promotion of our country in Australia, we celebrate a 'living the Italian way' that has its humanistic roots in our great past and that today is an interpreter of the construction of a global and shared future".
In Australia Pompeii comes to life in an exhibition at the National Museum
With the support of the Italian Embassy