Scuola Di Pitagora
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Scuola Di Pitagora
''Scuola'' ('school' in Italian; plural ''scuole'') is part of the name of many primary and secondary schools in Italy, Italian-language schools abroad, and institutes of tertiary education in Italy. Those are not listed in this disambiguation article. It may also refer to: Associations * The Scuole Grandi of Venice, religious confraternities with art collections * The Scuole Piccole of Venice, religious confraternities Artistic movements * Scuola Romana Scuola romana or Scuola di via Cavour was a 20th-century art movement defined by a group of painters within Expressionism and active in Rome between 1928 and 1945, and with a second phase in the mid-1950s. Birth of the movement In November 192 ... or Scuola di via Cavour, a 20th-century art movement in Rome * Giovane scuola, a group of Italian composers of the late 19th and early 20th centuries Other * '' La scuola'', 1995 Italian film * CISL Scuola, Italian labor union for teachers {{disambiguation ...
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Scuole Grandi Of Venice
The Scuole Grandi (literally 'Great Schools', plural of ) were confraternity or sodality institutions in Venice, Italy. They were founded as early as the 13th century as charitable and religious organizations for the laity. These institutions had a key role in the history and development of music. The first groups of bowed instrument players named were born there in the early 16th century. Membership and responsibilities Unlike the trade guilds or the numerous , the Scuole Grandi included persons of many occupations, although citizenship was required. Unlike the rigidly aristocratic Venetian governmental Great Council of Venice, which for centuries only admitted a restricted number of noble families, membership in the Scuole Grandi was open to all citizens, and did not permit nobles to gain director roles. Citizens could include persons in the third generation of residency in the island republic, or persons who had paid taxes in Venice for fifteen years. The Scuole Grandi proved ...
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Scuole Piccole Of Venice
The Scuole Piccole of Venice are confraternities in the Republic of Venice. Unlike the more famous '' Scuole Grandi'', membership in them was not restricted to citizens and indeed some of them were formed specifically for foreigners. Most ''Scuole'', the ''scolae communes'', were devoted to a particular saint or devotional cult, but some, the ''scuole delle arti'', were associated with specific crafts or trade guild, and often obligatory for the members of that trade. The confraternities were officially divided into ''Piccole'' 'small' and ''Grandi'' 'great' in 1467. By the fall of the Republic, there were 925 ''scuole piccole''."The Scuole", ''The Churches of Venice''/ref> Almost all scuole, ''grandi'' and ''piccoli'', were suppressed by Eugène de Beauharnais, the Napoleonic Viceroy of Italy, in 1806–1807. Besides commissioning some artworks for their own meeting houses—though not on the scale of the ''Scuole Grandi''—many ''scuole'' also donated altarpiece An a ...
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Scuola Romana
Scuola romana or Scuola di via Cavour was a 20th-century art movement defined by a group of painters within Expressionism and active in Rome between 1928 and 1945, and with a second phase in the mid-1950s. Birth of the movement In November 1927, artists Antonietta Raphaël and Mario Mafai moved to No. 325 of Roman street ''Via Cavour, Rome, via Cavour'', in a Savoyan palace subsequently demolished in 1930 in order to allow the fascist construction of the ''New Empire Way'' (currently the via dei Fori Imperiali). The apartment's larger room was transformed into a studio. Within a short time, this studio became a meeting point for intellectual, literati such as :it:Enrico Falqui (scrittore), Enrico Falqui, Giuseppe Ungaretti, :it:Libero de Libero, Libero de Libero, Leonardo Sinisgalli, as well as young artists Scipione (Gino Bonichi), Scipione, Renato Marino Mazzacurati, and Corrado Cagli. Contraposition to the sensibility of the Return to Order Movement The spontaneous conflue ...
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Giovane Scuola
The giovane scuola ("young school") refers to a group of Italian composers (mostly operatic) who succeeded Verdi and flourished in the late 19th and early 20th century. The group all had close connections with the Milan Conservatory and included Puccini, Mascagni, Leoncavallo, Giordano, Cilea, Pietro Floridia, Catalani and Franchetti, as well as non-operatic composers such as Lorenzo Perosi, who wrote almost exclusively sacred music. Most of the operatic composers of the ''giovane scuola'' were also members of the verismo movement. Although they also wrote more mainstream operas, many of their works focused on "the rawness of life" and the effect of poverty on society, and were characterized by an emotional rhetoric influenced by Wagner and Massenet.Sadie (1992) p. 429 References *Budden, Julian (2002''Puccini: His Life and Works'' Oxford University Press. *Ciampa, Leonardo (2006). Don Lorenzo Perosi. *Fanelli, Jean Grundy (2004"Realism and the Giovane Scuola" ''Opera ...
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La Scuola
''La scuola'' (also known as ''School'') is a 1995 Italian comedy-drama film directed by Daniele Luchetti. It is loosely based on two books by Domenico Starnone, ''Ex Cattedra'' and ''Sottobanco''. The film was awarded with the David di Donatello for Best Film. Plot In a grammar school in the outskirts of Rome, it's the last day of school before the summer holidays. Professor Vivaldi, Italian literature teacher, before the end bitterly remembers what happened in that year and he wonders what will happen to those young students that he cared for as children from their first day of school. But they've paid him off in a somewhat offensive way, given that, as the professor has noted, today's youth are in most cases changed, drifters and without a sense of civic duty. Cast *Silvio Orlando: professor Vivaldi *Anna Galiena: professoressa Majello *Fabrizio Bentivoglio: professor Sperone *Antonio Petrocelli: professor Cirrotta *Anita Zagaria: professoressa Gana *Roberto Nobile: profess ...
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