Touring - Piemonte Feel

Handicraft

Knowledgeable hands, meticulous patience while transforming the most diverse materials into valuable creations, have contributed to giving Piemonte craftsmen the seal, “Piemonte Eccellenza Artigiana”. It is recognition of the ability of humans, which is also safeguarding ancient traditions, a precious heritage that should be protected, oftentimes handed down from father to son, from generation to generation.

handicraft

Gignese is a little town nestled in the green countryside next to Lago Maggiore. Here there is an Umbrella Museum where more than 1500 examples of parasols for strolling and vacation time as well as umbrellas embroidered on hand-made staffs by craftspeople in the Piedmont tradition. Even the floor plan of this environmental museum is curious. It suggests three open umbrellas placed side by side. Not far away is the Isola Madre, the site of the Palazzo Borromeo inside of whose preciously decorated salons you can find an artistic marionette museum that conserves puppets and dolls from the 1700s and 1800s. Music lovers should visit Quarta, where clarinets, flutes, and saxophones are made out of brass, wood, or metal, depending on the families of the craftspeople involved and the work techniques employed. A little way off in Novara Province lies Pettenasco, where you can breathe an old-time atmosphere. There is a former water mill where a collection of antique hand-made wooden products for daily use has been set up. There are peppermills, rings and supports for curtains, bowls, seats, and mannequins.

handicraft

If it is true that “gentlemen prefer blondes,” it is also true that “diamonds are a girl’s best friend,” as Marilyn Monroe and Jane Russell remind us in the Howard Hawks film. This is a perfect motto for Valenza, where emeralds, rubies, aquamarines, topazes, pearls and diamonds enhance the value of rings, necklaces, bracelets, and pins – all these made by hand with almost surgical perfection. People who prefer objects from material culture to luxury items can pay a visit to Cisterna d’Asti, where there are several handicraft slipper makers who have continued to make wooden clogs, the traditional footwear of Piedmont’s farmers.
Lanzo, on the other hand, is noted as the city of magnin, the tin smiths who make pots and casserole dishes new again. Castellamonte is the city of stoves. There are stoves everywhere – on balconies, terraces, or in church. You can admire the traditional handicraft work in terracotta, extracted from the numerous clay pits in the area. Mondovì is an important centre for ceramics production. It is here, also, where the City Printing Museum holds the first book printed in Piedmont with moveable type, "De Institutiones confessorum” published in 1472.

 

 






Places

Abbazia di Novalesa

Near the monastery, there are four chapels dedicated to Saint Mary, Saint Salvador, Saint Michael, and the most important one to Saint Eldrado which has two splendid fresco cycles (from the late 11th century) narrating moments from the lives of Saint Eldrado and Saint Nicholas.

Biblioteca Reale di Torino

The Biblioteca Reale (Royal Library) houses important collections of manuscripts, illuminated manuscripts, and engravings. Besides its 2,000 drawings, it has several drawings by Leonard Da Vinci, among which are: the Self-Portrait, the Volto dell’Angelo (the Angel’s Face), the preliminary drawing for the Vergine delle Rocce (Virgin of the Rocks), and the Codice sul Volo (Codex on the Flight of Birds).

Palaisozaki

It is the new Torino Olympic Palasport (Sports Arena) designed by the Japanese architect Arata Isozaki for the Winter Olympics in Torino 2006. A multi-functional space, versatile and flexible which, thanks to the mobility of its platform, can turn from an ice rink into a concert, show, or convention venue.



People

Bruno Gambarotta

Bruno Gambarotta

"For the people of Torino, I was a ‘pacu’, a little peasant…I came from Asti where my father was a typesetter. After the flood of 1949, we moved to Torino. I only spoke the dialect from Asti and I wore zouave-style pants. I got back at them by becoming the best student in class".

Ugo Gregoretti

“The first time was in 1948: I was riding a bicycle across one of those piazzas that look like a De Chirico painting. Since then Torino became a steady…everyone here is so nice. And then, I’ll be honest, my most precious friends live along the Po.”

Morgan

“I know Torino very well…it has learned to convert the ruins of its industrial past into green areas and places dedicated to culture. This is a positive fact. I only hope it will be capable of maintaining its proletarian outline.”