Difference between revisions of "Villa Bartolomei Museum Collection"
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Villa Bartolomei is a two-storey building with a preserved Late Baroque exterior, which is especially obvious from the northern façade: the central axis is accentuated by a massive stone portal on the ground floor and a balcony on the first floor. In 1980 the building, damaged by the 1976 earthquake, was allocated to the Goriška Museum to arrange a collection of recent history there. One year later the interior was renovated according to plans by architect Bogdan Mikuž and converted into museum exhibition rooms. | Villa Bartolomei is a two-storey building with a preserved Late Baroque exterior, which is especially obvious from the northern façade: the central axis is accentuated by a massive stone portal on the ground floor and a balcony on the first floor. In 1980 the building, damaged by the 1976 earthquake, was allocated to the Goriška Museum to arrange a collection of recent history there. One year later the interior was renovated according to plans by architect Bogdan Mikuž and converted into museum exhibition rooms. | ||
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Revision as of 22:07, 27 November 2009
Villa Bartolomei features the permanent historic exhibition 'Goriška between 1918 and 1947', which comprises a multitude of documents, artefacts and photographs illustrating the period when the region belonged to Italy (1918-1943), the Second World War and the liberation struggle in Goriška (1941-1945), and the conditions under the allied military administration and the Yugoslav Army (1945-1947).
The museum exhibition is enhanced by a documentary film entitled Usode črnega neba ('Destinies of the Dark Sky') and an art exhibition which illustrates the cultural history of the period.