With more than 1500 museums and art galleries holding almost half of the world’s greatest art and culture heritage, Italy is home to the finest museums in the world, from Florence’s Uffizi to the Vatican Museums in Rome. What may be less well known – except among car enthusiasts – is that Italy is also the home of many of the world’s greatest automotive museums and this northern summer they and many of their non-motoring counterparts are joining forces to celebrate 110 years of Italy producing the most stylish and acclaimed cars in the world.
Until October 31 not only will there be co-ordinated displays across Italy, some private Museums will be open to the public – including the largest collection of Maseratis in the world – and there will be special prices for visits to more than one of the participating museums.
Under the banner of “L’Automobile Italiana” (The Italian Automobile), the nationwide series of exhibitions will attract car lovers from around the world and will run throughout the northern summer.
Italian cars are international symbols of style, class, elegance, technology and performance, and 'L’Automobile Italiana' brings together the great iconic Italian marques as part of a voyage of discovery of the most exclusive products of Italian ingenuity between 1899, the year in which Fiat was founded, and the present day.
The exhibition illustrates the extent to which the automobile has changed our way of life and customs at various turning points in history, and the influence of creative thought and the economy on the evolution of the cars themselves. It holds a mirror up to an entire era, revealing the advertisements, the aspirations, the sense of freedom and escape, and scientific application involved. This is the story of an entire century told by looking at the car, which probably more than anything else has characterised its direction and fuelled the dreams of every strata of society.
In its role as official Ferrari museum and home to Maranello’s permanent single-seater and GT collections, the Galleria Ferrari has for the occasion decided to pay special homage to such technological masterpieces as the 1907 FIAT 130 HP, the 1954 Lancia Aurelia B 24, the 1938 Alfa Romeo 8C 2900 B and the 1948 Maserati A6 1500 as well staging the “110 Years of the World’s Most Beautiful Cars” exhibition of photography with original film clips produced by the various marques.
The Galleria Ferrari is taking part in the exhibition in collaboration with other prestige collections which include: the Museo dell’Automobile di Torino at the Turin Esposizioni centre, the Collezione Umberto Panini at Corlo di Formigine (just a few kilometres outside Modena), the Museo Nicolis dell’Auto, della Tecnica, della Meccanica at Villafranca near Verona, and the Centro Storico Fiat, home to the designs and actual vehicles (destined for air, sea and land) produced by the renowned multi-faceted Italian company over the years. Other museums across Italy will include special “L’Automobile Italiana” presentations within their normal displays.
Until October 31, visitors will enjoy reduced entry fees at the other museums involved in the exhibition when they produce the ticket purchased at the first one they visit. Most importantly of all, they will be able to book very special visits to two private collections: the Collezione Umberto Panini, which houses one of the most complete collections of Maseratis in the world, and the Centro Storico Fiat, which opened in 1963 and is based in the first extension made to the workshops on Corso Dante in Turin, where Fiat began life.
Friday, May 29, 2009
Cars go on display throughout Italy
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Sunday, May 24, 2009
VIDEO: Singapore revisited 2009
In this travel video we visit Clarkes Quay precinct at nighttime, Singapore's National Orchid Garden, Sentosa Island and finally enjoy a Singapore Sling at Raffles Hotel. These scenes were shot during a two night stopover in Singapore (enroute to Europe). We stayed at Peninsula Excelsior Hotel, which is centrally located in Singapore's attractions.
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Labels: orchids, peninsula excelsior, raffles hotel, sentosa island, singapore, travel video
Thursday, May 21, 2009
Pandaw arrives for Ganges River cruises
Pandaw River Cruises’ 28-stateroom Bengal Pandaw has arrived for her new life on the Ganges River, after more adventures than her owners had in mind ahead of a career promising “one the greatest river journeys in the world.”
Scheduled to leave Burma for Calcutta last month, a tug sent to pick up the luxury vessel in Rangoon ran into a cyclone on the India coast and had to seek refuge until the storm abated; when a second attempt was made to cross to Rangoon, the tug broke down and had to limp home again for repairs.
And after finally making Rangoon on the third attempt, coming back across the Bay of Bengal a monsoonal storm hit tug and Pandaw, and they didn’t reach the safety of India’s Hugli River (a tributary of the Ganges) until May 15.
“The last time a Pandaw river boat crossed the Bay of Bengal was ninety-odd years ago when a number were sent to support allied troops on the Tigris River during the First World War,” a spokesman said. “But several were lost in a monsoonal storm on the Bay, which probably explains why we couldn’t get insurance for our tow this year!”
After storm repairs and a refit, Bengal Pandaw will begin spectacular 14-night sailings in September from Calcutta to Varanasi in the upper reaches of the Ganges, a luxury experience of over 1600 kilometres via a near-dozen ports.
For full details of her itinerary, daily sightseeing and prices for just 28 pampered couples, see travel agents, phone Pandaw Australia (02) 8080 5622, email jlbati@ozemail.com.au or visit www.pandaw.com
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Labels: Bengal, Calcutta, Ganges, India, Pandaw, river cruises
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
PODCAST: Around the World #19-09
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CRN (Australia) broadcast date: 13 May, 2009
John Crook starts the show with his regular wine and dine report and this week highlights a good Aussie ‘drop’, Rothwell Midara Cab Sauv. Our Euro correspondent Frances Beasley has just returned from a holiday in East Africa and reports on a visit to a Kenyan garden. US-based co-host Arthur von Wiesenberger reviews the ever-popular tourist park, Universal Studios, Hollywood. Capping off the program, John Crook interviews fellow Australian Kiri Bryan about her impressions of Vietnam.
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Wednesday, May 6, 2009
PODCAST: Around the World #18-09
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CRN (Australia) broadcast date: 6 May, 2009
Aussie reporter John Crook meets and chats with Rodney Twiss who has restored some 20 heritage listed buildings in Adelaide (South Australia). We then learn all about the Kwale Eye Centre in Kenya, Africa from roving reporter Frances Beasley. Our US team, Buddy Winston an Richard Mineards chat (from the studio in Santa Barbara) with Kent St John who has recently travelled through the Champagne district in France. The final segment features John Crook interviewing a former Australian Football star and Adelaide based architect, Ian Shorty Hannaford, who has an interesting story or two to tell.
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Labels: Adelaide, africa, champagne, france, Kenya, Kwale Eye Centre, Rodney Twiss



