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Showing posts with label Fungo Building. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fungo Building. Show all posts
Saturday, May 19, 2012
Sculpture at EUR: but leave the kids at home!
RST discovered this curious piece of public sculpture while on our way to the Fungo, a space-needle-like tower in EUR. We don't pretend to have figured it out. The woman in the center is lacking an arm--or, more precisely, she has two arms but the left one is wedged under the right one, the work of the sculptor (if so, more than odd) or vandals.
At her feet, on its back, is something out of Rosemary's Baby: it appears to have little devil ears and the lower half of its body trails off, placenta-like. Maybe the one-armed maid had just given birth to this little monster.
But maybe not. The man is front of her is all blustery violence, ax-like weapon in hand. He might have just killed the child--and cut off its mother's arm--making her scene one of personal trauma and maternal tragedy.
At the other end (left), images of horrific confinement for both genders; everyone's boxed up or dominated. Looks like a woman, with a fetus in her womb, is being ridden by George Washington.
There's no plaque to identify the work, and the sculptor's name doesn't appear on it, that we could find. It was probably made and installed around the time when the nearby Fungo was built: the late 1950s. (See an earlier post on the Fungo itself - worth a glance.)
Zealots of artistic interpretation can find this piece across from Pier Luigi Nervi's Palazzo dello Sport in EUR (right, the Palazzo in the background). It's on the west fork of Via Cristoforo Colombo, about halfway betweeen the lake and il Fungo.
Let us know your morbid thoughts.
Bill
Sunday, March 4, 2012
Il Fungo: Rome's Mid-Century Modern Architecture
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Il Fungo, in the distance, center, from Via Cavalcanti |
So we took the Metro to EUR, got off at the Marconi stop and walked south on the west (right) fork of Via Cristoforo Colombo, crossing the Laghetto (little lake) and on about 1/4 mile, up a small hill to the right, to Piazza Pakistan, the site of Il Fungo. Note the Fungo is on the EUR itinerary in our new book, Modern Rome: 4 Great Walks for the Curious Traveler. More information on the book is at the end of this post
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The Fungo, c. 1960 |
Il Fungo, as it looks today |
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Seattle's Space Needle (1962) |
The original restaurant, owned for a time by the tenor Mario di Monaco, closed in the late 1970s or early 1980s, and the building went into disrepair. The decline was arrested about a decade later, when a new restaurant opened and repairs and changes were made, including the repositioning of the windows, which in the original version had tilted outward from top to bottom and in the 1990 incarnation tilt inward to more easily shed rain water.
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Top of the Fungo |
At least two films of significance utilize the Fungo. Michelango Antonioni's black and white drama L'Eclisse (The Eclipse) [1962], presents the Fungo as a symbol of alienation (a big theme in Italian films of that era). The film begins with Vittoria (Monica Vitti), having concluded her relationship with Riccardo, looking from an apartment to find succor in the landscape, but seeing, instead, the Fungo, a product a mechanistic modernism, even, perhaps, in its shape, symbolic of the threat of nuclear disaster.
Il Fungo appears again in Adulterio all'Italiana (Adultery Italian Style), a 1966 film starring Nino Manfredi and Catherine Spaak. This clip from YouTube includes a scene filmed at the restaurant (scroll through to about the 6-minute mark) and another, on ground level (at about 8 minutes).
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Banca di Roma uses Fungo for advertising |
Although the original Fungo was not, we think, designed to support advertising (though we're not sure about that), it was inevitable that some company would want its name up there.
It's sad, but perhaps not as sad as what happened to the E. Clem Wilson building at Wilshire and La Brea in Los Angeles. Completed in 1930, the Wilson building was used as the Daily Planet on the first television production of Superman
(1951-). That building, too, fell victim to advertisers, and now sports a particularly ugly version of the Samsung name.
On a lighter note, we enjoyed our expedition to one of Rome's more unusual buildings. Although we haven't yet tried the restaurant on top, we did have beers and sandwiches at an outdoor table on the ground floor, served by a lunch place inside.
Great views looking up at Il Fungo. Thanks, M.
Bill
For more of EUR, see our new print AND eBook, Modern Rome: 4 Great Walks for the
Curious Traveler. Modern Rome features
tours of the "garden" suburb of Garbatella; the 20th-century suburb
of EUR, designed by the Fascists; the 21st-century music and art center of
Flaminio, along with Mussolini's Foro Italico, also the site of the 1960 summer
Olympics; and a stairways walk in Trastevere.
This 4-walk book is
available in all print and eBook formats The eBook is $1.99 through amazon.com and all other eBook
sellers. See the various formats at smashwords.com.
Modern Rome: 4 Great Walks for the Curious Traveler now is also available in print, at amazon.com, Barnes and Noble, independent bookstores, and other retailers; retail price $5.99.
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