Studying at the University of Verona

Here you can find information on the organisational aspects of the Programme, lecture timetables, learning activities and useful contact details for your time at the University, from enrolment to graduation.

Type D and Type F activities

CuCi 1 A From 9/23/24 To 10/31/24
years Modules TAF Teacher
1° 2° “Crisis of Democracy? Dialogues on the world to come” (second edition). Cycle of public lectures F Giovanni Bernardini (Coordinator)
1° 2° Gino Tellini (emeritus, University of Florence): A recent edition of all the short stories by Aldo Palazzeschi F Fabio Danelon (Coordinator)
1° 2° Study seminar (PRIN 2022) "Carte Tommaseo on-line" F Fabio Danelon (Coordinator)
CuCi 1 B From 11/11/24 To 12/21/24
years Modules TAF Teacher
1° 2° “Crisis of Democracy? Dialogues on the world to come” (second edition). Cycle of public lectures F Giovanni Bernardini (Coordinator)
1° 2° Molestie sessuali in ambito universitario. Un approccio multidisciplinare e intersezionale alla prevenzione D Stefano Porru
CuCi 2 A From 2/17/25 To 3/29/25
years Modules TAF Teacher
1° 2° Tourism laboratory - Data collection F Emanuela Bullado (Coordinator)
1° 2° Tourism laboratory - Reporting F Emanuela Bullado (Coordinator)
1° 2° Mapping GIS F Fabio Saggioro (Coordinator)
1° 2° Workshop on the eighteenth and the landascape of Valpolicella F Fabio Saggioro (Coordinator)
1° 2° The Orbetto before Rome F Giorgio Fossaluzza (Coordinator)
1° 2° Pillole di sostenibilità F Matteo Nicolini (Coordinator)
1° 2° Tourism laboratory - GIS mapping F Emanuela Bullado (Coordinator)
CuCi 2 B From 4/7/25 To 5/31/25
years Modules TAF Teacher
1° 2° Tourism laboratory - Data collection F Emanuela Bullado (Coordinator)
1° 2° Tourism laboratory - Reporting F Emanuela Bullado (Coordinator)
1° 2° Mapping GIS F Fabio Saggioro (Coordinator)
1° 2° Workshop on the eighteenth and the landascape of Valpolicella F Fabio Saggioro (Coordinator)
1° 2° The Orbetto before Rome F Giorgio Fossaluzza (Coordinator)
1° 2° Pillole di sostenibilità F Matteo Nicolini (Coordinator)
1° 2° Tourism laboratory - GIS mapping F Emanuela Bullado (Coordinator)
List of courses with unassigned period
years Modules TAF Teacher
1° 2° Attendance at the final meeting of the FSE VeneToAll project - Implementation of a digital supply chain for the multimedia promotion of the Veneto cultural heritage F Paolo Pellegrini (Coordinator)

Teaching code

4S012457

Credits

6

Language

Italian

Scientific Disciplinary Sector (SSD)

L-ART/02 - HISTORY OF MODERN ART

Period

CuCi 1 A, CuCi 1 B

Courses Single

Authorized

Learning objectives

Provide a framework of advanced knowledge on the study methods and characteristics of artistic heritage, also in relation to its impact on tourism systems. The course involves the examination of local cases illustrating valorization processes and could be divided into chronological modules.

Prerequisites and basic notions

No specific prerequisites are required

Program

Propaedeutic aspect It provides a brief introduction to the founding moments of Italian and European artistic civilization: the periodization and the identification of the fundamental characteristics. The lessons will provide the basis and indications for selecting the essential information in the recommended manuals. In particular, students who have not studied historical-artistic disciplines in their study curriculum are taken into account. Essential propaedeutic contents. The great moments, centers and places of Italian and European artistic civilization. 1_The Romanesque. 2_The Gothic and the “international” Gothic. 3_The Italian Renaissance and the Renaissance of Northern Europe. Aspects of originality and interfering aspects. 4_The art of the sixteenth century and the religious reforms: new forms, new historical-cultural geography. 5_Italian Modern Manner, Mannerism, International Mannerism. 6_Between the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries: Carracci and Caravaggio, presence, declinations and European interpretations. 7_Italian Baroque and Baroque on the European quadrant: the protagonists. The “Palladian” alternative for the English world. 8_The Rococo: the Versailles model and the manifestations of the great European courts. European tours of artists and cultural “globalization”. 9_Neoclassicism as a European phenomenon. Enlightenment assumptions, philosophical principles and aesthetic canons. The protagonists in Europe. The symbolic and political function of the museums of the capitals between the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Program contents Multidisciplinary and “practical” aspect. How to observe, “narrate” and cultivate the attraction of the historical and artistic heritage stratified over the centuries, particularly in the tourist experience. The places of art: urban and territorial itineraries, accessibility and the methods of the tourist offer in progress or planned. Examples especially in the context of the “proximate” territoriality (Verona, the Vernese and the Veneto), and projects in progress and in fieri for an international tourism. 1_ Observing the city as a widespread museum and accessibility. Examples (starting from Verona), and study visits. a_The square, the centers of "power". The palaces and the urban fabric: the emblematic places of residence under the public/private aspect. The gardens as an art form. The painted city. Original historical aspects and changes in function, ordinary and extraordinary accessibility. b_ The cathedral, the churches, monastic and conventual settlements, the oratories, the lay schools. Liturgical function and accessibility c_ Theaters, places of entertainment, the historical, artistic and social value. Examples. d_ The civic museums, origins and their "constellation". The collections: from private to public. Initiatives: educational, temporary, exhibitions and tourist flows, access methods. c_ Other places of civil life and their values, accessibility to tourist demand. 2_ The territories: the landscape (basic concepts), the "contexts" of the widespread cultural and historical-artistic heritage. Center and periphery, basic concepts in artistic historiography regarding the circularity of artistic phenomena. a_The centers and the "peripheral" places. The small urban centers, the "quasi-cities", the villages. b_ diversified typologies of settlements in the countryside, aggregated and independent in regional and territorial conformations. The courtyards, the granges. Rustic buildings: qualification and protection of the landscape. Agricultural architecture. Typologies. c_The villas. The Venetian villa, the Palladian villa. Historical assumptions, transformations in the government of the territory of the Venetian State in the sixteenth century, organizational and construction typologies. The Venetian villa as a widespread museum. d_The churches, the country churches. Territorial itineraries and thematic itineraries. Examples: the frescoed churches, the masters of painting in the territories, etc. c_The sanctuaries. Accessibility and its modalities. Devotional aspect, the pilgrimage. Seasonal festivals as an opportunity for tourist visits. Tourist interest and the organization of the visit to the sanctuary and the annexed convent and monastic centers. d_ The valley: identity and place of convergence of experiences, historical and artistic events as a widespread museum and planning of temporary and permanent itineraries. e_ The artistic heritage and the tourist offer during seasonal stays in holiday resorts. Seasonal events, for example musical or cultural in the broad sense, concomitant accessibility to the artistic heritage. f_ how to plan and implement an itinerary, a guide and act as a guide.

Bibliography

Visualizza la bibliografia con Leganto, strumento che il Sistema Bibliotecario mette a disposizione per recuperare i testi in programma d'esame in modo semplice e innovativo.

Didactic methods

Frontal lessons with scheduled interventions by students on agreed topics of study. Study visits.

Learning assessment procedures

The exclusively written test lasting four hours includes 5 open questions, drawn at each exam session, relating to the points of the program. Within the program, the student must choose three in-depth topics to be covered in the form of an itinerary or planning of a tourist offer. These topics will be agreed upon in advance with the teacher, preferably during the lessons. They are to be addressed in the written test and constitute an extension of what was covered in class; they will be based on bibliographic research or on websites to be agreed upon with the teacher. For their organizational convenience, students, instead of taking the exam in a single exam session, can divide it into multiple exam sessions (three in total, other subdivisions must be agreed upon in advance), regularly registering for each of them. In this case, the final grade will be the average of the grade obtained in the partial tests. Those who opt for the exam subdivision must respect the sequence of topics as formulated in the course program.

Students with disabilities or specific learning disorders (SLD), who intend to request the adaptation of the exam, must follow the instructions given HERE

Evaluation criteria

The ability to acquire the preparatory notions, to formulate an autonomous discourse on problems and themes covered in the question and on design aspects based on the examples covered during the course will be assessed.

Criteria for the composition of the final grade

The final exam can be divided into several modules, each of which will be assigned a partial grade. The average of the partial grades assigned to each exam will result in the final grade recorded in the student's transcript.

Exam language

italiano