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Family treasures

By Zhang Kun | China Daily Europe | Updated: 2017-10-27 08:17
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An ongoing exhibition offers a view of some of the world's greatest art and artifacts from the Renaissance years

Francesca Bellini could be seen strolling around a large hall in Shanghai in late September with a cloth in hand to wipe the 16th-century tables and cabinets being kept there as part of an exhibition.

The show, Miracle: The Bellini Family and the Renaissance, opened at Shanghai Himalayas Museum on Sept 28, with five exhibition halls designed to replicate wealthy Italian households during the period.

The exhibits, nearly 460 everyday objects and artworks, include original works by Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo and Raphael. The displayed items are from the private collection of the Bellini family and the Museo Ideale Leonardo da Vinci.

 

Miracle: The Bellini Family and the Renaissance features relics and artworks from the private collection of the Bellini family and the Museo Ideale Leonardo da Vinci.

 

The exhibition halls at the museum are designed to replicate wealthy Italian households during the Renaissance period. Exhibits include original creations by Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo and Raphael. Photos Provided to China Daily

The exhibition was popular during the National Day holiday week earlier this month, when visitors formed long lines to get a glimpse of the displayed items.

Francesca and her husband, Luigi Bellini, are the 21st generation of the Bellini family from Florence, Italy. Through six centuries, the family has put together a huge collection of antiques and artwork. This is the first time these pieces have been shown in China, where the halls have been decorated in the style of the family's sitting room, dining room, salon, prayer room and bedrooms. The family even brought five original door frames from Florence for the China show.

At the center of one of the exhibition halls, there is a large bed frame that once belonged to the Medici family. A villa was bought by his grandfather from the Medicis and the bed was from that estate, Luigi Bellini tells China Daily.

The Medici family were important patrons of great artists during the Renaissance, including Botticelli, Leonardo and Michelangelo. But the family declined in the 18th century, and many of the collected artworks had either scattered or were lost.

The Bellini family has managed to continue to develop its collection and has accumulated around 10,000 pieces through six centuries, Luigi Bellini says.

Shen Qibin, director of the Shanghai Himalayas Museum, worked with the Bellinis as co-curator of the exhibition. To best represent the glory of the Renaissance, Shen has used virtual reality technology to re-create the domed roof of the Museo Ideale Leonardo da Vinci.

The Bellini family's heritage could be a source of inspiration for modern wealthy Chinese who collect art.

And in this regard, the Himalayas Museum hopes to establish a long-term cooperation with the Bellinis, says Shen.

"The Bellini family's collection will tour other cities of China, too" he says.

The tour will seek to introduce the family to a wider section of Chinese society.

"We want to promote the core idea of the Renaissance," Shen says. "Contemporary China shares a lot in common with the Renaissance period in Italy. Although this is an exhibition largely focused on antique artworks, it is highly relevant to today's China. That's why we decided to have the exhibition in the country."

The museum in Vinci, Leonardo's birthplace in Florence, has been dedicated to research and study of the artist for a long time. It has brought to the exhibition in Shanghai a 1.11-meter-tall sandstone sculpture by Michelangelo, Arrotino Lanfranchi, depicting a kneeling man sharpening his knife. Also among the artworks on display in Shanghai are original paintings by Raphael and Leonardo, as well as works by other important artists during the Renaissance.

The exhibition also includes a series of later artworks inspired by the Mona Lisa, from a copy of the masterpiece dating to the 16th century, to the creations of more modern artists such as Marcel Duchamp, Andy Warhol and Salvador Dali.

Alessandro Vezzosi, director of the Museo Ideale Leonardo da Vinci, says this section presents Leonardo and his masterpiece in the perspective of artistic history.

Additionally, Vezzosi has brought to the exhibition prints, publications and physical models made after Leonardo's designs, to show the "great man of the Renaissance" not only as an artist, but also as an engineer, inventor, scientist and architect.

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(China Daily European Weekly 10/27/2017 page11)

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