until 26 November some galleries are closed for set-ups; please can find here the ongoing exhibitions
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for young people aged between 18 and 25 (not yet turned 25);
for groups of 15 people or more; registered journalists with a valid ID card; La Galleria Nazionale, Museo Ebraico di Roma ticket holders; upon presentation of ID card or badge: Accademia Costume & Moda, Accademia Fotografica, Biblioteche di Roma, Centro Sperimentale di Cinematografia, Enel (for badge holder and accompanying person), FAI – Fondo Ambiente Italiano, Feltrinelli, IN/ARCH – Istituto Nazionale di Architettura, Sapienza Università di Roma, LAZIOcrea, Palazzo delle Esposizioni, Amici di Palazzo Strozzi, Accademia Nazionale di Santa Cecilia, Scuola Internazionale di Comics, Teatro Olimpico, Teatro dell’Opera di Roma, Teatro di Roma, Università degli Studi di Roma Tor Vergata, Youthcard
valid for one year from the date of purchase
minors under 18 years of age; disabled people requiring companion; EU Disability Card holders and accompanying person; MiC employees; European Union tour guides and tour guides, licensed (ref. Circular n.20/2016 DG-Museums); 1 teacher for every 10 students; AMACI members; CIMAM – International Committee for Museums and Collections of Modern Art members; ICOM members; journalists (who can prove their business activity); myMAXXI membership cardholders; European Union students and university researchers in art history and architecture, public fine arts academies (AFAM registered) students and Temple University Rome Campus students from Tuesday to Friday (excluding holidays); IED – Istituto Europeo di Design professors, NABA – Nuova Accademia di Belle Arti professors, RUFA – Rome University of Fine Arts professors; upon presentation of ID card or badge: Collezione Peggy Guggenheim a Venezia, Castello di Rivoli Museo d’Arte Contemporanea, Sotheby’s Preferred, MEP – Maison Européenne de la Photographie; on your birthday presenting an identity document
MAXXI’s Collection of Art and Architecture represents the founding element of the museum and defines its identity. Since October 2015, it has been on display with different arrangements of works.
23 Nov 2024 05.00 pm
MAXXI with the familyDi Spazio in SpazioDIVENTO SPAZIO
24 Nov 2024 05.00 pm
MAXXI with the familyDi Spazio in SpazioDIVENTO SPAZIO
27 Nov 2024 06.00 pm
books at MAXXITanti Auguri. 70 anni di tv 100 anni di radioby Marco Carrara
The Histories of Art, a series of seminars on the history of contemporary art from 1960 to 2010, organised on the basis of chronological and thematic issues from the last 40 years’ research is returning to MAXXI.
In the eight seminars, gallerists, curators, art critics and university lecturers will be discussing theoretical issues in order to offer the museum public further instruments for reading and understanding contemporary art, criticism and its system from the Neo-Avant-Garde to Conceptualism, from Post-Modernism to the art of the new millennium.
Not simply lectures on contemporary art, but the stories by those protagonists who with extraordinary exhibitions have marked the history of Italian contemporary art.
Second appointment:
I’ll tell you about an exhibition: Fabio Sargentini and Fuoco Immagine Acqua Terra
Saturday 19 November, 11.30 – 13.00
MAXXI Auditorium
admittance €4 – free* for holders of the my MAXXI membership card?(*while places are available, tickets to be collected by 11.15 on the day of the event)
When, where and how was Arte Povera born? Popular opinion says it was in Turin, but Fabio Sargentini once again claims that the exhibition Fuoco Immagine Acqua Terra (Fire Image Water Earth) held in the Rome gallery L’Attico in the June of 1967 anticipated the first Arte Povera exhibition at La Bertesca in Genoa in October that year. There is no doubt that the term Are Povera was coined by Germano Celant, but it was “Mediterranean” Rome, represented by Pascali and Kounellis, L’Attico’s shining stars, who offered him a prompt on a silver platter.
Fabio Sargentini, the Italian gallerist, actor, director and writer is known above all as the avant-garde gallerist and deus ex machina of L’Attico gallery in Rome that in 2007 celebrated its 50th anniversary. He has made a fundamental contribution to the Italian and international art scene, both through the promotion of artists such as Pino Pascali, Jannis Kounellis, Gion De Dominicis, Luigi Ontani and many others and for having with his gallery helped break down artistic confines by dealing not only with the visual arts but also theatre, music and dance.
Forthcoming events:
11.30 – 13.00
17 December 2011 | Francesco Poli
21 January 2012 | Achille Bonito Oliva
18 February 2012 | Angela Vettese
17 March 2012 | Germano Celant
21 April 2012 | Laura Cherubini
19 May 2012 | Laura Cherubini