Articolo da ri-leggere (con il link si raggiunge l’articolo originale) perchè i temi continuano ad essere dibattuti
Pubblicato su ArtNet da Jo Lawson-Tancred,
For many, Botticelli’s Venus embodies the Renaissance ideal of beauty, but have you ever wondered what that might look like today? Italy’s ministry of tourism has launched a campaign that reimagines the iconic figure as an influencer—and it has been swiftly ridiculed on social media.
“Hi there, everybody. My name is Venus,” the ad’s digitally altered protagonist announced on her Instagram. “But that’s something you probably already know. I’m 30, ok maybe just a wee bit more than that… And I am a virtual influencer. What does that mean? Well, I’ll take you with me on a journey around Italy to visit its most fantastic places and venues.”
The culture ministry’s undersecretary Vittorio Sgarbi, who is also an outspoken art critic, told conservative publication La Repubblica, “I don’t want to contradict my colleagues too much. But ‘Open to Wonder?’ What is that? What language is that?”
Other flaws in the campaign have been eagerly pointed out online, including its crude translations into foreign languages, like mistakenly referring to the town of Cento as Hundert (hundred) in German. Il Fatto Quotidiano even reported that the promotional video, intended as a celebration of Italian culture, uses stock footage filmed in Slovenia.
She also called into question the ethics of reappropriating a famous image from Botticelli’s Birth of Venus (c. 1485), which belongs to the Uffizi Gallery in Florence. While the museum has not commented, the city’s mayor Dario Nardella has weighed in: “We’re fighting against commercial exploitation that ridicules our artistic jewels, like the aprons showing the statue of David’s private parts or grotesque reproductions of works of art in stupid poses.”
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