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LIFE BIENNIAL BEYOND ® PUBBLICATION EVENTS 2014 - 2016

MEETING THE WORLD IN Centro Congressi al Duomo ® Events

Director | Direttore Carlotta Del Bianco

Coordinator | Responsabile Michaela Žáčková Rossi

Organizing Secretariat | Segreteria Organizzativa Stefania Macrì Eleonora Catalano Zdenka Skorunkova Dati Chika Arai

Publication edited by | Pubblicazione a cura di Centro Congressi al Duomo: Life Beyond Tourism® Events

With the collaboration of | Con la collaborazione di Centro Congressi al Duomo: Laurus al Duomo Hotel Pitti Palace al

Design and layout | Progetto grafico e impaginazione Corinna Del Bianco Maria Paz Soffia

Contents | Contenuti Life Beyond Tourism® Events

Abstracts texts have been sent to Life Beyond Tourism® Events by the Project Leaders of each conference and workshop – promoted by the Fondazione Romualdo Del Bianco® of Florence.

I testi degli abstract di convegni e workshop – promossi dalla Fondazione Romualdo Del Bianco® – sono stati forniti a Life Beyond Tourism® Events dai Project Leader degli stessi eventi.

Translation | Traduzione Eleonora Catalano

Masso delle Fate Edizioni Via Cavalcanti 9/D - 50058 Signa (FI) ©Fondazione Romualdo Del Bianco® - Life Beyond Tourism® Masso delle Fate Edizioni

ISBN LIFE BIENNIAL BEYOND TOURISM® PUBBLICATION EVENTS 2014 - 2016

Our ability to reach unity in diversity will be the perfect present for the test oF our civilization MAHATMA GANDHI Welcome to Florence!

In order to offer the travellers support to their Florence, a personal and professional Florentine journey, the Centro Congressi al Duomo has established an event planning section called Life Beyond Tourism® city frozen in Events, which for years has been organizing in Florence international and intercultural events. time The team of the Organizing Secretariat develops and embodies the ideas of its customers, providing them with all the necessary resources to create unique events, enhancing the intercultural aspect of the proposed activities, in favour of dialogue Florence is known worldwide for its history, between cultures. beautiful scenery and cuisine. It offers everyday Experts, professors, researchers, students and new ideas and points of view, and sometimes the artists from all around the world every year realise traveller could be disoriented by the vastness of and take part in conferences, workshops and the possibilities that this city presents, and might exhibitions, becoming part of an international have trouble living the local reality in its many community open to dialogue and mutual facets. understanding. The Centro Congressi al Duomo of Florence, This publication therefore represents a path to promote within Florence to its fullest, leading to the Florentine heart of interculturalism makes available its facilities, which include the and dialogue, through the events realised by Life and the Hotel Pitti Palace Beyond Tourism® Events in the academic years al Ponte Vecchio, aiming to give to its guests not 2014-2016. only “”, but also opportunities for interaction and exchange between different cultures, following the philosophy “Life Beyond Enjoy you journey! Tourism®”. Al fine di accompagnare il viaggiatore nel suo Firenze, una percorso personale e professionale alla scoperta della città, il Centro Congressi al Duomo ha istituito anche un ufficio eventi, Life Beyond citta sospesa Tourism® Events, che da anni realizza a Firenze iniziative scientifiche internazionali e interculturali. nel tempo Il team della segreteria organizzativa sviluppa e concretizza le idee dei suoi clienti, mettendo a loro disposizione tutte le risorse necessarie per dar vita a eventi unici, valorizzando l’aspetto interculturale delle attività proposte, in favore del Firenze è conosciuta in tutto il mondo per le sue dialogo tra culture. Esperti, docenti, ricercatori, bellezze storiche, paesaggistiche e culinarie. Offre studenti e artisti, provenienti da ogni parte del quotidianamente stimoli e nuovi punti di vista e mondo, ogni anno realizzano e prendono così a volte il viaggiatore potrebbe essere disorientato parte a convegni, workshop e mostre, entrando a dalla vastità delle possibilità che questa città far parte di una comunità aperta al dialogo e alla presenta e potrebbe avere difficoltà a vivere la comprensione reciproca. realtà locale nelle sue varie sfaccettature. Questo volume rappresenta quindi un percorso Il Centro Congressi al Duomo di Firenze, per nella Firenze dell’ interculturalità e del confronto, promuovere il viaggio all’interno di Firenze a 360 attraverso gli eventi realizzati da Life Beyond gradi, mette a disposizione le sue strutture, di cui Tourism® Events negli anni accademici 2014- fanno parte anche l’Hotel Laurus al Duomo e 2016. l’Hotel Pitti Palace al Ponte Vecchio, in modo da offrire al suo ospite non solo camera e colazione, ma anche occasioni di incontro e confronto tra Vi auguriamo culture diverse, seguendo la sua filosofia “Life Beyond Tourism®”. un buon viaggio!

2014 - 2016 CONFERENCES

International meetings in Florence, by which professors, researchers and scholars from all over the globe may meet and exchange knowledge in order to contribute to the development of intercultural dialogue in the world. COSTUME COLLOQUIUM IV COLORS IN FASHION 01 November 2014

TIME AND PLACE IN T. S. ELIOT AND HIS CONTEMPORARIES 02 January 2015

“HOW TO ASSESS BUILT HERITAGE?” ASSUMPTIONS, METHODOLOGIES, EXAMPLES OF HERITAGE ASSESSMENT SYSTEMS 03 March 2015

APPLICATION OF 3D NEUTRON: IMAGING & TOMOGRAPHY IN RESEARCH 04 April 2015

EVERYDAY LIFE IN THE 21ST CENTURY 05 July 2015

7TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CONTEMPORARY PROBLEMS OF ARCHITECTURE 06 AND CONSTRUCTION November 2015

PROGRESS IN APPLIED SURFACE, INTERFACE AND THIN FILM SCIENCE SOLAR RENEWABLE 07 ENERGY NEWS (SURFINT - SREN IV) November 2015

DRAFTING GUIDELINES FOR HERITAGE MANAGEMENT OF ARCHEOLOGICAL WORLD 08 HERITAGE SITES November 2015 ARCHITECTURE OF THE TURKISH COUNTRIES: HISTORY AND PRESENT 09 December 2015

DIALOGUE AMONG CULTURES. CARNIVALS IN THE WORLDS 10 February 2016

JAPANESE LEGACY II 11 February 2016

URBAN COMMUNICATION FOR A QUALIFIED IN HISTORICAL CITIES: EXPERIENCES OF URBAN SIGNAGE 12 March 2016

MODERN HERITAGE - IDENTIFYING, ASSESSING AND MANAGING ITS PROTECTION AND 13 CONSERVATION March 2016

THE FLORENCE CHARTER ON HISTORIC GARDENS REVISITED: LONG TERM 14 EXPERIENCE AND NEW APPROACHES June 2016

COSTUME COLLOQUIUM V RESTRAINT AND EXCESS 15 IN FASHION AND DRESS November 2016

COSTUME COLLOQUIUM IV: COLORS IN FASHION 01 November 20-23, 2014 From the morning sunlight striking the green and travel to Castelfiorentino for a private tour of the white marble façade of The Duomo to the brilliant Pucci and Talent Center in the family’s array of color on display throughout the city’s Estate in Granaiolo (to be confirmed). While in boutiques, Florence dazzles us with color. Color Castelfiorentino they will also explore the Teatro to admire, to purchase and to immerse yourself del Popolo and the BEGO Museum where in. So what better subject for Costume Colloquium Benozzo Gozzoli’s magnificent frescoes provide IV than Colors in Fashion, to be held in Florence, a stunning historical context for our contemporary November 20-23, 2014. understanding of decorative color. Other highlights include the opportunity to view some Costume Colloquium will feature presentations on rarely exhibited costume gems in the collection of a wide range of topics, including current research the in Florence, the new dress on subjects as diverse as color as an expression installation of the Galleria del Costume in the of power, the role of color in constructing which recently commemorated its identity, the creation of color via contemporary 30th year anniversary and the new exhibition of technical advances, alongside the classification the Salvatore Ferragamo Museum “Equilibrium”. and codification of color. The chronological and geographical range of Costume Colloquium So to discover why legal robes are black, how IV will be matched by the chromatic diversity of color could be positively harmful in the 19th papers discussing color in: 10th century , century, what signals are relayed by the colors occupied Paris during WWII, 19th century Sweden of the iconic Bunny Girl costume and how Viktor and contemporary Nigeria, with a multitude of & Rolf are re-thinking color, join us for what will speakers representing nations from around the be the most vibrant of the Costume Colloquiums world. so far and help us update Henry Ford’s famous dictum and declare that we need any color as long Naturally enough for a conference exploring color as it’s black, green, pink, yellow, red, purple…! in fashion, black, arguably a non-color, will be much to the fore. Additionally Colors in Fashion The Costume Colloquium IV program features will discuss themes such as colorlessness, faded exclusive behind-the-scene visits, tours and color, transitory color, with papers that engage receptions at sites in and around Florence. The in the full spectrum of color such as the colors special events are included in the conference fee of early tinted fashion films, the pink and blue of and available to all participants. nurses uniforms, the legal complexities of the red- Colors in Fashion is the fourth in a series of bi- soled shoe and the evocative names given to 19th annual conferences dedicated to the discussion century aniline dyes; cabbage green, Tyrian purple of fashion, fabric, styles, techniques, conservation and Eugénie blue. and the many topics associated with dress history The Colloquium is particularly honored this year and contemporary costume creation, use and to welcome in the program the Emilio Pucci design. Archive, the international authority on colorful haute couture. All conference participants will Red, White and Blue on the Runway: Scientific Mary Westerman Bulgarella Costume & Textile Conservator, the 1968 White House Fashion Committee Researcher and Consultant Show Florence, Leif Runefelt Gillion Carrara Assoc. Prof., Södertörn University Director, Fashion Resource Center Stockholm, Sweden The School of the Art Institute of Participants Blue Peasant, Grey Peasant: Indigo as an Ethical Problem in Swedish Chicago, USA Susan Kay-Williams Rural Dress 1790–1820 Chief Executive, Royal School of Daniela Degl’Innocenti Kimberly Wahl Needlework Curator, Museo del Tessuto, Prato, Associate Professor, Ryerson London, UK Italy University Shade Cards and Dye Sample Toronto, Canada Books 1856-1906: What Do They Carlotta Del Bianco Purity and Parity: The White Dress Tell Us About Colors in Fashion of Vice President, Fondazione of the Suffrage Movement in Early ® the Period? Romualdo Del Bianco Twentieth-Century Britain Life Beyond Tourism® Charlotte Nicklas Lauren Whitley Florence, Italy Senior Lecturer University of Curator, Textiles & Fashion Arts, Brighton Museum of Fine Arts Jonathan Faiers Brighton, UK Boston, MA, USA Reader in Fashion Theory, Cabbage Green, Tyrian Purple and Psychedelic to Camp: Color in Winchester School of Art Eugénie Blue: Color and Language Fashions 1967-1973 University of Southampton, United in Mid-Nineteenth Century Women’s Kingdom Fashion Michelle Finamore Curator of Fashion Arts, Museum of Jennifer Rice Joanna Marshner Fine Arts Boston Freelance Archivist New York Costume Historian and Curator, Boston, MA, USA NY, USA Historic Royal Palaces Color before Color: Tinting Fashion Imagining Color: Fashion & the Kensington Palace Reels in the Silent Era Hand-Colored Postcard London, United Kingdom Elizabeth Galindo Roberts Anna Buruma Professor, University of California Archivist, Liberty Art Fabrics and Roberta Orsi Landini Sacramento Curator, Central Saint Martins Costume and Textile Historian Sacramento, CA, USA Museum and Study Collection Florence, Italy Glorious Technicolor in 1939 Films: London, UK How the Golden Age of Hollywood Alexandra Palmer Alpine Glow & Alphamine Bronze’: and the onset of Technicolor Nora E. Vaughan Senior Curator Comparing Two Dyebooks Changed the Way the World Looked of Textile & Costume Royal Ontario Joy Bivins at Films and Fashion Museum Toronto, Canada Curator, Chicago History Museum Giulia Tonucci Chicago, IL, USA Rosalia Varoli-Piazza PhD Candidate, University of Color and the Expression of African Special Advisor to the Director Bologna American Fashion Identity General of ICCROM and Art Bologna, Italy Historian Kimberly Chrisman Campbell The Performing Color of Wearable Technologies Rome, Italy Independent Scholar Los Angeles, CA, USA Alexandra Murray-Leslie with Kate Strasdin Aurora Fiorentini Sam Ferguson and Andrew Lecturer and Curator, Falmouth Associate Professor Polimoda & Johnston University Visiting Professor, IULM Artist Researcher, Creativity and Devon, UK Florence, Italy Cognition Studios, University of Gold and Silver by Night’ – Queen Silk : The Decorative Technology of Sydney Alexandra and the Colors of Power Ostentation of the Fairy Tales. The Sydney, Australia 1863-1910 Collaboration between Gucci and Color Tuning Vittorio Accornero 1960-1981 Maria Cristina Volpi Tina Bates Associate Professor, Universidade Dennita Sewell Curator Emerita, Canadian Museum Federal do Rio de Janeiro Curator of Fashion Design, Phoenix of Civilization Rio de Janeiro , Brazil Art Museum Gattineau, Canada Green and Yellow: An Empire under Phoenix, AZ, USA From Blue to Pink to White: the the Light of the Tropics Digital Print Fashion Significance of Color in the Nurse’s Deirdre Murphy Beatrice Behlen Uniform Curator, Historic Royal Palaces Senior Curator of Fashion, Museum Kevin Jones London, UK of London Curator, FIDM Museum at the Lord Boston’s Court Uniform: a London, UK Fashion Institute of Design & Story of Color, Politics and the ‘Le noir étant la dominante de notre Merchandising Psychology of Belonging vêture …’: The Many Meanings of Los Angeles, CA, USA Black in Post-War Paris Anjali Deshmukh A Colony of Colors: The Iconic Associate Professor and Head, Veronica Casando Hernandez Playboy Bunny Department of Textiles and Clothing, Visual Artist and Freelance Olga Vassilieva-Codognet Vidarbha Institute of Science & researcher Researcher, École des Hautes Études Technology Madrid, Spain and Baltimore, MD, en Sciences Sociales Amravati, India USA Paris, France Yellow Palette of Marigold for Silk The Red and the Black: Color The Telling Colors of Livery Dress in Coding and Female Visibility in Late Late Medieval France (1380-1480) Alison Matthews Victorian London Assocciate Professor, School of Jennifer Daley Sarah Fee Fashion, Ryerson University PhD Graduate King’s College, Curator, Eastern Hemisphere Textiles Toronto, Canada University of London and Costumes, Royal Ontario ‘Agonies in Red, Livid Horrors London, UK Museum in Green:’ Poison, Color, and Navy Blue: Color as a Language Toronto, Canada Chromophobia in the Nineteenth of Power and Belonging as Seeing Red: The Demand for British Century Represented in British Royal Navy Broadcloth in Africa and Asia, ca. Sailor Uniform and Blue-and-White Diane Fagan Affleck with Karen 1700-1900 Nautical Fashion for Women and Herbaugh Silke Otta Geppert Children Consulting Curator and Curator, Lecturer and Researcher in Costume American Textile History Museum Helena Beks History, Curator, Founder and Lowell, MA, USA Scholar President of Forum_Mode-Kostüm- Bright Blacks, Neon Accents: Fabrics Leiden, Netherlands Textil, Mozarteum University and of the 1890s The Big Black Dress: Why Legal Dommuseum Robes are Black Salzburg, Austria The Fondness of Black and Burgundian Fashion Stina Teilmann-Lock with Trine and Kate Irvin Petersen Brun Sao Salvador, Brazil Curator of Costume & Textiles, Associate Professor and Assistant The Costume of the Baiana: Rhode Island School of Design Professor, University of Southern Vestimentar Traditional Identity and Museum Denmark its Contemporary Readings Providence, RI , USA Kolding , Denmark Lives Lived: An Archaeology of Shu Hwa Lin with Margaret T. Red Alert: The Legal Battle over the Faded Indigo Ordoñez ‘Red Sole’ Trademark in Christian Associate Professor, University of Claire Rose Louboutin S.A. verses Yves Saint Hawaii and Professor, University of Contextual Studies Lecturer, The Laurent Am. Holding, Inc. Rhode Island Royal School of Needlework Margaret Olugbemisola Areo Kingston, RI, USA London, UK with Debo Areo Professor/Director, Historic Textile Rough Wolves in the Sheepcote: Researcher, Department of Fine and Costume Collection, University the Meanings of Fashionable Color, and Applied Arts, Ladoke Akintola of Rhode Island - Kingston, RI, USA 1909-1914 University of Technology and Color Code in Qing Imperial Maurita Mondanaro Heritage Manager, National Costume Color, Print and Trend Manager Commission for Museum and Mary M. Dusenbury Calvin Klein Underwear / PVH Monuments Research Curator, Spencer Museum Corp. Ogbomoso, Oyo State, Nigeria of Art, University of Kansas New York, NY, USA Heritage Manager, National Lawrence, KS, USA The Challenge of Balance: Fostering Commission for & Layering Color at the Heian Court of Innovative Design within the Monuments Abuja, FCT Japan (794-1185): Empress Shoshi Parameters of Commercial Demands Abuja, FCT, Nigeria and her Salon Birds of the Same “Color” Flock Michal Lynn Shumate Together: Identity and Solidarity Geraldine Craig MA Candidate at the School of the Expressions in Aso-Ebi Cloth of the Art Department Head, Kansas State Art Institute of Chicago Yoruba University Chicago, IL, USA Manhattan, KS, USA From Black Light to Bluescreen: Emmanuelle Dirix Color-Coded: Hmong Clan Identity Viktor & Rolf and Colors as Concept Lecturer in Critical and Historical Studies /Theory Coordinator; Piyanan Petcharaburanin with Chelsea College of Art and Design, Alisa Saisavetvaree University of the Arts Museum Editor and Curator, Queen London, UK Sirikit Museum of Textiles Contradictory Colors: The Tricolor in Bangkok, Thailand French Fashion 1939-1944 Dress and Color at the Thai Court, ca.1850-Present Justyna Jaworska PhD, Institute of Polish Culture, Jonathan Faiers Warsaw University Reader in Fashion Theory, Warsaw, Winchester School of Art and The Black Carnival – Mourning University of Southampton Fashion in Warsaw, 1861-1863 Winchester, UK Yellow is the New Red, or Clothing Catarina Argolo the Recession and How the Shade of School of Fine Arts at the Shame Became Chic Universidade Federal da Bahia (UFBA), Department of Art History COSTUME COLLOQUIUM WORKSHOP FINAL PRESENTATION

The Costume Colloquium IV featured exclusive behind-the-scene visits, tours and receptions at sites in and around Florence. TIME AND PLACE IN T.S. ELIOT AND HIS CONTEMPORARIES 02 January 18-21, 2015

Time and place have huge symbolic significance in Eliot’s work and that of his contemporaries. Scientific Space and time exist as symbolical, religious, Coordination philosophical, historical, political and personal ‘nodes’ in Eliot’s writings. This conference wants Temur Kobakhidze to explore these ‘nodes’ in greater depth — where Tbilisi State University, Tbilisi, they exist, how they interact with other nodes and themes in Eliot’s writing, and how they intersect Dr. Wim Van Mierlo with the aesthetic and philosophical thinking of Institute of English Studies Eliot’s contemporaries. University of London, UK

The symposium theme is focused on, but not Dr. Stefano Maria Casella limited to, T.S. Eliot and Modernism, and will IULM-International University of Language and include the following topics: Media • Evocations of time and place in Eliot’s writing Milan, Italy or that of his contemporaries

• The preoccupation with space, place and (dis)location Participants

• Modernism and the uses of time, ‘time past’, Edward Upton and timelessness University of Valparaiso Eliot’s Comparative Theology?: • Eliot, Modernism and history Faith and Transmigration in Knowledge • Eliot, Modernism and contemporary scientific and Experience and philosophical views on space and time Dionysis Tzevelekos • Eliot’s place in the tradition, the canon, Open University Modernism, and world literature Reconstructing the Cathedral of Time and Space; From T.S. Eliot to Ildebrando Pizzetti and the Cathedral in the Opera House

Irakli Tskhvediani Akaki Tsereteli State Univeristy Dissolving Temporal Sequence: Spatial Form in James Joyce’s Ulysses (‘Nausica’ Episode) William Malcuit Nancy Gish University of Wisconsin-Washington County University of South Maine The Waste Land and Anti-Liberalism: T.S. Eliot Time, Space, and Tradition: Rome and and Urban Failure World War I

Wim Van Mierlo Temur Kobakhidze IES, University of London Tbilisi State University Tradition, Individual Talent, and the Mythical Time and Place in “Burbank with a Baedeker , Method: T. S. Eliot and T. Sturge Moore Bleistein with a Cigar”

Rajni Singh Ann Mattis Indian School of Mines University of Wisconsin Creative Use of Tradition: Eliot’s Changing It’s Not Just ‘Birth, Copulation, and Death’: Response to Tennyson Interrogations of the Life Cycle in T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land Eteri Kirtskhalia Tbilisi State University Tony Sharpe Musically Perceived Time in Huxley’s Point Lancaster University Counter Point and Eliot’s Four Quartets Hello Hello are you there?: Theatrics of Place in T. S. Eliot Emily J. Dolive University of North Carolina-Greensboro Jewel Spears Brooker Seaside Modernism: Exploring Settings and Tropes Eckerd College in Eliot and Yeats Estrangement and Exile in the Poetry of T. S. Eliot

Jewel Spears Brooker Mena Mitrano Eckerd College Loyola University Where He Started: a Preview of Eliot’s The Vicinity of the Critic (T.S. Eliot in Susan Philosophical Papers Sontag)

Giuliana Ferreccio Xu Xiaofan University of Turin University of Nottingham The Unimaginable Touch of Time The English Rose-Garden and Eliot’s Ruralism: Four Quartets Revisited Stefano Maria Casella IULM-International University of Language and Michael Walsh Media-Milan University of Denver When Here and Now Cease to Matter”: T. S. Eliot The God that Dies: Poetic Sacrifice in Eliot, from Shamanic Attempts to Mystical Attainment Adorno and Bataille

Viorica Patea Natia Zoidze University of Salamanca Tbilisi State University Eliot’s Way of Making it New The Uses of Time, Time Past, and Timelessness in Modernist Literature Glenn Hughes St. Mary’s University, San Antonio Place/Time and Access to Timelessness in Eliot’s Four Quartets and Proust’s in Search of Lost Time

“HOW TO ASSESS BUILT HERITAGE?” ASSUMPTIONS, METHODOLOGIES, EXAMPLES OF HERITAGE ASSESSMENT SYSTEMS 03 March 5-7, 2015

The contemporary conservation theory attempts to describe the complexity of heritage and its functions, regarding the factors, which determine the forms of its protection. It is, however, not a simple task, because apparently the current theoretical tools are not effective enough in practice today. The major problem is that more and more monuments are modernized, adapted and transformed in order to meet the needs and standards expected from society today. The theory of conservation should, therefore, clarify and clearly outline the rules and limits of intervention pertaining to the historical design and substance. The pre-requisite at the outset must be a comprehensive analysis.

The inventory of the material elements is a relatively simple task, for which standards and procedures have been developed. However, the analysis of heritage values is far more complex. This complexity results from the uniqueness and functions as well as regional aspects. As a consequence, generally accepted methodologies of cultural heritage assessment need to be differentiated depending on the specific cultural context. The challenge to combine the generally accepted theoretical orientations formulated in a number of basic papers (charters, principles, etc.) with the special regional and case specific needs.

Scientific Coordination Participants

Wilfried Lipp Vassilis Ganiatsas President of the ICOMOS International Scientific Greece Committee for Theory and Philosophy of Assessing, Synthesizing and Re-Synthesizing Conservation and Restoration Heritage Values of What? Synergies of Theoretical Interpretations and Architectural Interventions Bogusław Szmygin General Secretary of the ICOMOS International Mara Cerquetti Scientific Committee for Theory and Philosophy of Italy Conservation and Restoration Cultural heritage management and value creation. Toward a dynamic and multi-level approach to Italian museum development

Ruxandra-Iulia Stoica Romania/Scotland Methodologies for Urban Conservation: Typology and Particularity in Assessing Cultural Values Iwona Szmelter Iryna Snitko Poland /Italy Multi-criteria valued protection of cultural heritage Heritage in the state of conflict in social/economical strategy Rugile Balkaite W.M.M. Van Bers Lithuania Netherlands Assessing midwar period (1918–1940) Current state of the art on the methodology and architecture of Kaunas, Lithuania systems of assessment of (immovable) cultural heritage Theo Muresan Romania Dennis Rodwell/Carsten Hermann Formative methodologies in conservation and Scotland restoration of architectural sites with mural Heritage significance assessments to evaluate paintings, at the University of Art and Design retrofit impacts. From heritage values to Cluj-Napoca, Romania character-defining elements in praxis C. Riminesi Jeremy C. Wells Italy USA Scheduled maintenance of stone statues Engaging Stakeholders in Defining Their Own in historical gardens Built Heritage: Using Participatory Action Research to Value the Historic Environment Gennaro Tampone Italy Rosa Anna Genovese Identification and assessment of the values Italy of the load bearing structures The defence of Cultural Heritage in between conservation and transformation: methodologies Smaranda Spanu and heritage assessment systems Romania Built heritage as other: a value assessment tool Paolo Del Bianco Italy Nalini Thakur Cultural values, for intercultural dialogue, India in an economical driven world Making of a New Paradigm: Transgressing from the Colonial Thinking to the Democratic Javier Gallego Roca Spain Mats Edström Catalogs and inventories of Spain Sweden Architectural Heritage Values in the Conservation Rasa Čepaitiené Process - Three Scandinavian examples and Lithuania lessons to learn Genius Loci/the Spirit of Place as a “Nameless Value” of Built Heritage Miia Perkkiö Finland Mara Popescu Echoes from the past. Complexity Romania and contradictions when evaluating the buildings Cultural Heritage – Methods of assessment of Seurasaari Open-Air Museum Tatia Gvineria Georgia Cultural Heritage as the Guaranteed Success (At the example of Tsinandali Al. Chavchavadze Complex)

Ayman Kassem Italy Heritage sites as performing spaces

Tania A. Soomro Pakistan/Belgium The Revival of the Surroundings of Empress Market and Adjoining Areas of Saddar Bazaar 2014

Ghislaine Avan France Projection of “Le LA du Monde – Installation mondiale le 14 septembre 2021 à l’occasion de l’anniversaire des 700 ans de la mort de Dante Alighieri”

APPLICATION OF 3D NEUTRON: IMAGING AND TOMOGRAPHY IN CULTURAL HERITAGE RESEARCH 04 April 20-23, 2015 The purpose of the meeting is to review mid-term project achievements on application of 3D neutron imaging and tomography in cultural heritage research. The main aim of the Coordinated Research Project is to harmonize selected Neutron-based Imaging techniques and to provide state-of-the-art services to Museum Conservators and scientists operating in the area of Cultural Heritage. Neutron Imaging, thanks to high penetration power of thermal neutrons and their intrinsic non-destructive character, is proposed as a precise and effective diagnostic techniques to probe the interior of bulky samples from museums and other collections of historical and archaeological findings. The members of the Coordinated Research Project will discuss the recent results, achieved in the past three years, and agree on the future perspectives.

Yoshiaki Kiyanagi Project Leader Hokkaido University, Japan

Marco Zoppi Nikolay Kardjilov Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche HZB-Berlin, Germany

Rawi M. Mohamed Zin MSTI-MNA, Malaysia Participants Jacek Milczarek NCNR, Poland Julio Héctor Marin CNEA, Argentina Marin Dinka INRC, Romania Reynaldo Pugliesi CNEN-IPEN, Brazil Denis Kozlenko JINR, Russia Rumyana Kostadinova University Sofia, Bulgaria Frikkie De Beer SANEC, South Africa Ivan Padron CEADEN, Cuba David Mannes PSI, Switzerland Mohamed A.T. Montaser EAEA, Egypt Sasiphan Khaweerat TINT, Thailand Burkard Schillinger FRM-II Garching, Germany Michael Lerche UC Davis, USA Francesco Grazzi CNR-ISC, Italy Kilian Anheuser MEG-Geneve, Switzerland

EVERYDAY LIFE IN THE 21ST CENTURY CITY 05 July 17-19, 2015 Metropolitan regions confront unprecedented economic, social, and political challenges, the meanings of everyday life are put into question because of the changing structure and increasing interdependence of urban economies. North American cities register the largest number of foreign-born persons in their history, while cities in confront issues of social integration with emergent minority populations in the suburbs and inner city neighborhoods. The rapidly growing urban regions in China and India confront the continuing pressures of rural to urban migration that will produce the largest urban populations in human history. While the focus on the global city often emphasizes similarities in the development of metropolitan regions and neo-liberal regimes, we are interested in better understanding how individuals and groups respond to and create new structures of everyday life within the ever changing urban environment.

Scientific Committee Participants

Ray Hutchison Ray Hutchison University of Wisconsin-Green Bay When Austerity Came to the United States

Camilla Perrone Derek Hyra Università degli Studi di Firenze Race, Neighborhood Redevelopment, and Micro-Segregation Circe Monteiro Universidade Federal Pernambuco Circe Monteiro The Right to Fight for the City Corinna Del Bianco Politecnico di Milano David White School of Architecture, Woodbury University Derek Hyra Tactical Urbanism Jumps the Fence American University Antonio di Campli Gabriele Manella Universidad Tecnica Particular de Loja Università degli Studi di Bologna An Abundance of Hats and a Shortage of Head: Radical Urbanism and Practices of Resistance in Joao Teixeira Lopes Present-day Latin America Universidade Porto Nilay Ozlu Luis Baptista Department of History, Bogazici University Universidade Nova de Lisboa The Monument, The Square, The City: Taksim Square as a Contested Urban Space Mark Clapson University of Westminster Rachel Kallus The Urban Genome ¬ A Universal Toolkit Architecture and Town Planning, Technion Israel For Good Cities Institute of Technology Citizenship in Action: Participatory Urban Carlos Smaniotto Costa Visualization Universidade Lusófona de Humanidades e Tecnologias, Lisbon Esther Hio-Tong Castillo Department of Sociology, Temple University Petja Ivanova-Radovanova Searching for the Right to the City Association for Integrated Development and Sustainability, Sofia Raquel Garcia GonÇalves & Ricardo Viana Carvalho de Paiva Marluci Menezes Universidade Federal Minas Gerais Laboratório Nacional de Engenharia Civil, Lisbon About urban conflicts, territories and power: the Exploring the benefits of Green Infrastructures for dispute by uncertainty the quality of life in urban areas

André Lima de Alvarenga Ana Maria Hermeto de Oliveirao & Pedro PPGEO - Universidade Federal Fluminense Vasconcelos Olympic Games, City Marketing and Right to the Universidade Federal Minas Gerais City in Rio de Janeiro Georgia Fernandes Barros Muntasir Masum Universidade Federal Mucuri Department of Sociology, University of Dahka A multidimensional and spatial analysis of poverty Capital Accumulation through Real Estate in Brazilian municipalities in 2000 and 2010 Investment Edison Hurtado Stefano Aragona FLACSO, Ecuador Università Mediterranea di Reggio Calabria How do poor people fight against urban Privatization of the city, disappearance marginality and spatial segregation? of citizenship Shu Wei Huang Siri Colom National Dr. Sun Yat-sen University Department of Sociology, Connecticut College Bringing The Water Back to the City: The Scalar Subcontracting Democracy and its Discontents Politics of South–to-North Water Transfer Project in Beijing João Telmo de Oliveira Filho Universidade Federal Santa Maria Fran Markowitz & Dafna Shir-Vertesh Ben Gurion University Carla Portal Vasconcellos Between War and Peace in 21st Century Beer- Universidade de Passo Fundo – Brazil Sheva O direito à cidades democráticas e participativas Maria Elisa Boada Raquel Ludermir Bernardino IAEN-CENEDET, Ecuador Universidade Federal do Pernambuco Marketing and distribution flows of products of Aloguincho agroecological community in Quito Hillel Schocken Azrieli School of Architecture, Tel Aviv University Albert Fu Antonia Di Lauro & Cristina Sciarrone Department of Sociology, Kutztown University Università Mediterranea di Reggio Calabria The Mediterranean-style homes of Istanbul’s Repossess the place: social practices as device to Tuscan Valley: built-environment, globalisation reshape collective landscapes and transnational elites Pedro Miguel Almeida Cristian Alejandro Silva Lovera CICS.NOVA, Universidade Nova de Lisboa and Nick Phelps Leisure and segregation in Cascais. Meanings University College London and experience of the everyday life in the Beach The Place of Rural Landscapes and Open Tracts of Carcavelos into (Suburban Sprawl. The Case of Santiago de Chile Heather Hutchison FLACSO, Ecuador Elena Maranghi Subversion from Within: Countering Sociocultural, Università degli Studi di Roma - La Sapienza Political and Spatial Exclusion of Transgender Reproducing the urban outside the city: Individuals in Quito, Ecuador through Visibility coexistence and proximity in the case study of the Tiburtina area Max Holleran Department of Sociology, New York University Li Jiang From Ludic to Lunacy: Hedonistic Tourism on Beijing University of Technology the Bulgarian Black Sea Coast and Peripheral European Identity Yang Jing School of Architecture, Tianjin University Robert Chlala Landscape Transition and Urbanization of Western University of Southern California Hills in Beijing: From Ming Dynasty to Nowadays Making Marijuana Work in Global Los Angeles: Cannabis “Gray” Zones Lily Wei Lising School of Interdisciplinary Arts, Ohio University Stefano Cozzolino Art as Protest; Cooking as Resistance Politecnico di Milano An ordinary story of complex emergent order Katarzyna Jagodzińska Institute of European Studies, Jagiellonian Christopher R. Browning, Catherine Calder, University Brian Soller, Aubrey Jackson & Jonathan Regeneration through culture – participatory Dirlam museums as catalysts of social change in Ohio University postmodern cities Community Routines and Neighborhood Social Organization: An Ecological Network Approach Ágata Dourado Sequeira DINÂMIA’CET, ISCTE-IUL, Lisbon Giancarlo Paba Reclaiming the walls: Collective street art projects Dipartimento di Architettura, Università degli Studi and the right to the city di Firenze FeliCity: territorial aspects of happiness and well- Richard Lloyd being Vanderbilt University On the Barstools of Giants: Place, Aura and the Ivana Hermová Production of Culture in Nashville TN Charles University (Prague) Creating the Sense of Home in Urban Environment: Focused on Windows Eugenio Pandolfini, Marco Sbardella, Sérgio H. Rocha Franco Gianluza Simonetta & Luca Toshi Sociology, University of Barcelona, Spain Università degli Studi di Firenze The specific forms of commodification of everyday Generative communication and urban landscape. ln Rio de Janeiro’s slums towards a new idea of urban well-being Yona Ginsberg Anna Aktaryan Department of Sociology, Bar-Ilan University A public space for all seasons: The religious The Role of Place Identity in Perception of Built beach of Tel Aviv Environment: Case of Yerevan City Teresa Sá Stefano Aragona University of Lisbon Università Mediterranea di Reggio Calabria Henry Lefebvre and the Critique of Everyday Life Well-being as result of integrated and ecological territorial policies Christopher R. Browning, Catherine Calder, Brian Soller, Aubrey Jackson, and Jonathan Laura Basco Dirlam Department of Architecture, University of Naples Ohio University Making multi-ethnic waste markets Informal Socioeconomic Segregation of Activity Spaces practices of waste-picking in Naples in Urban Neighborhoods

Jacqueline Olvera Mark Clapson Adelphi University Department of History, University of Westminster ‘The big local’: the National Lottery and local Stacey Sutton decision-making on suburban council estates in Columbia University since 2012 The Ecology of Convenience Jhenniffer Almonacid Velosa Lipon Kumar Mondal Universidad Nacional de Colombia University of Dhaka Residential segregation in Bogota, Columbia When Work is Available: The Rise of the New Urban Poor in Bangladesh Ana Maria de Souza Martins Farias Universidade Federal Pernambuco Rosa Ludermir Cidade, segregação sócio espacial e etni Universidade Federal Permanbuco Power counter-power and rebellion in Cais José Lucas Veloso de Menezes & Fernanda Borges Estelita in Recife, Brazil de Moraes University of Itaúna Fouad G. Marei When Rousseau visited gated communities in Free University of Berlin Brazil: status, inequality and a certain idea of (Re)ordering Dahiya: Everyday Life in Hezbollah’s community Capital of Resistance Joao Pedro Nunes Cherie Wu CICS.NOVA, Universidade Nova de Lisboa Department of Anthropology, Suburban growth and urban sprawl; social University College, London exclusion in the inner suburbs; multicultural cities Arabian Jasmines on the Asphalt: Filipino and ethnic spaces Domestic Workers in Hong Kong Jordi Nofre, Iñigo Sánchez Fuarros, Daniel Laura Martini Malet Calvo, João Carlos Martins, Patrícia Dottorato in Architettura Storia e Progetto, DASP, Pereira & Isabel Soares Politecnico di Torino CICS.NOVA, Universidade Nova de Lisboa Rome: The de-territorialization of leisure-time at The rise of the ‘vintage city’: recent findings in night nightlife and urban transformations in historical neighborhoods of Lisbon Eda Ünlü-Yücesoy Department of Sociology, Sehir University Andrea Braga, Fabio Zampieri, Paulo Reyes, Exploring streets of Pera: A historical-relational Décio Rigatti, Claudio Ugalde & Daniela perspective Reckziegal CICS.NOVA, Universidade Nova de Lisboa Lineu Castello The visible other: movement and co presence Universidade Federal Rio Grande do Sul patterns in Cidade Baixa evenings Places of Cloning and the Pervasiveness of the new gentrification Carolina Puttini, Magna Milfont & Rafaella Cavalcanti Sílvia Jorge CICS.NOVA, Universidade Nova de Lisboa Faculdade de Arquitetura, Nightlife Urbanity: New Cultural and Spatial Universidade Técnica de Lisboa Practices in the City Maputo’s Interdicted Places: The Pericentral self

Daniele Vazquez Pizzi Scuola di Dottorato in Urbanistica, Università IUAV di Venezia

7TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CONTEMPORARY PROBLEMS OF ARCHITECTURE AND CONSTRUCTION 06 November 19-21, 2015 In 2008 and 2010 Yerevan State University of The 7th International Conference on Contemporary Architecture and Construction organized the Problems of Architecture and Construction 1st and 2nd International Conference entitled international is an interdisciplinary conference "Architecture and Construction - Actual Problems". dedicated to the architecture and urbanism. The The conference was held in Jermuk, Armenia. conference will be dedicated to topics of cultural heritage protection and architectural-urban works rd The 3 year was organized in collaboration with from the 2nd half of 20th century this year. the Beijing University of Civil Engineering and Construction from October 20 to 24, 2011, The intention of the organizers is to continue the and was entitled International Conference on discussion on the relationship of the society to Contemporary Problems in Architecture and architecture and urbanism. Also representatives of Construction. This title is used up to the present other fields than architecture have the opportunity day. to submit contributions and open the space for other questions. Therefore it´s possible to th The 4 conference was held in Czestochowa city post articles from the fields of social sciences, (Poland) from September 24 to 27, 2012, as a joint economics, geography, civil engineering and effort of the Yerevan State University of Architecture, others. The purpose of the conference is to find and the Beijing University of Civil Engineering and evaluate in the open discussion the current state of Construction and the Czestochowa University of knowledge of architecture with the shortest history Technology. not only from the perspective of different fields but from the experience from various countries with The 5th conference was organized by the their diverse development and approach. Saint Petersburg University of Architecture and Construction from June 25 to 28, 2013, as a joint effort of the Yerevan State University of Architecture, the Beijing University of Civil Engineering and Construction, the Czestochowa University of Technology and Saint Petersburg University of Architecture and Construction.

The 6th conference edition is organized by the VŠB - Technical University of Ostrava (Czech Republic) from June 24 to 27, 2014, jointly with the Yerevan State University of Architecture, the Beijing University of Civil Engineering and Construction, the Czestochowa University of Technology and Saint Petersburg 2 University of Architecture and Construction. Scientific CHINA Committees Prof. Chengzhi Qi ITALY Msc. Beijing University of Civil Engineering and Architecture Prof. Phd. Stefano Bertocci University of Florence CZECH REPUBLIC

Prof. Phd. Paola Puma Prof. Darja Kubeckova University of Florence Msc. Phd, VSB -Technical University of Ostrava

Prof. Maria Teresa Bartoli POLAND University of Florence Prof. Lucjan Kurzak Prof. Emma Mandelli Msc, Czestochowa University of Technology International Institute Life Beyond Tourism RUSSIA Dott. Simone Giometti Fondazione Romualdo Del Bianco-Life Beyond Prof. D.Sc. Evgeny Borisovich Smirnov Tourism Pro-rector for R&D, SPSUACE

ARMENIA

Prof. Gagik Galstyan Participants Rector of National University of Architecture and Construction of Armenia Darja Kubečková Prof. Doctor Yeghiazar Vardanyan VŠB-Technical University of Ostrava (Czech First vice rector of National University of Archi- Republic) tecture and Construction of Armenia Biodegradation Of Composite Systems Applied On The Cladding Of Panel Buildings Prof. Yuri Safaryan Vice rector for Scientific affairs of National Jun Dong, Feng Jiangxiao University of Architecture and Construction of & Liang Tian Armenia BUCEA - Beijing University of Civil Engineering and Architecture (China) Prof. Vardges Yedoyan Structure Style Selection Of The Mid-Tower Of A Vice rector for International relations of National Three-Tower Suspension Bridge University of Architecture and Construction of Armenia Amin Basiri, Pouria Amirian & Anahid Basiri Irina Igitkhanyan Azad University of Qazvin (Iran) Head of bureau of international and interuni- The Use Of Fuzzy Inference Systems To Provide versity collaboration of National University of More Intelligent Hospital Management System Architecture and Construction of Armenia Martina Perinkova Alfred Meyers Lenka Kolarčíková HAN University of Applied Sciences (The & Marketa Twrda Netherlands) VŠB -Technical University of Ostrava (Czech Architecture, Too slow in developing? Republic) Reuse Of Industrial Areas Conversion Of Andrey Vaitens The Metallurgical Tower To A With & Sergey Mityagin Panoramic Views SPSUACE – Saint-Petersburg State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering (Russia) Dongfu Zhao Territorial planning in up-to-date Russia: & Haijing Gao development and implementation issues BUCEA - Beijing University of Civil Engineering and Architecture (China) Nina Sołkiewicz-Kos Review of research on the fatigue of high strength Czestochowa University of Technology, Civil concrete after high temperature Engineering Faculty (Poland) The issues of City Architecture. Tradition and the Cathy Saldana Present Time UAP, International Associate AIA, Municipality of Coron (Philippines) Shushan Hakobyan Challenges in Coastal and Island Design, National University of Architecture and Construction and Development Construction of Armenia (Armenia) Architect David Chislyan’s contribution in the Lusine Karapetyan redevelopment of Armenia National University of Architecture and Construction of Armenia (Armenia) Narek Barseghyan Some Features For Strengthening Of Masonry National University of Architecture and Buildings In Seismic Regions Construction of Armenia (Armenia) The Role And Peculiarities Of Composition In Zviad Churchelauri & Gela Kipiani The Formation Of Wayside Service Objects And Georgian Aviation University (Georgia) Complexes Calculation of Thin-Walled Prefabricated Type Shells With Model of Plastic-Rigid Body Qi Chengzhi BUCEA - Beijing University of Civil Engineering Christian Gasparini and Architecture (China) Architecture and Urban Planning Department - Free transverse vibration of long large-cross- Politecnico di Milano (Italy) sectional underground structure Smart Design for Smart City. Link as a plan strategy from architecture to landscape Linan Liu & Shan Chao Maria J. Żychowska BUCEA - Beijing University of Civil Engineering & Andrzej Białkiewicz and Architecture (China) Faculty of Architecture, Krakow University of Study on the Typical Dependent Structure of 400 Technology (Poland) Years Old— Shibaozhai Timber Tower European and Polish developments in church stained glass art. Differences and similarities Isabel Martínez-Espejo Zaragoza Yuri Safaryan & Tovmasyan Sargis Gabriella Caroti National University of Architecture and Capriuoli Federico Construction of Armenia (Armenia) & Andrea Piemonte The problems of accessibility of public services A.S.T.R.O. Laboratory – Civil and Industrial and links, caused by the geographical Engineering Department – Pisa University (Italy) location of the cities in the republic of Armenia Integrated survey of the San Francesco Basilica’s Attic and Domes in Ferrara Tigran Dadayan & Avagyan Hovhannes National University of Architecture and Gagik Galstyan Construction of Armenia (Armenia) & Arzumanyan Avetik Influence of Stress-Strain State of Reinforced National University of Architecture and Concrete Flat Plate on Its Punching Shear Construction of Armenia (Armenia) Resistance Evaluation Criteria Of A State Of Stone Materials Of Ancient Monuments Under Reconstruction Eghine Kanetsyan, Mkhitaryan Suren & Mkrtchyan Mushegh Marietta Gasparyan National University of Architecture and & Lilit Vardanyan Construction of Armenia (Armenia) National University of Architecture and On a Class of Contact Problems and Problems Construction of Armenia (Armenia) of the Mechanics of Cracks for Piecewise The adaptive reuse and reconstruction of the Homogeneous Elastic Bodies historical buildings of Yerevan Aleksandra Repelewicz Vladimir Andreev Czestochowa University of Technology (Poland) Elena V. Barmenkova Contemporary buildings of filial catholic churches & Alena V. Matveeva in Poland Moscow State University of Civil Engineering (Russia) Jacek Halbiniak On Taken into Account the Joint Work Structures Czestochowa University of Technology (Poland) and Foundations Analysis of the influence of reactive powders on the chosen high-value concrete prices Jurij Kotikov & Sergey Evtjukov Jacek Selejdak SPSUACE – Saint-Petersburg State University of Romuald Szopa Architecture and Civil Engineering (Russia) & Mariusz Urbański GIS-modelling of Transportations in the Logistical Czestochowa University of Technology (Poland) Cluster of St. Petersburg The influence of covering of industrial concrete floors with selected chemical agents on the Vardges A. Yedoyan, Raftik K. Aleksanyan & improving of their performance parameters David R. Aleksanyan National University of Architecture and Karel Kubečka & Josef Musilek Construction of Armenia (Armenia) The Institute of Technology and Business in České Torsion Of A Prismatic Compound Rod Made Of Budejovice, Department of Civil Engineering, Materials Having Different Anisotropic Properties (Czech Republic) Load-carrying capacity of timber structure bolt connection subjected to double unequal shears with thick plates as outer members Maritza Galiote, J. Alberto Escobar, David Morillón& Víctor Cecilio Instituto de Ingeniería, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (Mexico) Vulnerable Houses in the Southeast of Mexico

Lucjan Kurzak & Robert Sałek Czestochowa University of Technology (Poland) Role of prosumer energy in energy supply to buildings

Narine Pirumyan Gevorgyan Gagik & Mehrabekyan Nonna National University of Architecture and Construction of Armenia (Armenia) The modified method of rectangular finite elements with sixteen degrees of freedom for solving the problems of plate bending

Yeghiazar Vardanyan & Burnusuzyan Slavik National University of Architecture and Construction of Armenia (Armenia) Statistical Methods of Traffic Safety Assessment

Erika Zaleskienė & Indrė Gražulevičiūtė-Vileniškė Kaunas University of Technology (Lithuania) Landscape Management in Rurban Areas: Lithuanian Case in Global Context

Karel Kubečka The Institute of Technology and Business in České Budejovice (Czech Republic) Experience with the use of risk analysis methods for working forensic expert and an alternative method of determining the value of the coefficients

Sufiya Agisheva Kazan State University of Architecture and Engineering (Russia) Creation of World Cultural Heritage buffer zone under the influence of a new paradigm PROGRESS IN APPLIED SURFACE, INTERFACE AND THIN FILM SCIENCE SOLAR RENEWABLE ENERGY NEWS (SURFINT - SREN IV) 07 November 23-26, 2015 The main goal of the conference is to contribute to new knowledge in surface, interface, ultra-thin film and very-thin film science of inorganic and organic materials by the most rapid interactive manner · by direct communication among scientists of corresponding research fields.

The list of topics indicates that conference interests cover the development of basic theoretical physical and chemical principles and performance of surfaces-, thin films-, and interfaces-related procedures, and corresponding experimental research on atomic scale. Topical results are applied at development of new inventive industrial equipments needed for investigation of electrical, optical, and structural properties, and other parameters of atomic-size research objects.

The conference range spreads, from physical point of view, from fundamental research done on sub- atomic and quantum level to production of devices built on new physical principles. The conference topics include also presentation of principally new devices in following fields: solar cells, liquid crystal displays, high-temperature superconductivity, and sensors.During the event, special attention will be given to evaluation of scientific and technical quality of works prepared by PhD students, to deep ecological meaning of solar cell energy production, and to exhibitions of companies.

Scientific Committee Grzegorz Jung Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Beer Sheva, Israel Emil Pinčik Institute of Physics SAS Ladislav Harmatha Dubravska cesta 9 Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Information 845 11 Bratislava Technology, Slovak University of Technology, Slovak Republic Bratislava,

Hikaru Kobayashi Štefan Chromik Institute of Scientific and Industrial Research, Institute of Electrical Engineering SAS Japan Science and Technology Agency Bratislava, Slovakia Osaka University, Japan Taketoshi Matsumoto Dietrich R.T. Zahn Institute of Scientific and Industrial Research of Technische Universität Chemnitz Osaka University, Japan Chemnitz, Germany Yossi Paltiel Vitaly L. Alperovich The Hebrew University, Jerusalem Institute of Semiconductor Physics Israel Novosibirsk, Russia

Thomas Chassé Institut für Physikalische und Theoretische Participants Chemie, Universität Tübingen, Germany

Hikaru Kobayashi Andrej Pleceník Institute of Scientific and Industrial Research and Faculty of Mathematics, Physics and Informatics, CREST, Osaka University, Japan Comenius University Si surface control for achieving high conversion Bratislava, Slovakia efficiencies of crystalline Si solar cells

Jun Xu Thomas Chassé Nanjing University Institut für Physikalische und Theoretische NanjingChina Chemie, Universität Tübingen, Germany Interactions of Organic Films on Metals - Influence Roman Sobolewski of Graphene Buffer Layers University of Rochester, Rochester, USA, and Institute of Electron Technology Edmund Dobročka Warsaw, Poland Institute of Electrical Engineering SAS, Bratislava, Slovakia Shigeru Masuda X-ray diffraction analysis of residual stresses in Graduate School of Arts and Sciences textured ZnO thin films The University of Tokyo, Japan

José Carlos Piñero Katsuhiro Akimoto Universidad de Cádiz, Spain Tsukuba University Thermal treatment and interface-related effects Tsukuba, Japan on WC/ and Zr/O-terminated diamond Schottky diodes by TEM Nadia Saoula Equipe Plasma Décharge - Division des Milliéux Sahadev Pradhan Ionisés et Laser - Centre de Développement des Department of Chemical Engineering, Indian Technologies Avancées Institute of Science, India Alger, Algerie Thin film deposition using rarefied gas jet

Nour-eddine Gabouze Bert Stegemann UDTS, 2 Bd Frantz Fanon BP 140 Alger-7 HTW Berlin, University of Applied Sciences, Berlin, merveilles Algiers 16200 Algeria Germany Advances in Substrate Texturization and Interface Giampiero Pepe Passivation for Silicon Solar Cells Faculty of Engineering, University of Naples Federico II and CNR-SPIN Jozef Novak Naples, Italy Institute of Electrical Engineering SAS, Slovakia Optical and mechanical properties of compact Renato Gonnelli ZnO layer with embedded GaP nanowires Dipartimento Scienza Applicata e Tecnologia, Politecnico di Torino, Italy Vladmír Tvarožek Slovak Technical University in Bratislava, Institute of Electronics and Photonics, Slovakia Plasmonic behaviour of sputtered Au nanostructures on glass substrate Cesare Frigeri Andrej Pleceník CNR-IMEM Institute, Parma, Italy Faculty of Mathematics, Physics and Informatics, Structure and Strain Relaxation in Self-Assisted Comenius University, Bratislava, Slovakia Grown InAs/GaAs Nanowires High sensitive Pt/TiO2/Pt sandwich type hydrogen gas sensor operating at room temperature Stanislav Jurečka Zilina University, Slovakia Beatriz Medina Rodriguez Multifractal analysis and optical properties of Francisco Albero S.A.U. (FAE), Spain nanostructured silicon layers Record solar efficiency for CZTSe solar cells fabricated by ink-jet printing technology Pavol Kováč Institute of Electrical Engineering of SAS, Slovakia Alexander Kromka Interface MgB2 layers made by magnesium Institute of Physics of the ASCR, Prague, Czech diffusion into boron Republic Chemical Vapor Deposition of Diamond Thin Ratiba Outemzabet Films for Bio-Medical/Electrical Applications Université des Sciences et de la Technologie Houari Boumedienne, Faculté de Physique, Alger, Ratiba Outemzabet Algeria Université des Sciences et de la Technologie Grafting of biomolecules on hydrogenated Houari Boumedienne, Faculté de Physique, Alger, mesoporous silicon surfaces Algeria Effect of light on the electrochemical behaviour of Dietrich R.T. Zahn electrodes based TiN dioxide Technische Universität Chemnitz, Chemnitz, Germany Jozef Osvald Surface and Interface Properties of Semiconductor Institute of Electrical Engineering, Slovak Academy Quantum Dots Investigated by Raman of Sciences, Slovakia Spectroscopy Al2O3/AlGaN/GaN heterostructure interface studied by frequency dependent capacitance Vitaly L. Alperovich technique Institute of Semiconductor Physics, Novosibirsk, Russia Martin Kopáni Photon-enhanced thermionic emission from GaAs Faculty of Medicine, Comenius University, surface with nonequilibrium Cs overlayers Bratislava, Slovakia FT IR spectroscopy of silicon thin layers Nadia Saoula Laser - Centre de Développement des Marek Szymonski Technologies Avancées, Alger, Algerie Jagiellonian University Krakow, Poland Effect of substrate bias on the TiO2 films grown by Ordering of meso-tetraphenyl porphyrins-Zn(II) a rf-magnetron sputtering deposition (ZnTPP) and Zn(II)-phthalocyanines (ZnPc) on the Equipe Plasma Décharge - Division des Milliéux TiO2(011) surface: STM studies Ionisés et Dagmar Gregušová Taketoshi Matsumoto Institute of Electrical Enginnering, SAS, Slovakia Institute of Scientific and Industrial Research, Technology Of InGaAs/GaAs Metal-Oxide- Osaka University, Japan Semiconductor Heterostructure Field-Effect Improvement of crystalline silicon solar cells by the Transistors: Surface Treatment nitric acid oxidation (NAOS) method Yossi Paltiel The Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel Krzysztof Sztymelski Local Light-Induced Magnetization Using Silesian University of Technology, Poland Nanodots and Chiral Molecules The voltage asymmetry of batteries discharge in the off-grid solar systems Shigeru Masuda Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The Nuria Baladés University of Tokyo, Japan University of Cádiz, Spain UPS and MAES studies for organic–metal Structural characterization of InAlAsSb/InGaAs/InP interfaces for solar cells

Štefan Chromik Björn Műnzig Institute of Electrical Engineering SAS, Bratislava, Specs Surface Nano Analysis GmbH, Berlin, Slovakia Germany Advanced perovskite thin films and structures for EnviroESCA™ – The Beginning of a New Era applications Dario Daghero Katsuhiro Akimoto Dipartimento Scienza Applicata e Tecnologia, Tsukuba University, Tsukuba, Japan Politecnico Di Torino, Italy Defect characterization of Cu(In,Ga)Se2 and Effect of ion irradiation on surface morphology feasibility study of amorphous carbon as solar cell and superconductivity of BaFe(As,P) films material Martin Weis František Dubecký Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Information Institute of Electrical Engineering, SAS, Bratislava, Technology, Slovak University of Technology, Slovakia Bratislava, Slovakia Study of Novel Metal Contacts on Semi-Insulating The role of secondary doping in conductive GaAs: Electrical, Photoelectronic and XPS polymer poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(4- Characterization styrenesulfonate)

Giampiero Pepe Pavel Tománek Faculty of Engineering, University of Naples Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Federico II and CNR-SPIN, Naples, Italy Communication / FEEC, Brno University of Unconventional superconductivity for optical Technology, Brno, Czech republic photon detection Multiscale characterization of solar cells

Renato Gonnelli Andrea Šagatová Dipartimento Scienza Applicata e Tecnologia, Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Information Politecnico Di Torino, Italy Technology, Slovak University of Technology, The physics of few-layer graphene under strong Bratislava, Slovakia surface doping via electrochemical gating GaAs radiation sensors and their harness against gamma-rays, neutrons and electrons Natalia Fernández-Delgado University of Cádiz, Spain Effect of an in-situ thermal anneal on the structural properties of self-assembled GaSb/GaAs quantum dots to create, one must first question everything EILEEN GRAY DRAFTING GUIDELINES FOR HERITAGE MANAGEMENT OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL WORLD HERITAGE SITES 08 November 30 - December 3, 2015

The objective of this conference/workshop is to activities necessary to preservation of cultural develop a final draft of Standards and Guidelines resources, conservation of natural resources, for Archaeological Heritage Management. equitable distribution of social and economic A key distinction will be made here between benefit, and enhancement of visitor experience archaeological sites to which the public is invited at archaeological World Heritage Sites. Among and the great majority of archaeological sites the issues that these sections will address will be of which the general public is unaware. In fact, the necessity for archaeological inventories and revealing the location of the great majority of evaluations; adequate conservation, maintenance, archaeological sites places them at risk from research, and administrative facilities; monitoring looting. In contrast, virtually all archaeological sites and managing the condition of cultural and natural that are placed in the World Heritage List become resources and community and visitor satisfaction; archaeological parks. Archaeological parks serve presentation and interpretation in the service of a vital function as didactic devices that further the preservation and conservation; and many others. objective of international understanding, which is basic to the World Heritage . Nominations to the World Heritage List should describe how the nominated site will adhere to By acknowledging that archaeological sites, when the standards and guidelines presented in the inscribed on the World Heritage List, become best practices. Nomination dossiers should clearly archaeological parks, we recognize at the same identify management elements that will require time that special steps must be taken to preserve enhancement in order to comply with standards. irreplaceable archaeological materials, above and The dossier should then describe concrete steps below ground. Visitor facilities will be required in toward this end and an estimated budget for and around the site. Therefore, many steps must taking each step. be taken prior to inscription in order to ensure that development is compatible with the preservation Complying with the best practices document will objectives of the World Heritage Convention. provide the opportunity for States Parties nominating Regional planning is essential. In the half-century sites to the World Heritage List to request support since the World Heritage Convention was ratified, from a great number of organizations that support many archaeological sites have suffered damage, the protection of cultural resources. This will and the experience provided to visitors has been relieve UNESCO of the burden to acquire funding progressively degraded, because adequate for capacity building, an important consideration provisions were not made for managing visitation. given the fiscal constraints under which UNESCO must operate. The scientific committee for this conference/ workshop will draft sections of standards and guidelines for archaeological heritage management of World Heritage Sites. These sections will outline the management infrastructure, programs, and Douglas Comer, Michael Jansen, Said Scientific Alsalmi Coordinator The Concept of Archaeological Parks

Douglas Comer Douglas C. Comer, Management Planning Ph.D., President, International Scientific Committee on Archaeological Heritage Ian Lilley Management (ICAHM) Inventory and Evaluation

John Peterson Participants Management Facilities Fritz Lueth HRH Danas Firas Management Capacity Petra as bellwether archaeological World Heritage Site Helaine Silverman Inclusion of and working with stakeholders

ARCHITECTURE OF THE TURKISH COUNTRIES: HISTORY AND PRESENT 09 December 9-10, 2015

The cultural heritage of the Turkish countries collaboration and the need for global discussions recently is exposed to influence of many factors on the subject of the strong economic dynamic threatening to its destruction. Alongside with the and recent structural changes in cities inscribed on natural factors, growing danger is represented UNESCO's World Heritage List; with results of human activity, the military conflicts, • the 1964 "International Charter for the no controllable growth of cities and absence in Conservation and Restoration of Monuments and many cases of the modern scientific approach Sites" (Venice Charter); to restoration and protection of monuments of culture. It makes necessary the discussion of • the 1968 "UNESCO Recommendation this problem at the level of experts and heads concerning the Preservation of Cultural Property of architectural schools for development of endangered by Public or Private works"; corresponding recommendations and strategy. • the 1976 "UNESCO Recommendation The researches on the specified subject are concerning the Safeguarding and Contemporary conducted in each separate country. The review Role of Historic Areas"; of these researches has shown, that alongside • the 1982 "International Charter for Historic with traditional connections, there are many Gardens" (Florence Charter), general problems and similarity of approaches to their decision. Joint discussion of this theme with • the 1987 "Charter for the Conservation of participation of the European experts therefore Historic Towns and Urban Areas" (Washington would be useful in that case. Charter), and the 1994 Nara Document on Authenticity; Architectural schools and Universities play an important role in the process of preservation • international conference on the subject of "World of architectural heritage because they are the Heritage and Contemporary Architecture", which centers of education of the specialists in the field was requested by the World Heritage Committee of heritage preservation. Thus the knowledge and at its 27th session (Paris, 30 June-5 July 2003, experience exchange in the field of methodology, Decision 27COM 7B.108) and held from 12 to 14 right organization of the educational process etc is May 2005 in Vienna, Austria, under the patronage very important. of UNESCO;

Preservation of the historical architectural heritage • Vienna Memorandum "World Heritage and is one of the most important problems. Thus many Contemporary Architecture Managing the Historic conferences, symposiums were dedicated to that. Urban Landscape", 22 April, 2005 The practice of under mentioned conferences is We hope that initial conference will make a very important: contribution into development of the above • UNESCO's Convention concerning the mentioned topic and be seen as discussion of Protection of the World Cultural and Natural conservation of monuments and sites of the Islamic Heritage (World Heritage Convention, 1972), and countries recalling its Articles 4 and 5, striving for global N.Ahmed Kushhanoglu Scientific Head of the Commission on Transportation Committee of UEATW, assistant of the deputy director of the Ministry of Transport, Maritime Affairs and Communication of Turkey Paolo Del Bianco Eurasia project (Istanbul strait Highway tunnel President of the Romualdo Del Bianco Foundaation, honored professor of AzUAC Erdogan Dedeoglu Department director of the Istanbul Directorate of Prof. Gulchohra Mammadova Highways Rector of University of Architecture and Construction Cevat Alim Department director of the Istanbul Directorate of Ilyas Demirci Highways General Secretary of the Union of Engineers and Yavuz Sultan Selim bridge (Third Bosporus bridge) Architects of Turkish World Sarp Sabunchu Prof. Abdulrahimov Ramiz Executive manager of IGA Project AzUAC Construction of the new airports in Istanbul

Prof. Hajiyeva Sabina Correspondent member of the ANAS Artegin AzUAC Salamzade Institute of Architecture and Art of Azerbaijan Prof. Amirlan Kusainov National Academy of Science- ANAS (Baku) Rector of KazGASA Albanian capital and a bowl from Bartym

Prof. Ismail Yuksek Galina Iskhodjanova Rector of the Yıldız Technical University Kazakh Leading Academy of Architecture and Civil Engineering Prof. Dusen Kaseinov Architectural heritage of Kazakh khanates: TURKSOY Secretary General interaction of nomadism and sedentary

Ramiz Abdulrahimov Azerbaijan University of Architecture and Constrcution Participants Architecture of the palaces of Azerbaijan

Paolo Del Bianco Paola Puma Romualdo Del Bianco Fondation Florence University, Department Architecture Learning communities for intercultural dialogue The knowledge for the conservation: surveying and representing, some case studies Gulchohra Mammadova Azerbaijan University of Architecture and Rana Abdullayeva Constrcution Institute of Architecture and Art of ANAS High education in the field of Architecture and (Azerbaijan) Civil Engineering in Azerbaijan: history and The old city of Baku: site of UNESCO World present Heritage List Najaf Guliev Farhad Mollazada Director of the Museum of “Icherisheher” History Institute of Architecture and Art of ANAS Icherisher- living history (Azerbaijan) Comparative analyses of the city planning models Rayiha Amanzada in Baku and Tashkent Institute of Architecture and Art of ANAS (Baku) Typological peculiarities of the pillar-domical Rovshan Samadov mosques in the Azerbaijan architecture Azerbaijan University of Architecture and Constrcution Nargiz Abdullayeva Development of the residential buildings of Baku Azerbaijan University of Architecture and in the end of XIX-beginning of the XX-th centuries Constrcution Architecture of the historical bridges constructed Olimpia Niglio on the tranzit roads of Azerbaijan Institute Life Beyond Tourism, Expert of the Romualdo Del Bianco Foundation Sabina Hajiyeva Inheritance and identity of cultural heritage Azerbaijan University of Architecture and Constrcution Karimli Telman Religious architecture of the North-Western district Director of the Scientific- Research Project Institute of Azerbaijan “Azerberpa”, Azerbaijan Metodology of the restoration works in Azerbaijan Luigi Zangheri President of the Accademia delle Arti del Disegno Gennaro Tampone of Florence Union of Civil Engineers in Florence The “ablaq” blanquet in the Italian-romanic Revised criteria for preservation of architectural architecture monuments

Aizhan Akhmedova Saeid Khoshniyyat Kazakh Leading Academy of Architecture and Islamic Azad University of Urmia, Iran Civil Engineering Symbolic introduction and spatial organization of Roberto Corazzi Florence University, Department of Architecture the composition of Kazakh patrimonial cemeteries The Florence Brunelleschi’s cupola and cupolas in in western Kazakhstan the Islamic World: diversities in values, materials and techniques of construction for a common final Madina Omarqadiyeva purpose Azerbaijan University of Architecture and Constrcution

Problem of the preservation of the historically Nausikaa M. Rahmati Feng Shui Architectural & Garden Design formed mountaneous villages of Daghestan, Architecture and art in the Persian and Islamic Russia gardens Mammad Jafarli Eurasia University (Azerbaijan) Arash Mohammadi Fallah Islamic Azad University of Urmia, Iran Preservation and modern use of the German Topic of the speech is to be defind architecture of Azerbaijan Evaluation of the first day

DIALOGUE AMONG CULTURES CARNIVALS IN THE WORLDS 10 February 3-4, 2016

The popular traditions, based on disguises, have integration between East and West. Another very their origins in ancient festivals, which are very important aspect of the Carnival is the education different among them. In these artistic events towards the popular culture that can be seen as there is a large opening to human sentiments and a fundamental educational process for the new thoughts: they are meetings where all peoples generations to promote knowledge of the history converge with their social, ethnic, economic, and the value of their local heritage. political and religious differences. In these traditional celebrations the daily life is built on The academic aim of the 1st International imagination, on games and it allows a continuous Symposium is the analysis of the issues related enrichment and exchange of cultural knowledge. to the urban festivals and masquerades that take These urban festivals allow to build forms of art place, with different methods, in many countries of often unique. the world. The congress was born with the scope to deepen the knowledge of different and multicultural Among these artistic events we identify the expressions that occur in public and urban spaces Carnival, a city festival that, in the West, has origin for the cultural dialogue, for the integration and in ancient ceremonies of the Greek and the Roman the respect of differences (UNESCO, Declaration period. These traditions are survivals of ancient of 2005). purification rituals. However today the Carnival has become a symbol of meetings that take place For this reason the 1st International Symposium in public spaces of the city where you can meet promotes a space for intercultural dialogue people with different cultural backgrounds. All this between the scientific community, the local allows to enjoy and share traditional and artistic community and future generations, with the aim expressions of different cultures in large festivals of sharing different methods to understand the with interesting diversities. tradition of the Carnival around the world.

The 1st International Symposium, Dialogue among cultures. Carnivals in the worlds offers a reflection Scientific on the international Value of Intangible Heritage as defined by UNESCO: practices, representations, Committee knowledge and techniques that facilitate a strong sense of cultural identity (UNESCO, Declaration Claudia Afanador of 2003) among the communities, groups and University of Nariño individuals. Pasto, Colombia

This Cultural Heritage can be appreciated in Olimpia Niglio different sectors of human activity: art, economics, University of Bogotá Jorge Tadeo Lozano, Bogotá, sociology, anthropology, architecture, engineering, Colombia, Colombia; Kyoto University, Graduate etc… So the Carnival plays an important role School of Human and Environmental Studies, in the cultural world because it proposes the Kyoto, Japan; International Institute LBT, Florence, protection of an important traditional heritage Italy and the reinforcement of the cultural and social Pepi Birliraki Participants Vice Mayor of Rethymno, President of Carnival Committee, Greece The nature of the Rethymnian Carnival Pietro Clemente Università degli studi di Firenze, Italia Carnevali indigeni del XXI secolo Pietro Clemente, Luca Mancini, Valentina Lapiccirella Zingari Società Italiana per la Museografia e i Beni Eliyahu Eduardo Muñoz P. FECC General Deputy of Colombia and DemoEtnoAntropologici, Italia appointed to represent the FECC by board Il carnevale come ‘elemento’ patrimoniale, tra directors comunità, politiche, antichi simbolismi FECC – Federation of European Carnival Cities Francis Ripard Malta Carnival Committee Member which falls Alberto Alma Fondazione dello Storico Carnevale di Ivrea, Italia under The Arts Council Malta' Lo Storico Carnevale di Ivrea Malta Carnival and its traditions. Carnival is the oldest popular festival in the world Melinda Harlov, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary Romelia Gama Avilez, Jaime Silva González The Intangible World Heritage Carneval of Universidad Autónoma de Guerrero, México Hungary and other winter closing traditions of the Carnavales en las costas de México region. Marta Villa Università degli studi di Trento, Italia Massimo Guarascio RMEI Réseau Mediterranéen des écoles Iniziazione e patrimonio tradizionale nei riti di d'ingenieurs, Francia Carnevale delle Alpi orientali

Viviana Martini Juseth Javier Palacios Montilla University of Nova Gorica, Slovenia Corporación Escénica de Pasto La Guagua, Intercultural dialogue: TUNeIT Mediterranean Colombia BRIDGING La máscara del pueblo Memorias de un Actor

Teresa Colletta Rosemary Zenker Università di Napoli “Federico”, Italia Museo Nacional de la Cultura Peruana, Peru Carnevali del Sud d'Italia e città storiche. Le Carnaval y tradiciones en la Sierra Sur del Perú en festività del Carnevale in Campania celebrazioni la obra de Manuel Alzamora (1900-1970) collettive come eventi urbani Claudia Afanador H., Carlos Andres

Graciela Silvia Molina Gonzalez H. Instituto Nacional de Estudios de Teatro, Universidad de Nariño, Colombia Ministerio de Cultura, Argentina “Vas a jugar Carnavales?” Construyendo Argentina Carnivals. Multiethnic and Pluralistic imaginarios de futuro desde el Carnaval de since its origin. Negros y Blancos de Pasto

Alberto Darias Príncipe, Jonás Armas Núñez Andrea Chamorro Universidad de La Laguna, Canarie, Spagna Universidad de Tarapacá, Chile El Carnaval en Canarias: variedad e Carnival in Arica: dancing with the heart interculturalidad Alessandro Dozena Cesare Poppi University Federal do Rio Grande do Norte/ SUPSI, Lugano, Switzerland UFRN, Natal, Brazil Death, Masks and Carnival: ritual practice, The Carnival in the Biggest Brazilian City metaphor and ‘the real thing’ in Europe

Ezequiel Álvarez Cuesta Elizabeth Alfaro, Laura Ibarlucea Universidad del Atlántico, Barranquilla, Colombia Universidad de la República, Uruguay Realismo mágico hecho disfraz De la bacanal al escenario: consolidación del carnaval teatral en Uruguay Paola Elisabetta Simeoni Scuola di specializzazione in beni Mario Fernando Egas Villota demoetnoantropologici, Università “Sapienza”, Universidad de Nariño, Colombia Roma, Italia Identidad cultural y expresión musical en el Celebrare la creatività carnaval de Negros y Blancos

Ana Margarida de Carvalho Miranda Vicente Guerola-Blay, Ignasi Gironés-Sarrrió, Almeida Mónica Espí-Pastor Torres Vedras City Hall, Portogallo Universitat Politècnica de València Carnival of Torres Vedras. Portugal. Carnival and Managing intangible cultural heritage: the traditions Carnval project case study

Giovanni Kezich Antonella Mott Anna Lisova Museo Usi e Costumi della Gente Trentina, Italia Art Manager Carnival King of Europe: una nuova prospettiva Oksana Dmitrieva sulle mascherate d'inverno Kharkiv National University of Art Ukrainian Maslenitsa: rituals, origins, diversity and Eliyahu Eduardo Muñoz P. influence on contemporary culture Fundación Organización Carnaval Nacional de Carnavales, Colombia Andrea Mazzi El Patrimonio Cultural Intangible. Recurso para el Fondazione Carnevale Viareggio, Italia Fortalecimiento de las Economías Locales a Nivel Arte e cultura nelle grandi macchine di cartapesta Global del carnevale di Viareggio

Riccardo Gionata Gheri Tanya Park Rotary Club Firenze “Amerigo Vespucci” School of Architecture and Design, University of The foods of Carnival, in different Italian regions, Tasmania as a cultural expression of ancient traditions The transmission of Intangible Cultural Heritage in Japanese Traditional Architecture Mario Paffi Museo delle Maschere Mediterranee Andrés Eduardo Pacheco Sepúlveda Mamoiada, Nuoro Agrupación Cultural CapaNegra, Chiloé, Chile Le maschere di Mamoiada (NU), i Mamuthones Nuevas memorias, viejos relatos e gli Issohadores, e le altre del Carnevale Barbaricino Sandra Ferracuti Società Italiana per la Museografia e i Beni Enzo Siviero DemoEtnoAntropologici, Italia IUAV, Venezia, Italia Polifonie del patrimonio culturale: il caso del Carnevale di Satriano di Lucania (PZ) José Neves Alessandra Broccolini ISCTE - Instituto Universitário de Lisboa, Katia Ballacchino Departamento de Arquitectura e Urbanismo, Società Italiana per la Museografia e i Beni Demo Portugal Etno Antropologici, Italia The Carnival Arts Center, in Torres Vedras: the city, Dal folklore alle "comunità patrimoniali": il the museum and the square Carnevale di Serino (Avellino) e le nuove reti territoriali del carnevale Ricardo Campos Castro Centro de Estudios de las Tradiciones. El Colegio Mauricia Domínguez Rodríguez de Michoacán A.C., México Universidad Nacional Pedro Henríquez Ureña De las cuerdas del violín, a las tecnologías de [UNPHU], República Dominicana sonido (sonideros). Cambio y trasformación en el Arte colectivo e identidad en los personajes y carnaval de los barrios de la ciudad de Puebla regiones del carnaval dominicano

Vincenzo Esposito Ferdinando Mirizzi Università di Salerno, Italia Società Italiana per la Museografia e i Beni Tracce persistenti. La lunga vita del Carnevale di DemoEtnoAntropologici, Italia Montemarano (Movie) I Carnevali contemporanei e il rapporto con la tradizione Vincenzo Padiglione Società Italiana per la Museografia e i Beni Fredy Mauricio Hidalgo Insuasty DemoEtnoAntropologici Universidad de Nariño, Colombia Della maschera e dei suoi usi politici dentro De Mamá Trini a Piero en el Carnaval de Negros e fuori il carnevale: un'etnografia del y Blancos de Pasto contemporaneo Jorge Enrique Londoño Pinzón Jaime Silva González Universidad Nacional de Colombia Romelia Gama Avilez Carnival and sociocultural processes Traditional dances in carnival and other festivities in Guerrero, México Claudia Afanador H. Carlos Andres Gonzalez H. María Gracia Nonato Cueto Universidad de Nariño, Colombia University of Piura, Peru Chair carnival. Assessment of carnival of black Carnavales en la Sierra del Perú: tradición mestiza and white from Pasto, intangible cultural heritage through the academy Alberto Herrera Diaz Instituto de Cultura del Departamento de Bolívar Luca Baraldi – ICULTUR Istituto Superiore di Scienze Religiose “Santa Los Cabildos en Cartagena de Indias…con sabor Maria di Monte Berico”, Vicenza a Carnaval. Su papel en la identidad y toma de The revenge of the ratchet: the festival of Purim decisiones and the carnival in Jewish tradition

Petr Adámek Gabriel Francisco Cataño Nieva Masaryk University Brno, National Institute of Escuela de Teatro del Instituto Popular de Cultura, Mental Health (NIMH) Czech Republic Cali, Colombia The resonances of Slavic carnival celebrations in La Dramaturgia itinerante del Carnaval de Cali the work of Vavřinec Leandr Rvačovský Delia del Consuelo Domínguez Cuanalo Virginia Cabrera Becerra Agustín López Romero Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla, México El carnaval, acto festivo, patrimonial y de reapropiación barrial, en la ciudad de Puebla. México.

Javier Rodríguez Rosales Universidad de Nariño, Colombia Aesthesis del Carnaval de Negros y Blancos

Rita Maria Porcu FECC, Sardegna Carnevale Barbaricino: Fonni e Teti, due realtà a confronto

Ana Hurtado Pliego Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, México Tlaltizapán. Un lugar para mirar y querer ser

Natalia Acuña Betancourt Fundación Con-ciencia, Ibagué, Colombia Festival Folclórico Colombiano: identidad como símbolo de libertad

Edgar Guillermo Mesa Manosalva Universidad de Nariño, Colombia El carnaval, escenario para el encuentro intercultural

JAPANESE LEGACY II 11 February 25-27, 2016

Japanese Legacy is in its second edition; its aim is to gather in Florence every two years, from all over the world scholars/experts, collectors and amateurs of Japanese Traditional Arts, focusing on Arms and Armours from X to XIX century. Visit to specialized Museums, conferences, papers, sharing knowledges and round tables on specific topics are the aims of the project.

Scientific Committee Participants

Luc Taelman Francesco Civita Collector and Member of the NKBKHK Tokyo The Shimabara armor

Francesco Civita Piers Dowding Curator at the Stibbert Museum of Florence The Evolution of the Japanese Matchlock

Ian Bottomley Ian Bottomley and Jan Petterson Former Senior Curator of the Oriental Arms and The evolution of japanese matchlocks. With a Armour of the Royal Armouires Museum UK case study of the Uesugi-clan

Bas Verberk Bas Verberk Curator at the Wereld Museum Rotterdam A new approach of menpo

Jo Anseeuw Aymeric Antien Engineer, responsible for the non-japanese The evolution of kabuto in the 16th and 17th members of the Nihon Katchu Bugu Kenkyu century Hozan Kai Francesco Grazzi Identification of the forging methods of Japanese swords from the Ancient Sword (Koto) Age to modern times (Gendaito). A non-destructive study through neutron diffraction

Ian Bottomley The evolution of armor

URBAN COMMUNICATION FOR A QUALIFIED CULTURAL TOURISM IN HISTORICAL CITIES: EXPERIENCES OF URBAN SIGNAGE 12 March 3-4, 2016

The Workshop intends to analyze the issue of the The Signage, as it is commonly called, is often communication in the history of the city in the heart absent in comparison with the information on the of urban centers, namely the information to a wide works of art and the architectural monuments. The audience about the successive transformations topic involves a problem of knowledge of urban of the streets, squares, walls, markets, castles, history and of management of urban spaces as monasteries, palaces, etc., but also vistas, strategic well as of the infrastructure that are available for viewpoints, environments, cultural landscapes etc. to make the communication. In Italy there are in the site of their current location, compared with also recent regulations UNI ("Gestione integrata the "ancient". dei servizi di supporto per il funzionamento, la fruizione e la valorizzazione dei beni immobiliari The topic of Urban Communication or Urban e urbani"). Signage already was analyzed in the Seminar of the Italian Committee ICOMOS CIVVIH that took place in Ravello in March 2012 at the European Scientific Committee Centre for Cultural Heritage.

After three years, with the advent of the Teresa Colletta technological innovation and of the knowledge always more specialized, there are new possibilities, Nur Akin new experiences and best practices that are very important to know and to share. Olimpia Niglio

The issue of the communication of urban history is a subject closely linked to urban tourism more extensively informed and trained, that cannot be reduced to activities of urban design, and therefore must be "scientifically" organized and realized.

So the Workshop aims to involve projects and proposals made on this issue in the historical Mediterranean cities and to compare them. The finality is to make the public aware of the visitors the urban history and the values of the architectural and urban heritage that are not always well marked, with references to historical and contemporary maps with the aim to understand the transformations of various areas of the city. Stefano Zaggia Participants Università di Padova Andrea Colasio Sofia Avgerinou Kolonias Già Assessore alla Cultura del Comune di President of ICOMOS, CIVVIH Padova National Technical University of Athens (N.T.U.A.) Padova: esempi di comunicazione culturale e From cultural to creative tourism turistica per la storia della città. Il sistema dei cartelloni sulla storia urbana durante la Signoria Emma Mandelli Carrarese Università di Firenze, Icomos Italia Comunicare la Città storica: museo o civitas? Antoine Bruguerolle ICOMOS France, architecte du patrimoine Giuseppina Carla Romby Le label "ville d'art et d'histoire " moteur d'une Università di Firenze politique culturelle touristique nationale Abitare il paesaggio della storia. Percezione e comunicazione della storia urbana per un turismo Paola Raggi della qualità Associazione Storia della città e Fonti di Archivio L’informazione/comunicazione urbana per un Olimpia Niglio turismo culturale qualificato nelle città storiche. Kyoto University, Graduate School of Human and Esperienza di cartellonistica urbana nel centro Environmental Studies storico di Senigallia (AN) Comunicazione urbana nelle città storiche del Sol Levante: l’esperienza di Kyoto tra tradizione ed Maria Chiara Minciaroni innovazione Touring Club Italiano, Milano Segnaletica e Turismo culturale Follow the Velia Iolanda Ordaz Zubia (Touring) SIGN Oltre il segnale Master of Urban and Regional Planning, PhD in Arquitecture, University of Guanajuato, Mexico Lorenzo Belli Claudia Zilli Ramirez Istituto OpenART Project, Roma PhD in Sociology. Università degli Studi di Milano Metodologie di comunicazione e fruizione Implication of Massive Tourism in an Historical city integrata dei centri storici tra nuove tecnologie e Guanajauto city, Mexico servizi alla persona: l’App OpenIT

Ana E. Goy Diz Ferruccio Canali Direttore del centro di studio della storia della Università di Firenze città Università di Santiago de Compostela In absentia. Storia della città e didascalizzazione Enrique Gonzalez Fernadez urbana (alcuni casi). Raccomandazioni per una Servizio Archeologico. Comune di Lugo “nuova” attenzione Lugo: La ciudad de las murallas.L’applicazione delle nuove tecnologie per la diffusione del Laura Zanini patrimonio culturale Criteria srl, Cagliari Le carte dell’evoluzione storica dell’insediamento Eleni Maistrou e i booklet digitali dei piani particolareggiati come National Technical University of Athens NTUA strumento partecipativo e comunicativo della Urban signage through highlighting public space storia delle città and historical buildings in historical cities and settlements Pierre Lacoonte Caterina Giannattasio Council Member and Chair, Industrial and Donatela Rita Fiorino Engineering Heritage Committee Europa Nostra, Andrea Pinna Expert Member ICOMOS and TICCIH Università degli studi di Cagliari Signage of industrial heritage: the case of "The Turismo culturale in Sardegna. L'esperienza di European routes of Industrial Heritage" Muros come caso di studio per la valorizzazione dei sistemi rurali Susana Esquivel Rios University Center UAEM Valley of Teotihuacan, Karl Kupka México Amsterdam University, Netherlands Re-development strategies for Urban Landscapes Norma Lizbet González Corona in Danger University Center UAEM Valley of Teotihuacan, México Nur Akin Tourism and cultural heritage in the area of Former President of ICOMOS Turkey archaeological Teotihuacán light of public policy Cultural Tourism and Traditional Market Places as networks Focal Point for Urban Communication

Antonello Alici Università Politecnica delle Marche The Culture of the City. Understanding the Urban Landscape

Denise Ulivieri Università di Pisa, Icomos Italia Comunità locali e territorio: le aree interne della Versilia storica

Michelangelo Donà Università degli Studi di Pavia e giornalista

Daniele Trabucco Università degli Studi di Padova Informazione, promozione e valorizzazione turistico-culturale: il caso delle città storiche della provincia di Belluno

Sufiya Agisheva Kazan State University of Architecture and Engineering (Russia) Conflict-solving strategies on World Cultural Heritage Protection and Urban Development in the context of historic urban landscapes MODERN HERITAGE - IDENTIFYING, ASSESSING AND MANAGING ITS PROTECTION AND CONSERVATION 13 March 10-13, 2016

The contemporary definition of heritage As local, national and World Heritage identification significance is very broad and diversified. Types of modern heritage places increases, the ICOMOS of heritage can be very different contemporary ISC20C has developed guidelines and research to sites/objects/places – the rules and limitations assist. Currently ISC20C is developing a thematic concerning age, substance, function or artistic framework for Twentieth Century Heritage to assist value vary from country to country. Contemporary in providing a contextual basis for comparing and conservation theory accepts all forms of place- verifying the significance of sites, working with the bound historical objects, and aims at defining Getty Conservation Institute (GCI). Nowadays the the rules of its protection and management. The process of assessing the value of pieces of heritage modern heritage is a particularly challenging is carried out more quickly, and it is so important to problem. Even setting straight the typology and discuss and define the criteria and the methodology terminology for the heritage of the 20th century to assess the value of potential heritage – this is evokes discussion. Thus, the term “modern also a challenge for the conservation theory. heritage” should be understood in a broad sense, as a definition of the whole set of monuments, In 2014 the ISC20C published The “Madrid places and sites created by the culture of the 20th Document – Approaches for the Conservation of century, whose significance earns them the status Twentieth Century Architectural Heritage”, which of heritage. was presented to the ICOMOS General Assembly in Florence as a contribution to clarify this issue. Do we need to define the criteria to select modern It sets out a clear methodology to protect and heritage places/ elements/objects, which should manage the elements/objects considered as the be granted the heritage status of listed properties, modern heritage. It has been translated into twelve or are the selection criteria the same for all types languages and can be downloaded from http:// of heritage, whatever its age? icomos-isc20c.org/id13.html

International discussion about criteria and The Madrid Document is currently the focus of significance is timely, because the process of expansion in collaboration with ISCs IFLA and creating and destroying the product of the CIVVIH to broaden its scope to cover cultural material culture has accelerated considerably in landscapes and urban ensembles. our globalized world. Currently, there is a great diversity of approaches to defining an appropriate Moreover a very difficult task is to define rules and time distance, which in the past allowed to evaluate standards to regulate the protection of the modern the elements/objects of value to be protected. heritage and to develop common objectives and principles for the conservation and restoration Previous ICOMOS research amongst its members of this younger cultural heritage. Previous has demonstrated the variety of selection criteria meetings about conserving modern heritage have and approaches to modern heritage management considered questions of practice and theory, such presented in the Montreal Action Plan (MAP) as The Colloquium to Advance Practice in the project that was shared amongst all ICOMOS Conservation of Modern Heritage in 2013, which national committees in 2001. can be downloaded at http://www.getty.edu/conservation/our_projects/ field_projects/cmai/colloquium_report.pdf Scientific Committee

It is the consideration of the Theory ISC that the ICOMOS ISC Theory of Conservation traditional and strict protection rules, prevailing in the protection of historical monuments, could Wilfried Lipp be directly used only in some assets of the President protection and conservation of modern heritage. These problems are caused by the differences Bogusław Szmygin in the technical, functional, design profiles of Secretary General modern and pre-modern heritage like traditional monuments of art and history and historical ICOMOS ISC Twentieth Century sites. The ISC20C welcomes broad international Heritage discussion of these issues. Sheridan Burke The Theory Committee proposed that a joint ISC President meeting to further discuss and elaborate key issues concerning the protection and management of the Kyle Normandin modern heritage would be timely in Europe. These Secretary General issues include a: Fondazione Romualdo Del Bianco® • Typology and terminology of the heritage of Life Beyond Tourism® the 20th century, including “dark heritage” of war and dictatorship Paolo Del Bianco President • Criteria of selection of the heritage of the 20th century Simone Giometti • Evaluation of mass / serial production and Secretary General of standardized products of the 20th century

• The value of thematic historic frameworks

• Approaches to conservation of the heritage of the 20th century

• Forms of protection of monuments and sites, including spacious urban, industrial and cultural landscape heritage areas of the 20th century

• What constitutes excellent examples of protection/adaptation/conservation of the heritage of the 20th century

Elaboration of the above-mentioned issues by a joint conference of ISC20C and Theory Committee members will assist and develop the efficient protection of the modern heritage in the 21st century. Calogero Bellanca Participants Susana Mora Approaches to conservation of the heritage of the Wilfried Lipp 20th Century President ICOMOS ISC Theory of Conservation Committee Fernando Espinosa de los Monteros Modern Heritage – Identifying, Assessing and The Madrid Document – Approaches for the Managing its Protection and Conservation. What Conservation of Twentieth Century Architectural are we talking about? Some basic considerations Heritage - A good example to be follow

Sheridan Burke Cristina Boniotti President ICOMOS ISC Twentieth Century History, cataloguing and valorization of Colonie Heritage Marine in Emilia Romagna as a public modern Managing and Conserving Twentieth Century heritage Heritage: Theory and Reality Dinu Bumbaru Jörg Haspel Integrity and the Heritage of the Modern Era - Precast concrete slab constructions – the heritage Report from the Montreal Round Table of modern mass housing production. Criteria of selection and principles of preservation Svitlana Smolenska The legacy of the Stalin empire style in Ukraine: Gunny Harboe the dubious past. Should it be kept? The identification and assessment evaluation processes for selection of modern heritage sites Ewa Stachura and places as an object of protection Joanna Sokołowska - Moskwiak Problems of protection and preservation of urban Ádám Arnóth and architectural heritage of the 20th century Modernist way of conservation - as an architecture in Poland architectural heritage Stefania Landi Vaidas Petrulis Italian grain silos in the 1930s. Cognitive analysis Architectural legacy of Socialist past: conflict of and study of the reuse possibilities interpretations Sufiya Agisheva Nina Stevanović Modern Heritage and Buffer Zone: Integrated Diversity and Creativity as the Highest Criteria in method for managing protection of the site and Preservation and Revitalization of the 20th Century development its surroundings in the urban area Heritage Sigrid Brandt Smriti Pant Retain and safeguard – foster and generate. 20th-Century Colonial Heritage as “Modern” Examples of Monument Culture and Building Heritage in Post-Colonial India – Addressing Some Culture in Dialogue Practical and Theoretical Challenges Ojars Sparitis Riitta Salastie Splendour, fall and rise of symbol - building of SIMILAR OR NOT? Case: protection of 1960s Latvian Academy of Sciences mass housing area from Helsinki Christiane Schmuckle-Mollard Restoration and Extension of the Karl Marx School of Villejuif (near Paris) by Andre Lucrat, 1933 and 1947

Leo Schmidt Traces and Traumascapes – Cultural Significance and Conservation Approaches

Dimitru Rusu Socialist Modernism – Analysis of modern heritage in Republic of Moldova

Olaf Steen How to protect and preserve a designer and architect’s combined home, studio and showroom from the 1950's, with outstanding cultural heritage significance?

Miia Perkkiö Modern heritage DOC or integrity disrupted. Observing and evaluating restorations of Finnish post-war period

Sheridan Burke Developing an Historic Thematic Framework for Twentieth Century Cultural Heritage THE FLORENCE CHARTER ON HISTORIC GARDENS REVISITED: LONG TERM EXPERIENCE AND NEW APPROACHES 14 June 22-24, 2016 The Florence Charter on Historic Gardens was Declaration on Heritage and Landscapes Values developed by the then ICOMOS International (2014). Scientific Committees on Historic Gardens and Sites beginning with a meeting in May 1981 in Consequently there is a need to re-visit the Florence. Florence Charter on Historic Gardens with fresh eyes. Since it is considered that the Charter is an The Charter, the first document of its kind, has been historic document, it is the view of the ISCCL that a cornerstone for the restoration, conservation, it should not be altered. It is necessary therefore to protection, and management of historic gardens review the content of the Charter and develop new across the globe. It was influential in extending guidelines for its application in the recognition and heritage meanings beyond solely historic gardens. conservation of ‘clearly defined landscapes’. For example, the Charter played a significant role in recognising the cultural significance of gardens and the interconnections between natural and Scientific cultural heritage. Committee It also made important contributions to discussions on concepts of authenticity (at the time ICOMOS-IFLA International Scientific associated with cultural heritage) and integrity Committee on Cultural Landscapes (associated with natural heritage), which offered different perspectives to traditional practices of Steve Brown President conservation and restoration of architectural ‘monuments’. In particular, the Charter concerned itself with the ‘living’ elements of a garden (in Monica Luengo Chair particular perishable plants, but also flowing ISCCL Working Group on the Florence Charter water) and foreshadowed work concerned with the management of change. Jochen Martz After 35 years since the adoption of the Charter, Vice-President Europe the idea of heritage as well as management approaches and practices have changed Stéphanie de Courtois substantially. New thinking in heritage has seen the Secretary introduction in 1992 of ‘cultural landscape’ as a category in the UNESCO Operational Guidelines International Committee on Legal, for the Implementation of the World Heritage Administrative, and Financial Issues Convention; adoption of the ICOMOS Nara (ICLAFI) Document on Authenticity (1994); the Council of Europe’s European Landscape Convention James Reap (signed in Florence in 2000); and new visions of Secretary General landscape as recognised in the ICOMOS Florence Participants

Olga Baseova Jochen Martz The Florence Charter: personal memories The Florence Charter: circumstances, impacts and side effects esp. in the German speaking countries Lionella Scazzosi & Luigi Zangheri Stephanie de Courtois The Carta Italiana dei giardini storici and the & Monique Mosser Florence Charter: critics and outlooks Florence Charter and heritage: French issues and recent cases David Jacques Alternative approaches to The Florence Charter: a Steve Brown British viewpoint Heritage and values: comparing The Burra Charter and Florence Charter Hartmut Troll The visible and the invisible: reception, Monica Luengo interpretation and immaterial heritage in the field Linking the Florence charters: 1981 and 2014 of preservation of garden monuments

COSTUME COLLOQUIUM V: RESTRAINT AND EXCESS IN FASHION AND DRESS 15 November 16-20, 2016 Are women and men “victims of fashion”? Does is equally familiar. Costume Colloquium V will what we wear, define who we are? In the world provide a forum where both of these languages of fashion, how much is too much or when is too can be heard and establish a dialogue with one little, well, beyond revealing? another.

Beau Brummel’s signature cravats, Joan Other topics will include a look at fashionable Crawford’s and Joan Collins’ exaggerated restraints that cause physical distortion of the body, shoulder pads, Carmen Miranda’s platform shoes fashion that can be detrimental to our health, and and fruit bowl turban and Henry VII’s black squirrel garments that bind us and limit our freedom of collars: all speak of excess. Tight lacing, foot movement. binding, penitential black and the minimalism of Jil Sander generate questions about the restrained, Discussions regarding fashion on display on stage, fashionable body. Fashion’s willing victims, on runways, in store fronts and in museums will whether past or present, give us pause to consider examine the trends of making fashion accessible whether clothes can ever be too tight, too loose, to a globalized consumer. too high, too low, too opulent or too modest. Costume Colloquium V will address the Costume Colloquium’s fifth edition “Restraint relationship between liberation and confinement, and Excess in Fashion and Dress” to be held display and concealment, and present an analysis in Florence, Italy in November of 2016; will of styles, including: hemlines, waistlines, necklines, highlight historic, geographic, psychological and embellishments and accessories which should help sociological accounts of restrictions imposed by to illuminate us about the why, where, when and dress codes and sumptuary legislation: who has how fashion can be, in fact, a guiding force for the right, or not, to be extravagant, who can trim us all. with lace or embellish with gold?

Additionally, we will delve into the showy counterpart to an equally intriguing set of questions about the strict limitations imposed on those who wear, make and indeed, sell military, legal, religious, national and ceremonial dress.

The language used in fashion retailing, journalism, promotion and exhibition is understandably often extravagant and excessive, with clothes and their designers described as outstanding, incomparable, exquisite and ingenious. However, a discourse of restraint that speaks of understatement less is more, functional minimalism and versatility Scientific Committee Participants

Mary Westerman Bulgarella Birgitta Berglund Costume & Textile Conservator, Senior Lecturer Researcher and Consultant Lund University Florence, Italy Malmö, Sweden The Great Corset Debate Carlotta Del Bianco Vice-President, Fondazione Romualdo Del Veronica Casado Hernandez Bianco® – Life Beyond Tourism® MFA Candidate Florence, Italy School of the Art Institute of Chicago IL, USA Gillion Carrara Transgression through Restraint: Crinolines and a Director, Fashion Resource Center, Space of One's Own in Victorian The School of the Art Institute of Chicago Britain 1840-1870 United States Kimberly Wahl Jonathan Faiers Associate Professor Reader in Fashion Theory, Winchester School of Ryerson University Art, University of Southampton Toronto, Canada United Kingdom The Excess/Restraint Dyad in Mainstream and Alternative Dress 1880-1915 Joanna Marschner Costume Historian and Curator, Historic Royal Emilia Müller Palaces, Kensington Palace PhD Candidate London, United Kingdom Universidad Católica de Chile Santiago, Chile Roberta Orsi Landini “Down with the Crinoline”: Fashion and Modernity Costume & Textile Historian in 19th Century Chile Florence,Italy Sally Grant Alexandra Palmer Senior Lecturer of Fashion & Textiles Senior Curator of Costume & Textiles, Royal Bath Spa University, UK Ontario Museum Cutting for Freedom: An Analysis of Glam Toronto, Canada Fashions’ Use of Hollywood Nostalgia in its Cut & Construction of Fashionable Dress with Teresa Pasqui Particular References to the Designs of Professor in Culture and Fashion Design at the Anthony Price University of Florence Florence, Italy Juliano Felizardo & Ramayana Sousa Rosalia Varoli-Piazza Professor of History of Fashion & Costume and Special Advisor to the Director General of Professor of Literary & Film Studies ICCROM and Art Historian Universidade do Sul de Santa Catarina, Brazil Rome, Italy Fashion and Queer Subversion: for a Political Use of Excess Maria Claudia Bonadio Stamatina Kousidi Associate Professor of Art & Design Research Associate Federal University of Juiz de Fora, Brazil Department of Architecture & Urban Studies, The Couturier’s Clothes: Tradition, Exuberance Politecnico di Milano and Gender Boundaries Milan, Italy Lumps, Puffs and Hoops. Perspectives on the Hillary Davidson Grotesque Dress in Space Independent Scholar of Dress & Textiles London, UK Lori Hall-Araujo The Excesses of Minimalism: Vulgarity, Bulk & Assistant Professor and Curator Extravagance in Regency Dress Costume Museum Research Library and Design School, Stephens College Cynthia Cooper Columbia, Missouri, USA Head of Collections & Research and Curator of The Lady in the Tutti-Frutti Hat Behind Glass: Costume & Textiles Explaining Excess at the Carmen McCord Museum Miranda Museum Montreal, Canada When Too Little Became Too Much: Low Gillion Carrara Necklines, Imperialism and Resistance in Adjunct Professor in the Department of Art History, Late 19th Century Canada Theory & Criticism and Director of the Fashion Resource Center Sally Helvenston Gray School of the Art Institute of Chicago Associate Professor IL, USA Michigan State University, East Lansing Underpinnings: Artist Fraser Taylor, MI, USA from Excess to Restraint The Mother Hubbard Gown: Restrictions on the Public Wearing of Private Attire in the Emmanuelle Dirix 19th Century Principal Lecturer Manchester Metropolitan University Alexandra Palmer Manchester, UK Senior Curator of Fashion & Textiles Hide and Seek: Restraint and Excess and the Royal Ontario Museum Politics of the “Designer Retrospective” Toronto, Canada Exhibitions Raymond Duncan: A Man of No Restraint Jose A. Ortiz Catriona Fisk Specialist in Art History & Heritage Preservation PhD Candidate - University of Technology University of Barcelona, Spain Sydney, Australia Dressing the Soul: Mourning Regulation and Sexual Restraint and Reproductive Excess: Excess in Spanish Culture Dressing for Pregnancy 1750-1900 Elizabeth Semmelhack Deirdre Murphy Senior Curator Senior Curator The Bata Shoe Museum, Canada Historic Royal Palaces On Display: Chopines and the Proclamation of London, UK Wealth in Early Modern Spanish and Couture for Teenagers Italian Dress Sandra Heffernan Hadas Hirsch Senior Lecturer of Textile Design Head Department of History and Land of Israel Massey University, New Zealand Oranim Academic College of Education Luxurious Design during a Period of Restraint: Ramat Yishay, Israel Empress Zita’s Coronation Gown The Construction of Personal Appearance of Mukhannathun (Hermaphrodites) in Alisa Saisavetvare (Curator) Medieval Muslim Jurisprudence Nuchada Pianprasankit (Conservator) Melissa Leventon Chryssa Kapartziani & Julia Brennan (Senior Consultants) & Myrsini Pichou Queen Sirikit Museum of Textiles Lawyer and PhD Candidate in Sociology of Law, Bangkok, Thailand and Curator of the Athens University History Fit for a Queen: Excess and Restraint in a Royal Museum, Greece Wardrobe Ties, Clothing and Legislation: The Impact of the Greek Crisis on Fashion Anna Vaughan Kett & Hannah Rumball Marina Blumin Lecturer, School of Humanities, PhD Student in Curator of the Department of the History of Dress History Russian Culture – State Hermitage Museum Quakerism and Material Culture St. Petersburg, Russia University of Brighton, UK The Ideological Restrictions in Soviet Fashion Negotiating Simplicity and Extravagance in 19th 1920-30 Century Quaker Dress: Restraint and Excess in the Clothing Worn by Eleonor Stephens Sandra Skaro Clark and Helen Bright Clark of & Ujevic Darko Street Assistant in the Department of Textile & Clothing Design and Professor in the Faculty of Textile Faegheh Shirazi Technology - University of Zagreb, Croatia & Christina Lindholm “Orders against Luxury” and How they Influenced Professor, Department of Middle Eastern 16th and 17th Century Fashion in the Studies of the University of Texas, Austin, TX, Dubrovnik Republic and Associate Dean - Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA Clarissa Esguerra Brand Islam: Islamic Fashion Assistant Curator of Costume & Textiles Los Angeles County Museum, USA Holly Poe Durbin The Zoot Suit: A Study on Sartorial Excess Professor University of California, Irvine Alison Matthews David CA, USA & Ben Barry Bad to the Bone: Dressing the Gods and Monsters Associate Professor and Assistant Professor of Rock & Roll School of Fashion, Ryerson University, Canada Restraining Orders: Men’s Slim-fitting Suits as Cynthia Amnéus Sartorial Shackles Curator of Fashion &Textiles Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati Michelle Finamore OH, USA Curator of Fashion Elizabeth Hawes: Restrained Couturier, Radical Museum of Fine Arts Boston, USA Thinker Cut, Color, Revolution?: Brioni in Context Beatrice Behlen Amy McHugh Senior Curator of Fashion & Decorative Arts & Annamarie Sandecki Museum of London, UK Assistant Curator and Archivist ‘Conspicuously Adorned’: The Wardrobe of Diana Tiffany & Co.,New York, NY, USA Lady Delamere 1913-1987 A Broadway Belle: Archeological Revival Jewelry in 19th Century New York Laurie Anne Brewer Associate Curator of Costume & Textiles Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design, Providence RI, USA Golden Glamour: The Edith Stuyvesant Vanderbilt Gerry Collection

Lauren Whitley & Emily Stoehrer Senior Curator of Fashion & Textiles and Curator of Jewelry Museum of Fine Arts, Boston MA, USA Timeless Beauty: Halston-Peretti 1971-1978

Kimberly Chrisman-Campbell Independent Fashion Historian and Costume Society of America Series Editor CA, USA Hair Today, Gone Tomorrow: Extreme Makeovers in Late 18th Century Hairstyles

Mairi MacKenzie Research Fellow Glasgow School of Art, UK “You smell like a whore”: Pungent Scents, Questionable Character and the Rise of Power Perfumes in the 1980’s

Laura Vegas, Teresa Viñes & Leire Rubio Researcher at the Universidad de Valladolid, Spain Independent Researcher - Madrid, Spain Illustrator - Valladolid, Spain Main Jewelry Pieces in the Castilian Royal Chamber during the 15th Century

2014 - 2016 WORKSHOPS

Occasions to favor opportunities of encounters among young people belonging to different cultures and countries, in order to enable their mutual knowledge and, through this mutual under standing, contribute to the development of friendship and cultural exchange. VALUE EDUCATION FOR COLORS IN FASHION BASED ON CULTURE, PEACE AND HUMAN FIVE SENSES 01 DEVELOPMENT: FROM INDIA TO 07 November 2014 THE WORLD

November 2014 COSTUME COLLOQUIUM IV: COLORS IN FASHION (PHD THE IX WORKSHOP “A 08 WORKSHOP) DICTIONARY WITHOUT November 2014 02 BOUNDARIES: FLORENCE IN THE WORKS OF WORLD DISPLAY WINDOW AS A FAMOUS PEOPLE. PROJECT OF PART OF HERITAGE URBAN A DICTIONARY” 09 LANDSCAPE - ITS HISTORY, THE November 2014 PRESENT AND THE FUTURE November 2014

CHURCHES IN THE ARCHITECTURE OF FLORENCE ARCHITECTURE AND MUSIC: CONNECTIONS AND 03 November 2014 10 INSPIRATIONS March 2015

NATURAL STONE IN THE ARCHITECTURE OF FLORENTINE INFLUENCE OF ITALY 04 PALAZZOS ESPECIALLY OF FLORENCE, November 2014 11 THEME MICHELANGELO March 2015

TONES OF FLORENCE: MIDDLE AGES AND ANTIQUITY VOCALISSIMO 2015 IN THE ARCHITECTURE OF March 2015 05 FLORENCE IN XII-XVI C. 12 November 2014 THE X EDITION “LINGUOCULTURAL SPACE OF THE CITY WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE DICTIONARY THE INTERNET OF PLACES 13 PROJECT “FLORENCE IN THE DAYS (MUCH BETTER THAN A WORKS OF WORLD FAMOUS HACKATHON!) 06 PEOPLE” November 2014 April 2015 CROSS-CULTURAL DIALOGUE: ETHICA MEDICO INFLUENCE OF ITALY, ESPECIALLY March 2016 14 OF FLORENCE - THEME RD 21 LEONARDO DA VINCI (3 EDITION)

June 2015 THE ARCHITECTURE AND LANDSCAPE OF FLORENCE NATIONAL AND EUROPEAN 22 March 2016 ASPECTS OF CULTURAL HERITAGE 15 October 2015 THE RIVER AND ITS CITY - LANDSCAPE, ARCHITECTURE EFFICIENT YOUTH INTERCULTURAL AND ART DIALOGUE THROUGH EDUCATION, 23 16 THE SCIENCES, CULTURE, August 2016 COMMUNICATION AND INFORMATION DIALOGUE AMONG CULTURES November 2015 WITHIN THE FRAMEWORK 24 OF EASTERN PARTNERSHIP “VALUE EDUCATION FOR PROGRAMME CULTURE, PEACE AND HUMAN November 2016 17 DEVELOPMENT: FROM INDIA TO THE WORLD” TWIN EDITION: ARCHITECTURE AND THE ITALY 2015 - INDIA 2016 IDENTIFICATION FEATURES OF November 2015 25 THE HISTORICAL CITY November 2016 COLONNADES IN ARCHITECTURE January 2016 18 "LINGUOCULTURAL SPACE OF THE CITY WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE THE INFLUENCE OF FORMER 26 DICTIONARY PROJECT"- MILITARY BUILDING ON THE URBAN FLORENCE IN THE WORKS OF LANDSCAPE 19 WORLD FAMOUS PEOPLE March 2016 November 2016

EXPERIENCING THE IDENTITY ETHICA MEDICO II OF PLACES AND COMMUNITIES: November - December 2016 20 COMMUNICATE NEW IDENTIFYING 27 REPRESENTATION MODELS OF URBAN LANDSCAPE March 2016 VALUE EDUCATION FOR CULTURE, PEACE AND HUMAN DEVELOPMENT: FROM INDIA TO THE WORLD 01 November 9-16, 2014 Culture, with the values and knowledge it that gradually developed into the contemporary contains, is the expression of human dignity itself Framework for Values Education in Schools of the and, as such, a guarantee of peace in the world. Indian National Council of Educational Research The original meaning of culture, “cultura animi, and Training. or ‘cultivation of the soul’ is a perfect reflection In the 80-90s of the XX century, educational of the Value Education approach: no fundamental systems in other countries, like Australia, the UK, transformation in society can occur, unless the Norway, Sweden, Thailand, Japan and some individuals constituting it are transformed. This others, have decided to embrace Value Education gradual inside-out transformation of society is the in their school systems, as a response to the overall essence of true human development. decline in values in society and need to face Value Education has its origins in the XIX century new globalization challenges, such as terrorism, India, in the teachings of great thinker and overall insecurity, violence, ecological crisis and educationist Swami Vivekananda, “the man who innumerable destructions of cultural heritage. influenced the influencers”, among which Romain The universal importance of bringing further the Rolland, John D. Rockefeller, Nikola Tesla, message of great Indians and introducing Value Rabindranath Tagore, Leo Tolstoy, Carl Jung, W. Education in other countries all over the world Somerset Maugham, Igor Stravinsky, Jawaharlal is seen as a way towards sustainable human Nehru, Mohandas Gandhi and many others. development and peace in the world. Swami Vivekananda was strongly convinced that social evils could be resolved through the transformation of man with the help of moral and spiritual education. He was the first spiritual leader of his time to draw attention to the poor masses, underlining that human development can be reached only through ‘man-making, life-building and character-making’ education.

The ideas of Swami Vivekananda, who held numerous lectures in the United States, England and India itself, influenced greatly not only the nationalistic awakening of his own country, but also the international intellectual community. Mahatma Gandhi developed his education message further, experimenting his revolutionary Basic Education System in South Africa and India. His ideas were subsequently included in Indian governmental documents concerning education VALUE EDUCATION FOR CULTURE, PEACE AND HUMAN DEVELOPMENT: FROM INDIA TO THE WORLD 01 November 9-16, 2014

Culture, with the values and knowledge it documents concerning education that gradually contains, is the expression of human dignity itself developed into the contemporary Framework for and, as such, a guarantee of peace in the world. Values Education in Schools of the Indian National The original meaning of culture, “cultura animi, Council of Educational Research and Training. or ‘cultivation of the soul’ is a perfect reflection of the Value Education approach: no fundamental In the 80-90s of the XX century, educational transformation in society can occur, unless the systems in other countries, like Australia, the UK, individuals constituting it are transformed. This Norway, Sweden, Thailand, Japan and some gradual inside-out transformation of society is the others, have decided to embrace Value Education essence of true human development. in their school systems, as a response to the overall decline in values in society and need to face Value Education has its origins in the XIX century new globalization challenges, such as terrorism, India, in the teachings of great thinker and overall insecurity, violence, ecological crisis and educationist Swami Vivekananda, “the man innumerable destructions of cultural heritage. who influenced the influencers”, among which Romain Rolland, John D. Rockefeller, Nikola Tesla, The universal importance of bringing further the Rabindranath Tagore, Leo Tolstoy, Carl Jung, W. message of great Indians and introducing Value Somerset Maugham, Igor Stravinsky, Jawaharlal Education in other countries all over the world Nehru, Mohandas Gandhi and many others. is seen as a way towards sustainable human Swami Vivekananda was strongly convinced development and peace in the world. that social evils could be resolved through the transformation of man with the help of moral and spiritual education. He was the first spiritual leader of his time to draw attention to the poor masses, underlining that human development can be reached only through ‘man-making, life-building and cwharacter-making’ education.

The ideas of Swami Vivekananda, who held numerous lectures in the United States, England and India itself, influenced greatly not only the nationalistic awakening of his own country, but also the international intellectual community. Mahatma Gandhi developed his education message further, experimenting his revolutionary Basic Education System in South Africa and India. His ideas were subsequently included in Indian governmental Project Leader

Alesia Koush Life Beyond Tourism®

Tatsiana Yakauchyts Belarusian State Economic University

Other Professors

“Be the Change” Meeting with: Round Table:

Garja Man Gurung Creativity: Past, Present and Future Minister of Cultural Affairs and Heritage, Chairs: Government of Sikkim, India Rohit Jigyasu Raffaele Salinari President ICOMOS India President of Terre des Hommes International Federation, , Switzerland Namiko Yamauchi ICOMOS Japan Ritu Chauhan Philosophy of Yoga Teacher, India - Italy Round Table: Luca Baraldi Sustainable Development: Travel and Project Developer and Scientific Consultant of the Dialogue Foundation Venetian Productivity Centre, Vicenza, Italy Chairs:

Roshnila Gurung Michael Turner Social Development Specialist, Government of UNESCO Chair for Urban Design and Sikkim, India Conservation Studies, Jerusalem

Namiko Yamauchi ICOMOS Japan MAHATMA “Be the change you GANDHI want to see in the world”

THE IX WORKSHOP "A DICTIONARY WITHOUT BOUNDARIES: FLORENCE IN THE WORKS OF WORLD FAMOUS PEOPLE. PROJECT OF A DICTIONARY" 02 November 9-16, 2014 The project aims at studying Florentine cultural The project will refresh tourists’ (both Italian and heritage and reflection of its influence in both foreign) interest in Florence through a brand new Italian and world cultures presented in the works and original vision of Italian prominent people of Italian writers, artists and composers who once whose lives were connected with Florence. It would lived in or visited Florence and got inspired by the also be useful for Florentine guides as a source of city, its museums, monuments, architecture and unique material about the eminent city. people. The purpose of the project is to show the links of the outstanding with Florence and Florentine Project Leader artistic atmosphere as seen by international Olga Karpova students. Ivanovo State University, Russia The proposed project of a new multimedia Internet lexipedia is based on the analysis of various sources (encyclopedias,books, journals, memoirs, Other Professors personal letters, etc.) about famous Italians of all epochs along with personal experience gained by Round Table: international students during their stay in Florence due to visiting Florentine museums, art galleries, Creativity: Past, Present and Future libraries, and research centres. Each group of students is supposed to submit their own vision of a Chairs: dictionary and its articles devoted to distinguished people (Italian writers, artists, musicians, etc.) whose Rohit Jigyasu creative career was connected with Florence. The President ICOMOS India dictionary entry will include: 1) a photo (gravure, painting) of the person described; 2) biographical Namiko Yamauchi data; 3) a thorough description of the person’s ICOMOS Japan connections with Florence and Florentine motives in his/her creative works (books, paintings, music, Round Table: etc.). The entries will be provided with exclusive multimedia features - audio and video passages Sustainable Development: Travel and (plays, ballets, canvases, music, etc.) illustrating Dialogue creative works inspired by Florence. The dictionary articles will have numerous links Chairs: to places of interest in Florence reflecting the present state of the sights in the students’ own Michael Turner perception. The user-friendly dictionary should UNESCO Chair for Urban Design and have a challenging design and innovative way Conservation Studies, Jerusalem of key-words description (chronology, nationality, sphere of activity, graphic illustrations, etc.). Namiko Yamauchi ICOMOS Japan CHURCHES IN THE ARCHITECTURE OF FLORENCE 03 November 10-17, 2014 Churches are of especial importance and interest buildings or complexes) to study architectural in the architecture of Florence. Churches with monuments and their peculiarities. Choosing their monumentality, original characteristics, of great amount of monuments is appreciated. planning peculiarities and decorative elements During photo fixation students should make create the unique appearance of the city, assist architectural analyses of the planning, decorative in understanding of the buildings composition, and any other peculiarities of the churches. layout, peculiarities etc. In addition, the Workshop Program will include a The main idea of the given project is to create the number of events organized in the wider context of possibility for the students of different universities the Florence Youth & Heritage Festival. Participants over the world to come to Florence, visit will have a unique chance to interact with high- monuments of the town, walk through the streets rank international experts in Cultural Heritage, studying the uniqueness of Florence, taking pictures Human Rights, Human Development, Intercultural and realizing the main peculiarities of the town's Dialogue, etc. present in Florence on the occasion appearance. As the result of joint work of students of the ICOMOS General Assembly & Symposium from different universities on understanding what 2014. is the origin of Florence' beauty, "genius loci" of the town, they will introduce their vision of the town, analyses of main peculiarities formed an appearance of any building, including not only main "touristic" objects, but also some buildings of not very 'popular' Florence.

Students must prepare home project on churches in their own country to be presented in the beginning of workshop. Project should present the main architectural peculiarities of the churches in their country according to the topic of workshop, should include photo fixation of architectural monuments, architectural analyses and demonstrate the ways and methods of restoration and preservation of architectural heritage in each country.

Project to be done during workshop should include photo fixation of several churches in Florence to be chosen after workshop beginning. After formation of international groups students and tutors are free to choose any "route" (streets, squares or separated Project Leader

Sabina Hajiyeva Azerbaijan University of Architecture and Construction, Azerbaijan

Other Professors

Round Table: Round Table:

Creativity: Past, Present and Future Sustainable Development: Travel and Dialogue Chairs: Chairs: Rohit Jigyasu Michael Turner President ICOMOS India UNESCO Chair for Urban Design and Conservation Studies, Jerusalem Namiko Yamauchi ICOMOS Japan Namiko Yamauchi ICOMOS Japan

NATURAL STONE IN THE ARCHITECTURE OF FLORENTINE PALAZZOS 04 November 9-16, 2014

The history of the art of architecture and construction testifies to the special place the culture of working with stone is occupying in the process of creation of buildings. Stone cutting reached the level of art particularly in areas where nature was abundant with a variety of natural stone. Among those countries are Armenia, Italy, as well as other countries. As a result of different world perception and beauty criteria, the world architecture of today is rich in various ways of using the natural stone.

Palazzos of Florence, the capital of Renascence, are the very embodiment of the highest mastery of the natural stone cutting. These buildings are a textbook for students of architecture and construction.

Students of at least second year of studies in the faculties of architecture and construction, who are capable of analytical work, are competent in computer graphic programmes and can handle photographic tools, can participate in the Workshop led by their supervisors.

Project Leader

Emma Harutyunyan National University of Architecture and Construction of Armenia

Other Professors Round Table:

Round Table:Creativity Sustainable Development: Travel and Dialogue Past, Present and Future Chairs: Chairs: Michael Turner Rohit Jigyasu UNESCO Chair for Urban Design and President ICOMOS India Conservation Studies, Jerusalem

Namiko Yamauchi Namiko Yamauchi ICOMOS Japan ICOMOS Japan MIDDLE AGES AND ANTIQUITY IN THE ARCHITECTURE OF FLORENCE IN XII-XVI CENTURIES 05 November 9-16, 2014

An international group of students that attend the methods of studying the architectural heritage universities of architecture will explore during one of different architectural schools. week the historic environment and the genuine architectural heritage of Florence of XII-XVI The aim of the workshop is to acquaint students centuries. The architecture of Florence is a unique with the rich architectural heritage of Florence and phenomenon not only in Italy but also in the history study it directly. In the workshop they will analyze of world architecture. In the pre-Renaissance and the creations of outstanding architects of Italy, Renaissance period, the architecture richness active in Florence during XII-XVI centuries. The is reflected in a variety of techniques, historical main purpose of the workshop is to create an sources and methods of citation. The students understanding among young people of different will not only walk through the streets and alleys ethnic groups and faiths and arouse the interest of the downtown area, but examine those parts and need for knowledge of other cultures. A that are not included in the travel books. This tremendous atmosphere of Florence will contribute will give them the opportunity to go deeper into to achieving this objective. the cultural atmosphere of pre- Renaissance The project consists of three phases: 1).According and Renaissance Florence. Students will make to the theme of the workshop students will learn in sketches, drawings, photographs of monuments of their hometown and will analyze the monuments, outstanding masters: Arnolfo di Cambio, Jacopo which express the influence of regional features in Talenti, Francesco and Simone Talenti, Michelozzo, medieval, ancient architecture renaissance, will Brunelleschi, Alberti, Benedetto da Maiano, make the picture. 2). The development project Michelangelo and Vasari. in Florence. Students from various countries will They will explore buildings that are less known introduce to their new friends their home land. and designed by anonymous architects and a They will make the development and presentation comparative analysis of the architectural heritage of the project in Florence. 3). After returning from of Florence XII-XVI centuries will be carried out. Florence the students, under the guidance of their On the basis of the studied and collected material, professors will continue to work on the project. the participants of the workshop will conduct a Each student will do a presentation of the project comparative analysis of various types of buildings. back at their own university, a photo exhibition. Captured on photos, students will view and show This broad familiarity with the city is very important friends at home, they will once again remember for students because they will see how amazingly walking with new friends in the streets of beautiful Florence’s buildings have been persevered. Florence. Yet, not only revere individual monuments but the historical environment in general. Working together in a seminar in international groups, preparation of reports, discussion of projects that give students an opportunity to get acquainted with Project Leader Valentina Serebryanaya Volgograd State University of Architecture and Civil Engineering Russia

Other Professors Round Table: Round Table: Sustainable Development: Travel and Creativity: Past, Present and Future Dialogue

Chairs: Chairs:

Rohit Jigyasu Michael Turner President ICOMOS India UNESCO Chair for Urban Design and Conservation Studies, Jerusalem Namiko Yamauchi ICOMOS Japan Namiko Yamauchi ICOMOS Japan

THE INTERNET OF PLACES DAYS (MUCH BETTER THAN A HACKATHON!) 06 November 10-11, 2014

The last few years have seen a radical paradigm change in the way we all consider access to information on the web. Whenever we want to find a restaurant in the nearby, an hotel for our summer , we do not search the Internet through standards search engines (e.g. Google) but we increasingly make use of tools which use the concept of “location” (e.g. Google Maps, Google Earth, NASA World Wind, Microsoft Bing Maps etc.).

This cultural change paves the way to an evolution of the Internet as we have known it towards a “location- aware” Internet that we call the internet of places.

Inspired by this location-based approach during the two days participants will be challenged to create the best application using virtual globes (e.g. Google Earth or NASA World Wind) around the themes of Life Beyond Tourismand Florence. The participants will be working to create new applications (requiring software development) as well as rich geo-data mash-ups using existing multidimensional viewers.

The event will bring together software developers with geo-experts, practitioners and volunteers collecting open data to create new stimulating experiences that follow the paradigm of the “internet of places”.

Project Leader

Patrick Hogan NASA World Wind Project Manager, US

Other Professors

Maria Antonia Brovelli Politecnico di Milano Polo Territoriale di Como, Italy

Giorgio Zamboni Comune di Como, Italy

Giuseppe Conti Trilogis, Project Manager and CTO, Italy

COLORS IN FASHION BASED ON FIVE SENSES 07 November 16-23, 2014

A Workshop for University's students, nearly 25-35 person, which will be divided into 5 groups. Every Project Leader group must have their tutor who will guide and Nana Iashvili work with them practically. The theme is "Colors Tbilisi State Academy of Arts in fashion" based on Five senses, basic colors are : Tbilisi, Georgia • White - Sight • Black - Touch In collaboration with • Yellow - Smell Paola Puma • Red - Taste University of Florence, Italy • Blue - Hearing

Each of the five groups will present one of the five senses. They will make concept and create: Clothes, Video Art and Installation. Final presentation will be held in the IcLab and it will be a Showcase presentation. The Iclab will be divided into 5 space, there will be thematically 5 panels and 1 runway . The students will have opportunity to present their creative ideas.

After registration on the website of the workshop on the Life Beyond Tourism Heritage Community, participants must upload sketch images directly on the webpage. In Florence they have to bring 2 printed posters on the theme of workshop in an A2 format.

Clothing can be divided into 5 parts: costume, shoes, bag, jewelry and hats.

Students will bring by themselves all the materials for working. All the information will be communicated by The Project Coordinator.

COSTUME COLLOQUIUM IV: COLORS IN FASHION (PHD WORKSHOP) 08 November 18-24 2014

Colors in Fashion – based on five senses and Chosen Students will start working home on primary colors the costumes.. Their works will be controlled by coordinators online. In November (20-24) white – sight Students will arrive in Florence and complete black – touch their works. yellow – smell red – taste Students must have a grad level (advanced blue – hearing fashion studies) fashion education.

Participants of this workshop can be the successful Final presentation will be held in Palazzo Coppini students chosen by each Institution. These during the Costume Colloquium IV (20-23 students will send their concept, works and November 2014). sketches (A2 Format) on the theme of workshop to the project coordinators. Prof. Iashvili and Prof. Carrara will choose best two students from each Project Leader University. These students will arrive in Florence and take part in the showcase (max. 8-10 Gillion Carrara students). School of the Art Institute of Chicago Chicago, USA Students will be required to communicate with advisers for approval by sketches sent via PDF. Nana Iashvili Tbilisi State Academy of Arts Sketches will be shared in the international Tbilisi, Georgia group in order to create a cohesive theme. Each student will transport work in luggage to Florence. Finalization can be completed in Florence .

Ensembles can include student fabricated shoes, hats, accessories, jewelry.

The theme is "Colors in the fashion" based on Five senses. Basic colors are:

· White - Sight · Black - Touch · Yellow - Smell · Red - Taste · Blue - Hearing

DISPLAY WINDOW AS A PART OF HERITAGE URBAN LANDSCAPE – ITS HISTORY, THE PRESENT AND THE FUTURE 09 March 8-15, 2015 Shop windows belong to the most variable Besides, there are a good inspiration for the design elements of city architecture. The evolution of of new shop fronts in the area of the historic display windows, which are part of the zone downtown. entrance, is always the result of the pace of change: technical, social and economic. Their origin is seen in ancient Rome, where sellers Project Leader exhibited their wares in the windows. In the Middle Bozena Zimnowoda-Krajewska Ages can be identified with the closures of windows Nicolaus Copernicus University in the market stalls and workshops. Faculty of Fine Arts, Institute for the Study, Forms of shop windows have achieved the highest Restoration and Conservation of Cultural Heritage growth and diversity in the nineteenth century, Torun, Poland thanks to technological advances and new construction solutions. This development would not have been possible without social transformation Other Professionals forms of urban life. An important determinant “Divine Comedy of the World Hymn to our was the dynamic development of trade as one of Humanity” the effects of the industrial revolution. The main Presentation of the Dante project of trade routes in the downtown were formed by , French the street frontages. The area of the ground floor Ghislain Avan was shaped by the structures of wood or iron in Dancer and Choreographer historizing or eclectic forms together with shop signs and advertising. In part, they disappeared under the rule of modernism.

Today, the phenomenon of radical transformation of old storefronts is the result of an aggressive form of trade, which, through the great glass surfaces displaces historical diversity of shop windows.

This situation creates an urgent need to return to the tradition of shop windows still existing in historical cities, or the use of archival iconography. Both sources are very important for the protection of shop windows, which have not yet been restated.

ARCHITECTURE AND MUSIC: CONNECTIONS AND INSPIRATIONS 10 March 8-15, 2015 Goethe said that architecture is frozen music. Architecture of Florence, a city famous for its excellent form, can become a source of inspiration for young music makers. Initiate a discussion on this topic, raising challenges for young composers to create works inspired by the Duomo and the church of Santa Croce can provide sensational musical works and open a new perspective on the relationship between architecture and music.

Every participant (young composer) will prepare a draft of the composition inspired by one of famous Florence building ( to prepare in his country).The works will be practice by the students during the workshop and made for a joint concert. Each composition will be entered the name of the corresponding structures.

Project Leader Other Professionals

Maria Murawska “Divine Comedy of the World Hymn to our Pianist, Vice - Rector for Organisation. Humanity” Science and International Cooperation of Presentation of the Dante project of The Feliks Nowowiejski Academy of Music in Ghislain Avan, French Bydgoszcz, Poland Dancer and Choreographer i call Architecture frozen music GOETH

INFLUENCE OF ITALY ESPECIALLY OF FLORENCE, THEME - MICHELANGELO 11 March 8-15, 2015

This workshop aims to introduce to students Greatest art of the Italy. They will feel in real Project Leader space development of History and Culture, Nana Iashvili which will become a source of inspiration for Faculty of Media Arts them. Difference and identity, Discoveries and Tbilisi State Academy of Arts, Georgia Parallels.

This is the main feature of the intercultural dialogue. We promote the development and Other Professionals using of the Life Beyond Tourism Non Profit Portal in the topic "Heritage and contemporary "Divine Comedy of the World – Hymn to our culture in the service of intercultural dialogue Humanity” and territorial development"- and the practical Presentation of the Dante project of Ghislain experience will make it more stronger. Avan, French Dancer and Choreographer.

The subject of the workshop-multimedia and fine art project: Michelangelo

TONES OF FLORENCE: VOCALISSIMO 2015 12 March 14-22, 2015

This travel course to Florence, Italy, is organized as a workshop to bring students and faculty together from different parts of the world to have an educational experience in an international and intercultural environment. More specifically, this environment is Florence, Italy. Through the support of the Del Bianco Foundation, Florence, Italy, the students/faculty in the workshop will experience Florence. Students will be studying the and investigating and exploring the Florentine culture through museum and historical sight visits. Their work will culminate in daily journal writing, a 4/5 page paper describing their experience in Florence, and for the performers, a public performance.

Project Leader Other Professionals

Sarah Meredith Livingston "Divine Comedy of the World – Hymn to our Professor of Music/Women and Gender Studies Humanity” University of Wisconsin-Green Bay Presentation of the Dante project of Ghislain Avan, French Dancer and Choreographer. Kerry Kuplic Assistant Professor of Music Dodge City Community College Dodge City, Kansas

THE X EDITION “LINGUOCULTURAL SPACE OF THE CITY WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE DICTIONARY PROJECT “FLORENCE IN THE WORKS OF WORLD FAMOUS PEOPLE” 13 April 19-26, 2015 The project aims at studying Florentine cultural The entries will be provided with exclusive heritage and reflection of its influence in both multimedia features - audio and video passages Italian and world cultures presented in the works of (plays, ballets, canvases, music, etc.) illustrating world famous writers, artists and composers who creative works inspired by Florence. The dictionary once lived in or visited Florence and got inspired articles will have numerous links to places of by the city, its museums, monuments, architecture interest in Florence reflecting the present state of and people. the sights in the students’ own perception. The user-friendly dictionary should have a challenging The purpose of the project is to show the links of the design and innovative way of key-words description outstanding people with Florence and Florentine (chronology, nationality, sphere of activity, graphic artistic atmosphere as seen by international illustrations, etc.). students. The project will refresh tourists’ (both Italian and The proposed project of a new multimedia Internet foreign) interest in Florence through a brand new lexipedia is based on the analysis of various and original vision of Italian prominent people sources (encyclopedias, books, journals, memoirs, whose lives were connected with Florence. It would personal letters, etc.) about famous Italians of also be useful for Florentine guides as a source of all epochs along with wwpersonal experience unique material about the eminent city. gained by international students during their stay in Florence due to visiting Florentine museums, art galleries, libraries, and research centres. Each group of students is supposed to submit Project Leader their own vision of a dictionary and its articles devoted to distinguished people (Italian writers, Olga Karpova artists, musicians, etc.) whose creative career was Ivanovo State University, Russia connected with Florence.

The dictionary entry will include: Other Professors

1) a photo (gravure, painting) of the person “Famous personalities in Florence”, lecture described; by Laura Desideri, Referent of the Library of . 2) biographical data;

3) a thorough description of the person’s Ferri Hall Gabinetto Vieusseux, Piazza degli Strozzi connections with Florence and Florentine motives in his/her creative works (books, paintings, music, etc.).

CROSS-CULTURAL DIALOGUE: INFLUENCE OF ITALY, ESPECIALLY OF FLORENCE - THEME LEONARDO DA VINCI (3RD EDITION) 14 June 28 - July 5, 2015

This workshop aims to introduce to students Greatest art of the Italy. They will feel in real space development of History and Culture , which will become a source of inspiration for them. Difference and identity, Discoveries and Parallels … This is the main feature of the intercultural dialogue. We promote the development and using of the Life Beyond Tourism Non Profit Portal in the topic "Heritage and contemporary culture in the service of intercultural dialogue and territorial development"- and the practical experience will make it more stronger.

The subject of the workshop-multimedia and fine art project: Leonardo da Vinci.

Project Leader Other Professors

Workshop coordinator: Lecture of

Nana Iashvili Roberto Corazzi Faculty of Media Arts Tbilisi State Academy of about Leonardo da Vinci and introduction of the Arts, Georgia Exhibition “Machine of Leonardo” NATIONAL AND EUROPEAN ASPECTS OF CULTURAL HERITAGE 15 October 4-11, 2015 In modern global world, political, economical of transfer of knowledge and the means of and social processes in Europe and Caucasus, perception of the world. escalated confessional and ethnic disputes and it challenged so-called “frozen conflicts”. In this Culture is organic connection of activities and regard, Caucasus, with its especially geostrategic mankind’s multiple development. It consists: occupation always was and is in the epicenter of knowledge, belief and behavior, which are based great powers’ interest. Thus, it has an important on attitudes and social education. Culture presents meaning in Eurasia geopolitics, which becomes commodity-money relations, political system of actual issue in the world’s politic. After collapse government, fields of influence and therefore, of the Soviet Union, many unsolved problems unique bridge - head for creation of common raised in the countries of south Caucasus and political area, where relations will be built on the Eastern Europe. By regional scale, in formation nations historical life, mutual history, dialogue of integration ties with other disturbed factors between nations and European experience of appeared acute ethnic conflicts. conflict resolution. So youth plays a great role in this historical processes. The peaceful resolution of ethnic conflicts and spread of national minorities rights between They must know more about each other’s independent states, based on equal rights, is history, existence and culture for development possible through intercultural dialogue and of neighborly relations. Frequently, distortion European historical experience. There are a lot of historical facts and myths complicates existing common cultural features between confronting difficult situation. ethnic groups, but at the same time all of them Knowledge about each other’s history and ethnic have their specific national cultural diversity; culture is the most significant factor for civil neighbor countries get from each other cultural education of youths. achievements and also maintain their specificity. There are several factors of common cultural area, Therefore, mentioned workshop is interdisciplinary which is still used: Common history, mentality, and aims to involve students of universities from English language, as a link between nations, the different countries in intercultural dialogue. They natural geographical conditions. Within modern are given an opportunity to get to know each globalization and social transformation processes, other’s national cultural values and make their degradation of national cultural values is more culture popular, share international experience, and more visible and they are under serious which will contribute to develop relationship and risk of disappearance. Cultural heritage is very maybe create common future. This significant important, because it consists of the traditions and example is European Union. forms of expression, transmitted from generation to generation and facilitates social unity of citizens, develops youth individualism, and responsibility. Therefore, cultural heritage is an original method Project Leader Other Professors

Workshop Leader: Meeting with:

Pasquale Ferrara Leila Khubashvili General Secretary of European University Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University Institute and Dieter Schlenker – Director of the Archives. Workshop Coordinator: Churches and Monasteries as the elements of the cultural heritage - not only as the Italian Bella Kopaliani artistic heritage. First Deputy Minister of A/R Abkhazia for Confidence Building and Reconciliation Lecture of: Georgian Technical University

Francesco Salvestrini University of Florence, Department of History and Anthopology

EFFICIENT YOUTH INTERCULTURAL DIALOGUE THROUGH EDUCATION, THE SCIENCES, CULTURE, COMMUNICATION AND INFORMATION 16 November 1-8, 2015

Participants of the project are supposed to study the UNESCO main documents and world heritage list, Manifesto of the foundation, ICOMOS Charter and list of both their local territory and Florence territory, choose one of the local objects - monument or site, give the description of it according to the suggested format. The format is supposed to promote the ICOMOS object demonstrating its significance for the world cultural heritage. That should be a power point presentation and an article with a bilingual (English - native language) glossary/ dictionary with thematic words of cultural heritage, restoration, conservation, preservation (the theme and quantity of words are subject for approval).

Project Leader

Liudmila Devel St. Petersburg University of Culture (Russia)

Other Professors

Presentation of:

Marcello Garzaniti and Natalia Zhukova Department of the Foreign Languages.

Introduction:

Francesca Funis and Gennaro Tampone University of Florence About the Vasari’s architecture “VALUE EDUCATION FOR CULTURE, PEACE AND HUMAN DEVELOPMENT: FROM INDIA TO THE WORLD” TWIN EDITION: ITALY 2015 - INDIA 2016 17 November 15-22, 2015 Culture is the expression of human dignity and a guarantee of peace and development. The original meaning of culture, ‘cultura animi’, or ‘cultivation of the soul’ is a perfect reflection of the Value Education approach: no fundamental transformation in society can occur, unless individuals constituting it are transformed. Gradual inside-out development of society will lead to the birth of ‘culture of the Right to Culture’ that will render illicit antiquities’ trafficking a violation of this right as it deprives humanity of the right to access cultural heritage and knowledge contained in it.

The II° Twin Edition of the international students’ workshop “Value Education for Culture, Peace and Human Development” intends to continue the work launched by the first edition of the Workshop in November 2014 and create an international forum of reflection, discussion and change, as well as contribute to the social awareness-raising about the importance of inculcating universal values into the minds and hearts of people in order to reach out, in the longer run, to constructing a values-based society. Here you can read an article "Lessons in Values" dedicated to the 2014 Edition, written by students that took part in it.

Stefano Valentini Project Leader Co-director of CAMNES Center for Ancient Mediterranean and Near Eastern Studies Alesia Koush Life Beyond Tourism Florence, Italy Florence, Italy Davide Nadali Sapienza - University of Rome Roshnila Gurung Forest-Plus (USAID and Government of India) Co-director of the Italian Archeological Mission in InsPIRE Network for Environment, India Tell Surghul/Nigin in South Iraq, Italy - Iraq

Lynda Albertson Other Professors Chief Executive Officer of ARCA Association for Research into Crimes Against Art, Captain Lanfranco Disibio Amelia, Italy Commander of the TPC Unit of Carabinieri (special Unit of the Italian Carabineer for the Stefano Alessandrini Protection of Cultural Heritage) Consultant of the Italian Ministry of Cultural Florence, Italy Heritage and Activities and Tourism Consultant of the Avvocatura dello Stato Italiano Carlo Francini (Italian Government Legal Services) Head of the UNESCO Office of the Municipality of Florence Florence, Italy Video contribution: Stefano Marinelli International Relations Manager of the Noah Charney Association Rondine Citta della della Pace Founder and President of ARCA (Citadel of Peace), Arezzo, Italy Association for Research into Crimes Against Art Editor of “Art and Crime” Nosiba Hider (Sudan) Professor at the American University of Rome & Ana Maksimovic (Serbia) Italy – USA – Slovenia Students of the Association Rondine Cittadella della Pace (Citadel of Peace), Arezzo, Italy Video contribution: Daniele Santi Andrea Ruf International Relations for the Italian Buddhist International Relationsfor the Brazilian Roerich Institute Soka Gakkai, Florence, Italy Institute, San Paolo – New York, USA Oksana Marchenko Vittorio Gasparrini Co-founder of the International Organization President of the Centro UNESCO Firenze Onlus, Peace through Culture, USA Florence, Italy COLONNADES IN ARCHITECTURE 18 January 31 - February 7, 2016

The application of colonnades as an important architectural and constructive part was known Project Coordinator since the Ancient world, Egypt, Greece and Rome. They got a unique expression in every age. We Marina Bunatyan National University of Architecture and also meet colonnades that have new aesthetics in Construction, Armenia modern works. They are seen in exteriors, interiors, separate porches, and even in engineering constructions for example in aqueducts. Florence is a textbook especially with the colonnades used Assistant in the Renaissance architecture, the study of which is a great school for the architect lecturers and Suren Melik-Karamyan National University of Architecture and students. During the first day of the workshop the Construction, Armenia students must present their examples of application of colonnades in the architectural heritage of their country, in attempt to find some specific National heritage features. Student homework should include photographs of architectural structures, analysis in the form of tables, diagrams and schemes.

At the start of works the students will be proposed to do research works in Florence, individually analyze the application of the order system linking it with the creation of the image. It will be necessary to present photographs, technical drawings and sketches. THE INFLUENCE OF FORMER MILITARY BUILDING ON THE URBAN LANDSCAPE 19 March 6-13, 2016

Former military building, especially that from the nineteenth century, is today a significant challenge Project Leader (task) on the protection of architectural heritage. Bozena Zimnowoda-Krajewska Location of fortress has always had an impact on University Nicolaus Copernicus the functioning of the city. Apart from ring of forts Toruń Poland that surrounded the city, the fortress had buildings that supply the needs of thousands of soldiers of all charges. These were the barracks, warehouses, Other Professionals bakeries, field hospitals, laundries, casinos, Command headquarters etca. Necessary were Meeting with: also maneuvering areas to exercise. Italian painter Bruno Lucatello (from Venice) During the construction of the fortress military and presentation of his painting technique function affect the dynamics of the development of the city. The presence of the army in the period of the scheduled defense system gave the city a garrison character, which often restrict the development of more economic directions. Eliminating the military functions of city life resulted in large changes in its space. Many buildings deserted, for some found a new use. However, teams of military buildings are unique cultural heritage, which first requires the estimation of historic value.

EXPERIENCING THE IDENTITY OF PLACES AND COMMUNITIES: COMMUNICATE NEW IDENTIFYING REPRESENTATION MODELS OF URBAN LANDSCAPE 20 March 6-13, 2016

Believing that a respectful understanding of different identities passes through the conscious Project Leader knowledge of the genius loci, in the workshop Paola Puma we will explore how try an innovative sense of Faculty of Architecture (DiDA) knowledge of our main CH and we’ll try to build University of Florence a new mapping procedure of historical cities that share the same city structure (hills surrounding the Nana Iashvili midtown, the city walls and doors sign crossing Faculty of Media Arts to arrive at the heart of the city represented from Tbilisi State Academy of Arts, Georgia the market place, the main religious building, the market place..).

In which way can we support people in building a Other Professionals representation of the place visited less fragmented and consumerist? Is it possible to help them to Meeting with: reach an experience more holistic and closer to Italian painter (from Venice) everyday experience using multimedia tools and Bruno Lucatello and presentation of his painting technique. locative media?

ETHICA MEDICO 21 March 13-20, 2016 Ethics (greec. ethos - a custom, disposition, nature) - phylosophy branch, studying moral and morality, is for the first time used Aristotle (384-322 gg. before n. e.) as indication by person of the area of the study.

Nowadays in all over the world bored develops bioethics – interdisciplinary, biologically oriented modern branch of the knowledge, analyzing moral questions in biology and medicine. Significant importance is added observance main ethical principle when planning, the undertaking and introduction scientific project. The Modern interest to ethics-legal aspect is conditioned integer beside reasons. In recently appear the new medicinal preparations, technologies, instruments of the medical purpose and diagnostic procedures. All are more often expressed worrying broad layer to public about possible social, moral, psychological and financial consequence got in these study of information. The Modern ethics and deonthology behavior of the physician differs from past. With appearance of the «pay services» in medicine, changed the relations a doctor-patient. Medicine all more become the part to commercial branch. Leave in past principles self-sacrifices, disinterestedness.

With the introduction of self-supporting, self-financing medicine, today, relationships between doctors and patients have dramatically changed, especially in East European countries. To save, or try to save the best of Ethical principles heritage for Medicine is an important goal of cultural society.

Project Leader

Ilshat Yuldashev Kyrgyz Russian Slavonic University, Kyrggyzstan THE ARCHITECTURE AND LANDSCAPE OF FLORENCE 22 March 13-20, 2016

The picturesque situation of Florence will be a great inspiration of a search for painting motifs. Our task will be to explore architectural against the background of the landscape.

Project Leader

Mieczysław Ziomek University Nicolaus Copernicus in Toruń Faculty of Fine Arts THE RIVER AND ITS CITY LANDSCAPE, ARCHITECTURE AND ART 23 Aug, 28 - Sept, 4, 2016

The workshop issue mainly emphasizes the River, as an element for structuring the city, its role and Other Professors function in shaping the city's urban space and in Lecture of: creation of the city's artistic look. Roberto Corazzi The workshop aims to carry out the research on University of Florence city-planning around the rivers for Florence and “Discovering the through its other cities, and from various aspects - historical Bridges” point of view, arrangement of river banks, buildings, bridges, landscape, design. A “walk” around Florence to see the urban spaces near the river Arno

Project Leader Francesco Lupi Florentine Architect Lela Piralishvili Associate professor Visit of the Palazzo Spinelli, the Institute Head of the MA program in "Contemporary for Art and Restoration with: Culture Research" Head of the PhD program in "Culture Catherine Burnett Research" Palazzo Spinelli, Florence

Liana Antelava Meeting with: Associate professor Head of the MA program in "Art, Culture, Francesco Salvestrini identities" University of Florence Head of the PhD program in "Culture “Florence and the Arno. Life and Destruction in a Research" Thousand-Year History".

Tamar Meliva Senior Specialist and International Projects Coordinator at the Faculty of Restoration Art history and theory PhD student DIALOGUE AMONG CULTURES WITHIN THE FRAMEWORK OF EASTERN PARTNERSHIP PROGRAMME 24 November 13-20, 2016 Recent past political processes in Eastern Europe This workshop invites students and professors and the Caucasus showed the EU leaders the from the universities of the countries of Eastern necessity of close cooperation with this region. Partnership and Europe to participate in the In December, 2008 European Commission put intercultural dialogue. They are given possibility forward a proposal, which is a special branch of to get to know their country’s national cultural the European Neighbourhood Policy and aims to values, share with each other the problems in the enchance cooperation with Azerbaijan, Belarus, field of cultural cooperation and their own views Republic of Moldova, Georgia, Armenia and of problem solving. Such kind of cooperation Ukraine. The political transformation processes in will promote integration process and sustainable these countries, cleared neccessity of the protection future collaboration. of national values, principles of democracy and harmonious merger of liberal values. Countries, involved in this programme, have common problems and priorities in the cultural field, Project Leader particularly, common colonial past, still unfinished Bella Kopaliani process of national identity formation, ethnic and Tibilisi Technical University, Georgia linguistic problems. By the objective reasons they suffer from the problem of freedom expression, which should be considered as a result of the Soviet legacy. During Decades Minorities’ cultural heritage was ignored, Cultural and linguistic diversities were replaced by homogeny culture and national identity was replaced by the soviet identity.

Naturally, in such heritance conditions, it was difficult to maintain minorities cultural heritage and reserve diversity, minorities integration in the common national cultural space. Eastern Partnership Programme is an ambition project of strategically cooperation with the European Union and its priority course is cultural cooperation with partners and deepen integration process. It is very important to engage youth in the process of Euro integration and enhance cultural field, give young people chance to know more about neighbor countries’ history, culture and tradition and share their knowledge and experience with others. In general, such projects facilitate to increase civic awareness and responsibility. Other Professors

Presentation of:

The Organization “Rondine” from Arezzo by Blerina Duli, Head of Training and Education of the “Rondine” and the presentation of the participants of Rondine.

Meeting with:

Andrea Cecconi President of the Foundation Ernesto Balducci and the presentation of their activities in context of the education for peace.

Lectures by:

Vakhtang Tordia Member of High Council of Justice of Georgia, "Peaceful resolution ways of dispute among IDPs".

Archimandrite Adam Vakhtang Akhaladze Rector of the Georgian Patriarchate St. King Tamar University, Head of Georgian Patriarchate health Affairs Department; Father Superior of the Church of St. John the Theologist) “Georgia as a country of ancient civilization and cross-cultural polylogue”

Vaja Shubitidze Chairman of Khashuri Municipality Assembly and Professor of Georgian Technical University “Polyphony model of the Dialogue of Culture and Civilization"

Alesia Koush Romualdo Del Bianco Foundation Expert “Right to Culture as an Inalienable Human Right”

ARCHITECTURE AND THE IDENTIFICATION FEATURES OF THE HISTORICAL CITY 25 November 20-27, 2016

The aim of the project work is identification of the historic city characteristics, which creates its unique and special image. Identifying characteristics of the historical city are analyzing on several levels: urban planning (planning structure, the grid of streets, the scale of blocks, structure of residential quarters, public spaces),the scale of the building (the height building characteristics, the principle of formation of the silhouette of the building, dividing the building into blocks), the architectural features of the buildings, particular parts of buildings (windows, doors, balconies, and other details), use of color, landscaping, other features of identification.

In Florence, students choose to the city's typical neighborhoods of the historical center for architectural analysis. Depending on the number of participants of program, will be formed groups of researchers, who are studying the city according to one or more criteria, described above. Students should prepare graphical charts, photos. According to the results of work, students do a summary report. As a result of work, students should define the characteristics of the city, which create its special image.

Project Leader Other Professors

Perov Fedor Lecture by: St.Petersburg University of architecture and Civil Engineering, Russia Roberto Corazzi University of Florence “Rebuilding of Via dei Bardi” & “The old Florentine market” "LINGUOCULTURAL SPACE OF THE CITY WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE DICTIONARY PROJECT"- FLORENCE IN THE WORKS OF WORLD FAMOUS PEOPLE 26 November 20-27, 2016 The project aims at studying Florentine cultural (plays, ballets, canvases, music, etc.) illustrating heritage and reflection of its influence in both creative works inspired by Florence. The dictionary Italian and world cultures presented in the works of articles will have numerous links to places of world famous writers, artists and composers who interest in Florence reflecting the present state of once lived in or visited Florence and got inspired the sights in the students' own perception. The by the city, its museums, monuments, architecture user-friendly dictionary should have a challenging and people. design and innovative way of key-words description (chronology, nationality, sphere of activity, graphic The purpose of the project is to show the links of the illustrations, etc.). outstanding people with Florence and Florentine artistic atmosphere as seen by International The project will refresh tourists' (both Italian and students. foreign) interest in Florence through a brand new and original vision of Italian Prominent people The proposed project of a new multimedia Internet whose lives were connected with Florence. It would lexipedia is based on the analysis of various also be useful for Florentine guides as a source of sources ( encyclopedias, books, Journals, memoirs, unique material about the eminent city personal letters, etc.) about famous Italians of all epochs along with personal experience gained by international students during their stay in Florence Project Leader due to visiting Florentine museums, art galleries, libraries, and research centres. Each group of Olga Karpova students is supposed to submit their own vision of a Ivanovo State University, Russia) dictionary and its articles devoted to distinguished Coordinator: Nataliia Utkina (Ivanovo State people (Italian writers, artists, musicians, etc.) University, Russia) whose creative career was connected with Florence. The dictionary entry will include: Other Professors 1) A photo (gravure, painting) of the person described Visit to the University of Florence and lecture of Marcello Garzaniti 2) Biographical data

3) A thorough description of the person's Visit of the Gabinetto Vieusseux and lecture by connections with Florence and Florentine motives Laura Desideri in his/her creative works (books, paintings, music, etc.). “Tools for studying the history of the Italian language”. Lecture of Dr. Cosimo Burgassi from The entries will be provided with exclusive Italian National Research Council, Institute of the multimedia features - audio and video passages “Opera del Vocabolario Italiano in Florence” ETHICA MEDICO II 21 November 27-December 4, 2016

The aim of the project is to compare, discuss, exchange ethical behaviour and ethical principles of medicine workers in different cultures and countries (West and East). Find, compare and disseminate international Ethical principles for doctors and medical workers over the countries. Every student group come to Florence with prepared presentation about historical, current ethical situation or case from domestic experience. Than all students in Florence will have couple of lectures about current Medical Ethical problems. Than will mix and divide to complex mixed groups and decide and conclude the same, presented before cases after advancing knowledge and in mixed intercultural environment. At the end there can appear situation that participants will create something like Ethical Codex or Memorandum for students, doctors etc.

Project Leader Other Professors

Ilshat Yuldashev Lecture by: Kyrgyz Russian Slavonic University, Kyrgyzstan Mariella Abruzzo Human Rights Education Programme Officer of Robert F. Kennedy Foundation for Human Rights Italia “Right to the health"

Meeting with:

Teresita Mazzei Vice President of the Surgeon and Dentist Order of the Florence region.

2014 - 2016 EXHIBITIONS

The cultural and artistic heritage possesses itself a high capacity for transmitting the values of interpersonal and intercultural exchange, reciprocal awareness and understanding. It is a powerful instrument to stimulate friendship between people. DALLE CUPOLE NEL MONDO ALLA CUPOLA DEL BRUNELLESCHI 01 September - October 2014

SUMI FLOWER 墨の花 02 October 2014

LA MIA VENEZIA 03 March 2015

SOME OF US 04 April 2015

COLOURS OF KYOTO 05 July 2015

CULTURAL HERITAGE OF GEORGIA - ABKHAZIA 06 October 2015 PLAYFUL ARCHITECT 07 December 2015

CARNIVALS IN THE WORLD 08 January - February 2016

NORILSK 09 March - April 2016

RESONANCE AND REFLECTION 余情残心 REGENERATION 再生 2ND KODOMONO TENRANKAI 2016 コドモノテンラカイ 10 June 2016

UNVEILED EMOTIONS, CULTURE REVEALED 11 November 2016 CULTURAL HERITAGE OF GEORGIA - ABKHAZIA DALLE CUPOLE NEL MONDO ALLA CUPOLA DEL BRUNELLESCHI 01 September 29 - October 10 - 2014 SUMI FLOWER - 墨の花 02 October 25-29, 2014 SUMI FLOWER - 墨の花 02 October 25-29, 2014 Bruno Lucatello in arte “LUC” “La Mia Venezia”

Foyer dell’Auditorium al Duomo e a Astra al Duomo Dal al marzo Dalle alle e durante gli eenti serali

Inaugurazione alla presenza dell’artista aato marzo ore

Auditorium al Duomo Firenze ia De erretani n

LA MIA VENEZIA 03 March 13-15, 2015 SOME OF US 04 April 23, 2015 * Il Centro Congressi al Duomo collabora con Daikin progett o di monitoraggio finalizzato all'ottimizzazione dei consumi ene rgetici un sistema climatizzazione. *

COLOURS OF KYOTO 05 June 8-10, 2015 “CULTURAL HERITAGE OF GEORGIA - ABKHAZIA”

Mostra documentaria organizzata da MINISTER OF A/R ABKHAZIA FOR CONFIDENCE BUILDING AND RECONCILIATION

5 OTTOBRE 2015 ore 18:30 AUDITORIUM al DUOMO e CAFFE’ ASTRA al DUOMO Firenze, Via de’Cerretani 54/r

FINO AL 9 OTTOBRE - INGRESSO LIBERO Orario da lunedì a venerdì 10:00– 18:00 e durante eventi serali

Evento promosso da:

CULTURAL HERITAGE OF GEORGIA - ABKHAZIA 06 October 5, 2015 Progetto internazionale artistico - architettonico per le scuole elementari nell’ambito della 9° settimana “Architecture Week Prague 2015” Progetto organizzato sotto gli auspici di Ivana Zemanová moglie del Presidente della Repubblica Ceca

1 3 - 22 Dicembre 2015 , ore 10- 17 Auditorium al Duomo, Firenze Via de‘ Cerretani 54r

Organizzatori:

Partner:

PLAYFUL ARCHITECT 07 December 13-22, 2015

“CARNIVALS IN THE WORLD” 5 PHOTOGRAPHIC EXHIBITIONS ON THE MOST BEAUTIFUL CARNIVALS OF SOUTH AMERICA

JANUARY 25 – FEBRUARY 9, 2016

Palazzo Coppini – International Study and Meeting Center Florence - via del Giglio 10

COLOMBIA Carnaval de Negros y Blancos de Pasto Carlos Eduardo Benavides Diaz, Gerardo Sanchez

COLOMBIA San Basilio de Palenque - Espacio y cultura. Ana Patricia Montoya Pino, Esteban Solarte Pinta, Jose Mendoza Villamizar

REPÚBLICA DOMINICANA De Diablos Cojuelos a Tiznaos: personajes del carnaval dominicano Gabriel Castillo,

BRAZIL Carnival Rio de Janeiro Lucia Judice

MÉXICO Carnaval en los Barrios de la Ciudad de Puebla Ricardo Campos Castro, Raymundo Sandoval Sánchez, Arturo Carrera, Morales Méndez’s family, Isabel Salazar and local folk groups

!!! FREE ENTRANCE !!!

Monday – Friday 10.00 – 17.00

CARNIVALS IN THE WORLD 08 January 25 - February 9, 2016 Yegor Gaidar Foundation and Fondazione Romualdo Del Bianco®

cordially invite you to the presentation of ‘Vestnik Evropy’ (Herald of Europe) magazine

and opening of a Photo Exhibition ‘Norilsk’

To be presented by PALAZZO COPPINI Paolo Del Bianco, International Meeting President, Fondazione Romualdo and Study Centre Del Bianco®-Life Beyond Tourism® Via del Giglio 10 Victor Yaroshenko, Florence on Saturday, editor-in-chief, ‘Vestink Evropy’ 12 March 2016 magazine at 11.00 Irina Buylova, executive director, Yegor Gaidar Foundation

NORILSK 09 March 12 - April 8, 2016 “Resonance and Reflection” Japanese Watercolor Painting Exhibition

RESONANCE AND REFLECTION 余情残心 REGENERATION 再生 – 2ND KODOMONO TENRANKAI 2016コドモノテンラカイ 10 June 17-19, 2016 È una esclusiva esposizione dedicata a tre dei grandi e numerosi tesori naturali del Giappone: l’armonia, la seta, la lacca.

Le opere esposte in questa sede appartengono a una collezione privata, sono opere complessivamente moderne, ma assai significative per le peculiarità che presentano.

A peculiar exhibition dedicated to three of the most important natural treasures of Japan: harmony, silk, lacquer.

The works exhibited here belong to a private collection, and they are overall works of modern Art, but very significant for the peculiarities that they show.

Unveiled Emotions, palazzo coppini via del giglio 10 Culture Revealed lun - ven 10-17 mon - fri 10 am - 5 pm Curated by Francesco Civita

UNVEILED EMOTIONS, CULTURE REVEALED 11 June 17-19, 2016

2014 - 2016 ACADEMIC & PROFESSIONAL COURSES

Travelling in a way that goes well beyond the tourism of services and consumption, combining virtuously Heritage, Travel and Dialogue.

In collaboration with

Istituto Internazionale Life Beyond Tourism®

TRAVEL & DIALOGUE LIFE BEYOND TOURISM WEEKLY INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP 01 November 14-18, 2016

Tourism is one of the world fastest economies and during the last decades has created a network of services that, thanks to the new technologies, connects the word. Tourism has in itself a powerful opportunity of intercultural dialogue. The Fondazione Romualdo Del Bianco has explored and studied, both in theory and practice and how this opportunity can be used as a tool for the rapprochement of cultures. In the world that goes towards 10 billion inhabitants understanding differences among cultures is becoming crucial. Nowadays societies are getting more complex because of migrations and . Cultures that are created by the movement of the masses are new and mixed. Territories are changing but each one has its own identity and resources. The course is aimed at informing participants of the opportunities and threats of tourism and giving an alternative approach to it: “Life, Beyond Tourism”, that was studied during the last twenty five years by the Fondazione. During the course students will be asked to create their own representation and guide of the territory and to look at it with other lens.

Lecturers

Corinna Del Bianco Director of the International Institute Life Beyond Tourism® Board Member Fondazione Romualdo Del Bianco®

Alesia Koush Secretary International Institute Life Beyond Tourism® Expert of the Fondazione Romualdo Del Bianco® Finito di stampare nel mese di marzo 2017 Firenze YOUR ENCOUNTERS WITH EUROPE IN FLORENCE