Dal 1955 uno dei Premi dArte di Fotografia e Pittura tra i piugrave; prestigiosi dItalia; la cui volontagrave; egrave; di valorizzare larte contemporanea e crearne uno snodo creativo e di riferimento; per esportarla in seguito nella rete internazionale artistica.Tema del Premio Basilio Cascella 2013:Lrsquo;ireg;a ndash; arte; sogno; giogo; rabbia.Artisti: Mattia Baraldi; Andrea Mario Bert; Guido Bottazzo; Alessandro Brunelli; Alessandro Bulgarini; Alessandra Carloni; Alessandro Carnevale; Cristian Erdas; Kamen Kissimov; Vittorio Manciagli; Augusto Orestini; Elisa Pietrelli; Maurizio Rapiti; Sergio Saccomandi; Andrea Savazzi; Gianni Triggiani; Imma Visconte; Elisa Zadi; Pierluigi Abbondanza; Giorgio Distefano; Vladimiro Lilla; Antonio Matarazzo; Terry May; Alessandro Passerini; Monica Seksich; Ornella Di Profio (Symbolon); Pino Ferrucci (Symbolon); Massimo Volponi; Paolo Volta; Mr Wany; Luca Zarattini.
#455610 in eBooks 2015-08-17 2015-08-17File Name: B0147SG202
Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Dining in the Queen CityBy Jim M.good history and information on the many historic restaurants in Cincinnati. Having lived in Cincinnati when most of these restaurants were flourishing. I found this history not only fascinating but also a trip down memory lane. Dann Woellert has done an excellent job of selecting those food spots that mirror the history of the Queen City. Well worth the time to read and absorb the wonderful information provided in this enjoyable book.8 of 10 people found the following review helpful. Interesting. but not always reliable.By Dennis HansemanThis book contains some pretty interesting anecdotes. The problem is ndash; can I believe them? Unfortunately. the book contains many errors and misstatements. Maybe the most glaring is the repeated misspelling of the Izzy Kadetzrsquo; familys surname as ldquo;Cadetsrdquo;. Ugh. But elsewhere. Woellert discusses ldquo;Johnny and Carlordquo; (instead of ldquo;Carlo and Johnnyrsquo;srdquo;). claims that Gripporsquo;s does not sell plain potato chips (they do!). asserts that haggis originated in ldquo;Teutonic (sic) Europerdquo;. and misnames Paul Dixon as Paul Gibson. And Irsquo;m pretty sure that the Temple Deli on 7th Street closed long before 2006.1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Great customer service; awesome product. Thanks!By Maria AdamGreat little book; Im very happy with my purchase. Thank you very much!