From the Palette to the Table - the Origins of Milanese Risotto
ロケーション: Duomo di Milano
住所: Piazza Duomo
It wasn’t a chef but a painter who invented Milanese Risotto. According to a manuscript kept at the Trivulziana Library, the star dish of Milanese cuisine dates all the way back to 1574. It speaks of a certain Mastro Valerio of Flanders, who came to Milan from Leuven to work on the windows of the Duomo which was under construction. It seems that his assistant was given to adding a pinch of saffron to his paints to make them more vivid. We don’t know anything more about him than his nickname - Zafferano (Saffron), of course. Valerio of Flanders was so bewildered by this tendency, that he remarked that his helper would probably throw saffron into his food if given the chance. And so it was - the day of the painter’s daughter’s wedding, Zafferano put some of the spice in the rice which, until then, had always been seasoned simply with butter. The legend has it that, first, the guests were enthralled by the colour of the dish, then by its fragrance and flavour. The discovery of the young artist was a success - from there on, saffron became an official part of Milanese cooking.
Four 40 meters canvases and twenty charred-foam sculptures, lit every 15′: Frangi reactivates a nocturnal landscape, in dialogue with brutalist architecture and a 135-sheet diary.
A Three-Thousand-Year Journey into the Olympic Spirit
From Greek and Etruscan artifacts to modern Olympic icons, Fondazione Luigi Rovati’s exhibition traces the evolution of Olympic values across art, sport, and inclusion.
The artist’s first Italian exhibition marks 25 years of color-driven research, presenting new abstractions shaped by light, material, and unexpected harmony.
A major exhibition rediscovers Andrea Appiani, painter to Napoleon and Master of Neoclassicism, through portraits, frescoes, and drawings from Italian and international collections.