A lecture by Federica Parretti and Linda Falcone
In 1935, Lola Costa purchased Il Palmerino, and set up her painting studio there. Until a few months before Lola moved her family there, it was home to English writer Vernon Lee and haunt to Florence’s ‘English community’ – from Henry James and Oscar Wilde to Edith Wharton and Virginia Woolf.
An English city girl with a French education, Lola learned to keep the estate alive and continued its vocation as a place for cultural exchange through her own art and interest in Vernon Lee scholarship. Lola was the ‘signora’ behind the easel painting her farm labourers, but she would stop mixing colours to help with the harvest.
Federica Parretti, the current custodian of Il Palmerino, will discuss her grandmother’s life and art in conversation with Linda Falcone.
If you are in Florence and would like to attend the lecture in person at the British Institute Library, please register here or send an email to bif@britishinstitute.it
The registration fee is 15 Euro per person.
To join this lecture online, simply click on this link to register and receive the Zoom meeting invitation: The virtual doors will open at 18:00 Italian time on Wednesday 22nd January. https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZ0udeCtqzMpHtPrMdz53a6keGQQCelrvp4c
A recording of the virtual lecture will be available for registered participants only. Clicking on the link above, you authorise the British Institute of Florence to use your image, name and comments.
There is no charge to attend the event on Zoom, but we ask you to consider making a donation to support the Institute and its beautiful library if you wish to attend an event.
This event is sponsored by Calliope Arts and forms part of a larger 3-year programme: “A Florentine Garden: Early Women Expats and Artists of Today”, organised by Calliope Arts and Il Palmerino Cultural Association, in collaboration with the British Institute of Florence.
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