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About
Near the Spoleto train station, there is a monument that you can easily overlook. Its name is Teodelapio, which comes from one of the first Lombard dukes of Spoleto, who reigned in the 7th century, Theudelapius.
SHORT HISTORY
The story began in 1962, at the fifth edition of the Festival dei Due Mondi (Festival of the Two Worlds), curated by Giovanni Carandente.In March 1962, Giovanni Carandente invited Alexander Calder to participate in the event. He asked him to create a piece of art that could serve as a triumphal arch at the entrance to the city and become its symbol.
Alexander Calder was an American sculptor known for his Mobile sculptures, which are moving due to air currents, but also for the monumental stationary sculptures that are called Stabiles.
The American sculptor designed a metal monument, kept today in the Carandente Museum, inside Palazzo Collicola. The sculpture was enlarged 27 times, being the first of many Stabiles of Calder and the only one on the Italian soil.
18 meters in height, the work is considered the first stationary monumental sculpture in the world.
HOW TO GET THERE
It’s simple! The Teodelapio is right in front of the Spoleto train station, the place through which you will most likely enter the city. -
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1 Reviews on “Teodelapio”
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I believe you mean, “You canNOT easily overlook”!!
Actually, that’s exactly what I meant. As you get out of the train station in Spoleto, and see the town in front of you, you can easily overlook the monument.