After slashing arts budgets and with its most famous monuments badly in need of repair, Italy’s government is increasingly looking to private investors to help it preserve a priceless cultural heritage.
However, the biggest initiative so far is faltering after billionaire Diego Della Valle said he might pull his 25 million euros (US$33 million) to restore the Colosseum following union protests and investigations into the project.
Fragments of the 2,000-year-old Roman amphitheater — now at the center of a busy road junction and blackened with pollution — have begun falling down and the restoration project’s start date last month has been delayed.
Photo: AFP
Meanwhile, at the archeological site of Pompeii near Naples, which has also been hit by a series of alarming collapses in recent months, the long-mooted prospect of bringing in private investors is still a distant prospect.
The government has promised to unblock 105 million euros in funding from the EU for a four-year maintenance plan and to increase the number of archeologists at the site from just one person employed at present.
“Italy’s entire heritage needs attention,” the National Association of Italian Archeologists said in a recent appeal for greater resources.
Italy is not alone in its struggle to preserve its ruins. In a move that left many Greeks and academics aghast, Greece’s culture ministry said that it would open up some of the debt-stricken country’s most-cherished archeological sites, including the Acropolis, to advertising firms, movie companies and other ventures. The money generated would be spent on upkeep and monitoring of the sites.
Greek archeologists are also finding it hard to get funding for licensed digs, while antiquity smuggling is on the rise.
Italy is the fourth-biggest tourism destination in the world after France, the US and Spain, and is rightly proud of its cultural heritage — enriched by centuries of history from the Roman era to the Renaissance to the Baroque.
However, its low growth and debt mountain of 1.9 trillion euros have spooked international investors and forced the government to implement three austerity budgets in under a year in a bid to rein in public finances.
Italy currently allocates just 0.21 percent of its GDP to culture and the 1.8 billion euros are often only good for patching up its many monuments, leaving little space for funding the living arts.
The world-renowned La Scala opera house and Piccolo Teatro in Milan were forced to accept a cut of 17 million euros last year.
And a special fund that subsidizes Italian theaters had a budget of 231 million euros last year — 50 percent less than the previous year.
Cinema has also been badly affected, with an association of cinema and TV workers this month saying the situation was “grave.”
Italian documentary maker Gustav Hofer said he had been forced to go abroad to look for financing.
“There are just crumbs in Italy,” he said.
Author and professor Umberto Eco, a leading voice in the arts, recently wrote a scathing open letter to the government.
“Something isn’t working,” he wrote. “We haven’t learned how to make money from our national culture.”
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