As part of the collateral activities for the exhibition “Giulio Cesare e Francesco Bedeschini. Drawing and Invention in L’Aquila in the Seventeenth Century,” guided tours will be held by typhlologist Deborah Tramentozzi, who has designed tactile itineraries suitable for the visually impaired.
Experiencing art through touch, seeing with your hands, delving into the details. This is the first of five meetings scheduled during the exhibition “Giulio Cesare e Francesco Bedeschini. Drawing and Invention in L’Aquila in the Seventeenth Century,” curated by Michele Maccherini, Luca Pezzuto, Simonetta Prosperi Valenti, and Federica Zalabra.
On Sunday, December 17, Deborah Tramentozzi, a blind typhlologist and expert in access and inclusion techniques for the blind and visually impaired, will lead two guided tours at 11:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m., also dedicated to the blind, using various mediation tools: 3D tactile prints, short captions, QR codes, and books in Braille.