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{{Short description|Museum in Lugano, Switzerland}}
{{Infobox Museum
[[File:2021 VM Riva Caccia-RG web (1).jpg|thumb|400x400px|The museum's view from Riva Caccia Street, Lugano]]
|name = Museo delle Culture
The '''Museo delle Culture di [[Lugano]]''' ('''MUSEC''') was opened on 23 September 1989 with the aim of preserving most of the ethnic art collected by [[Serge Brignoni]] and coming in particular from the Far East, India, South-East Asia, Indonesia and Oceania. Since then, the museum has had the honour of receiving numerous other prestigious collections of ethnic and oriental art, photography, contemporary and applied art. Works donated or deposited at MUSEC have been or will be the protagonists of dedicated temporary exhibitions. The museum was founded as the Museum of Extra-European Cultures, in 2007 it was renamed "Museo delle Culture" and since 2017 "MUSEC: Museo delle Culture". It is housed in the central Villa Malpensata, with access possible both from Via Mazzini and from Riva Caccia.
|image = Villa Heleneum dx.jpg
|map_type = Switzerland
|map_caption =
|coordinates = {{coord|46.000653|8.982847|display=inline}}
|established = 1985<br />''Opening'': September 23, 1989
|dissolved =
|location = Via Cortivo 24-28, 6976 Lugano-Castagnola, Switzerland
|type = Anthropology - Ethnic Art
|visitors =
|director = Francesco Paolo Campione
|publictransit =
|website = http://www.mcl.lugano.ch/
}}
The '''Museum of Cultures''' ({{lang-it|Museo delle Culture}} or {{lang|it|Museo Heleneum}}) is one of the museums that forms part of the Polo Culturale of the city of [[Lugano]] in [[Switzerland]]. It is situated in the '''Heleneum''', a villa on the shore of [[Lake Lugano]] to the east of the city centre, and in the [[Castagnola|quarter of Castagnola]]. In 2016, the Museum will move to Villa Malpensata, a site closer to the center of Lugano, but still on the lake.<ref name=Malpensata>{{cite web |url=http://www.ticino.ch/it/commons/details/Museo-delle-Culture-Heleneum/3071.html |title=Museo delle Culture Heleneum - Ticino Turismo |newspaper=Ticino.ch |date=April 7, 2016 |accessdate= May 28, 2016}}</ref>


As of 1 January 2019, the Museo delle Culture (MUSEC) is entrusted to a Foundation that ensures its operation, while maintaining its identity, autonomy and image. The "Fondazione culture e musei (FCM)" allows for a more effective management, capable, thanks also to the renovated Villa Malpensata premises, of generating further synergies and economies of scope and of intensifying interaction with the territory and the public. MUSEC will thus benefit from countless advantages, which will allow it to continue and improve the work carried out so far, in all areas of its countless activities.
==Heleneum==
The museum occupies Caréol Villa, which was built by [[Johann Frederic Haflinger]] in the second half of the 19th century. In 1929, it was sold to [[Hélène Bieber]], originally from [[Frankfurt]] and a resident of [[Paris]]. Hélène had the earlier villa demolished, and replaced it with the current Heleneum. The new building, which was built between 1930 and 1934, was modelled on the [[Petit Trianon]] in [[Versailles (city)|Versaille]]. Hélène lived there until her death in 1967.<ref name=villa>{{cite web | url = http://www.lugano.ch/museoculture/welcome.cfm?id=002005001 | title = Museo delle Culture - L'Helenium |trans-title=Museum of Cultures - The Helenium | publisher = City of Lugano | accessdate = 2012-10-09}}</ref>


==Villa Malpensata==
Between 1969 and 1971, the Heleneum hosted piano master classes under the artistic direction of [[Carlo Florindo Semini]], with [[Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli]] and [[Franco Ferrara]]. After that, the villa was home to the [[Istituto Ticinesi di Alti Studi]], directed by [[Elémire Zolla]] which gathered together archaeologists, anthropologists, art historians, philosophers, linguists, egyptologists and orientalists. Between 1971 and 1976, the Heleneum hosted the [[Dalle Molle Institute for Semantic and Cognitive Studies]].<ref name=villa/>
[[File:2020 VM.jpg|alt=|thumb|300x300px|Villa Malpensata, MUSEC's venue]]
In 2017, MUSEC moved to Villa Malpensata. The Villa was built by the Caccia family in the mid-eighteenth century according to the style that at that time characterized the monumental and scenic rearrangement of the banks of the great alpine lakes. Used from 1893 onwards as a museum, from 1973 it became the permanent seat of the art museum and temporary exhibitions of various kinds.


The restoration designed in 2014 to give MUSEC a larger and more central location involved, in addition to the main building, both the two buildings flanking it to the north - intended for offices and the Research and Documentation Centre - and the terraced garden to the south, reorganized to house the MUSEC's outdoor spaces and the raised terrace that leads to the new main entrance. All the spaces are rearranged according to international climatic and museum-technical standards and equipped with the best safety conditions.
The Museo delle Culture was established in the Helenium in 1985, in order to house [[Serge Brignoni]]'s collection. Brigoni was a Swiss Italian artist who donated his extensive collection to the City of Lugano. The museum opened to the public in 1989.<ref name=brief>{{cite web | url = http://www.lugano.ch/museoculture/welcome.cfm?id=002001002 | title = Museo delle Culture - Breve storia del Museo |trans-title=Museum of Cultures - A Brief History of the Museum | publisher = City of Lugano | accessdate = 2012-10-09}}</ref>

== History ==
The Heleneum park surrounds the villa. Thanks to a particularly mild microclimate, Mediterranean, tropical, and subtropical plants are able to survive. The park's lakeside location offers a panoramic view of the lake and the surrounding mountains. A landing stage within the park is served by a boat service, provided by the [[Società Navigazione del Lago di Lugano]].<ref name=park>{{cite web | url = http://www.lugano.ch/museoculture/welcome.cfm?id=002005002 | title = Museo delle Culture - Il Parco |trans-title=Museum of Cultures - The Park | publisher = City of Lugano | accessdate = 2012-10-09}}</ref><ref name=tt>{{cite web | url = http://www.lakelugano.ch/en/11/timetable_summer_2012.aspx | title = Timetable summer 2012 | publisher = Società Navigazione del Lago di Lugano | accessdate = 1 August 2012 | archiveurl = https://www.webcitation.org/69llQ8YAv | archivedate = 8 August 2012 | deadurl = no}}</ref>
Since its opening to the public on September 23, 1989, and until 2016, the Heleneum was the seat of MUSEC. The Heleneum is a villa on the shores of [[Lake Lugano]] built between 1930 and 1934 on the architectural model of the "[[Petit Trianon]]" in [[Versailles, Yvelines|Versailles]] by Hélène Bieber, a strong-willed cosmopolitan lady who wanted to transform it into a centre for social and cultural entertainment and who lived there until 1967. Especially because of the economic crisis of the 1930s, Hélène Bieber failed in her intentions and the Heleneum remained a sparsely inhabited dwelling until, in 1969, it was bought by the Municipality of [[Castagnola, Switzerland|Castagnola]], now a district of the City of Lugano.

From 1969 to 1971 the Heleneum was the venue for the piano courses held by [[Carlo Florindo Semini]], [[Franco Ferrara]] and [[Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli]]. From 1971 to 1973, the villa hosted the summer courses and seminars of the [[Ticino Institute of High Studies]], directed by [[Elémire Zolla]], which brought together important scholars of different disciplines on the themes of religious knowledge.

Later, until 1976, the Heleneum was the seat of the Centre for Semantic and Cognitive Studies of the Dalle Molle Institute, which operated in the field of artificial intelligence, at that time in its early days, and which organized various seminars attended by scholars and researchers from all over the world. The villa was finally the kindergarten of Castagnola and was used as a set for film productions in which [[Bruno Ganz]] and [[Aldo Fabrizi]], among others, took part.


==Brignoni Collection==
The Museo delle Culture conserves most of the ethnic art that Serge Brignoni collected between 1930 and 1985. The collection shows the link between the creative forms of the "South Seas" culture and the artistic [[Avant-garde|Avant-Garde]] of the 19th century that were inspired by those objects. The collection reflects Brignoni's selection of well-crafted objects that show an appreciation of art forms from a very different culture. The genres and the geographical origins of the Brignoni collection works are similar to those found in leading European, North American and Australian collections from the first half of the 20th century. Moreover, the collection includes all of the areas that are considered fundamental for a contemporary collection of the time.{{citation needed|date=May 2016}}
The Museo delle Culture conserves most of the ethnic art that Serge Brignoni collected between 1930 and 1985. The collection shows the link between the creative forms of the "South Seas" culture and the artistic [[Avant-garde|Avant-Garde]] of the 19th century that were inspired by those objects. The collection reflects Brignoni's selection of well-crafted objects that show an appreciation of art forms from a very different culture. The genres and the geographical origins of the Brignoni collection works are similar to those found in leading European, North American and Australian collections from the first half of the 20th century. Moreover, the collection includes all of the areas that are considered fundamental for a contemporary collection of the time.{{citation needed|date=May 2016}}


==Nodari Fund and Collection==
==Collection==
'''The Brignoni collection'''
In 2006, the Museo delle Culture came to an agreement with the [[Ticino|government of the canton of Ticino]] on the Nodari Fund and Collection. This agreement states that Canton Ticino, owner of the Collection and the Fund, lends the Museo delle Culture, on a permanent contract, the whole collection and the documentary fund collected by Alfredo and Emma Nodari. The collection consists of a thousand works of art, two large river boats, almost 6,000 pictures, 71 documentary films, and more than 60 hours of tape recording. They were collected by Alfredo and Emma Nodari during their journeys to Africa (notably in Congo) in the 1950s and 1960s. The most important artwork of the collection are two pillars from the BaKuba royal palace in Kasai (Congo). They are placed at the entrance of the museum.

MUSEC opened its doors in 1989 thanks to the bequest of ethnic works of art that the Swiss artist and collector Serge Brignoni (1903-2002) collected in the long period between 1930 and the mid-1980s, when he decided to donate them to the city of Lugano. The collection thus bears witness, first of all, to the link between the forms of creativity of the "South Seas" cultures and the object that the artistic avant-gardes of the 20th century discussed in their circles and tried to create in their works. The works are the expression of a refined choice that privileges the best manufactured articles and knows how to recognize phenomenologically the expressions of an art not yet acculturated. The genres and geographical origins, albeit with some significant exceptions, reflect those most widespread in the European, Australian and North American collections of the mid-twentieth century and there is almost no lack of "pieces" of what were considered the indispensable objects of collecting at the time. Particularly evident is the taste for sculptural works, marked by expressionistic content and creative methods and by a particular richness of drawing and pictorial decoration.

'''Other collections'''

Following the opening of the museum and especially since its relaunch in 2005, the MUSEC hosts and enhances many other Collections, some of which are listed below: the Ceschin Pilone-Fagioli Collection (hand-painted Japanese albumen photographs, dating back to the late nineteenth and early twentieth century); the Pilone Collection (includes over 400 works or groups of works of Chinese theatre, including painted masks and faces, headgear, make-up and costume accessories, fans, musical instruments and entire sets); the Nodari collection and fund (a thousand works of art and objects of material culture, two large river boats, about 6. 000 photographs, 71 documentary films and over sixty hours of sound recordings on cassette or tape, collected in the field, during a series of trips to Africa - especially in the Upper Congo - in the 1950s and 1960s) and the Antonini Collection (over 1100 ornamental combs from all over the world).


==Exhibitions==
==Exhibitions==
MUSEC preserves and enhances art collections from the Far East, India, Southeast Asia and Oceania. The new headquarters, the eighteenth-century Villa Malpensata, located on the lakeside promenade of Lugano, provides for an ever-changing setting following the most modern canons of museology. The museum, an important research centre on the anthropology of art, simultaneously offers the public at least three exhibitions able to communicate, each according to its own thematic peculiarities, the richness and the overall articulation of its cultural project.
The permanent exhibition layout is designed as an imaginary geo-cultural journey through the different regions represented in the Museum collection. In every room, the visitor can appreciate and understand the works on the basis of the following four themes:


- The "Spazio Tesoro", located at the entrance of the museum and with free access, accompanies the visitor on a periodically renewed route, with works from the Brignoni Collection and the other main collections of the museum. An itinerary full of meanings allows the visitor, among other things, to interact dynamically with the themes and works presented in the other exhibition spaces of the museum, sometimes anticipating them, sometimes providing valuable keys of interpretation, useful to grasp the unity of the museographic project.
* A journey to the South Seas and the “discovery” of ethnic art (viewed from an ethical standpoint). It also relates to the interior “voyage” taken by European avant-garde artists and the actual journey undertaken from the West towards the “farthest” East. The intention is to point out the existence of a cultural and stylistic community (koinè) of the vast area from Eastern India to Easter Island, taking in Indochina, south-east Asia and the Hawaiian archipelago.
* the culture of which the artists represented in the exhibition were an integral part of, and were distinguished by particular cultural, ideological and social structures. The monographs correspond to the cultures represented by the works in the museum: India, Indonesia, Borneo, Asmat, Maprik, the Papuasian Gulf and the Melanesian Island Chain, Sepik, New Ireland and Polynesia.
* an [[Emic and etic|emic]] approach to the understanding of different cultures - what the people have to say about themselves, rather than what is observed by outsiders.
* a display of the style, with its salient characteristics and peculiarities, developed by the cultures represented in the exhibition.


- The "Spazio Maraini" presents the exhibitions of the "Esovisioni" cycle dedicated to travel photography and the theme of exoticism in the work of great photographers.
The temporary exhibitions are organized in three different exhibition cycles: "Esovisioni" deals with the theme of [[exoticism]] in early 20th century photography; "Dèibambini" focuses on the pedagogical and creative relationship resulting from the encounter between children and ethnic art; "Altrarti" broadens the relationship between art and anthropology. An illustrated scientific catalogue is published for every exhibition.


-The "Spazio Cielo" is entirely dedicated to hosting the exhibitions of the "Cameredarte" project, dedicated to new acquisitions, to collectors who collaborate with MUSEC and to contemporary artists who have approached the museum's activities over the years.
==Activities and services==
The Museum activities are based on scientific research carried out by the Museum staff and other experts, together with museums, cultural institutions and universities worldwide. For this reason, the Museum often hosts seminars and higher education activities: lectures, refresher courses, and museography and anthropology laboratories.
The Library and the Archive are open Tuesday through Friday from 3–5 pm. The Library catalogue is on-line at the Sistema bibliotecario ticinese (Sbt)] website.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://aleph.sbt.ti.ch/F |title=SBT01 - Catalogo cantonale del Sistema bibliotecario ticinese (SBT) |newspaper=Aleph.sbt.ti.ch |accessdate= May 28, 2016}}</ref>
By appointment, it is possible to visit the Museum stores where there is also the Conservation and Museum Technology Activities Laboratory, equipped for the Museum's needs and for private specific consultancies.
Specialised Museum staff offer educational activities such as laboratories for children, guided tours, conference-tours and other activities that can be customised according to the needs of the user.
By appointment, the Museum also offer a guided tour of the mansion house and the park. The Museum offers its rooms for meetings, special events, photographic sessions and movie shots.


- Inside the "Spazio Mostre" which occupies two floors of the museum presents major exhibition.
==References==
{{reflist}}


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
Campione Francesco Paolo (ed.), ''The Brignoni Collection''; volume one, ''Art through Methamorphosis''; volume two, ''Catalogue of Works'', Mazzotta, Milan 2007. {{ISBN|978-88-202-1848-5}} and {{ISBN|978-88-202-1865-2}}.<br />
*Campione, Francesco Paolo (ed.), ''The Brignoni Collection''; volume one, ''Art through Methamorphosis''; volume two, ''Catalogue of Works'', Mazzotta, Milan 2007. {{ISBN|978-88-202-1848-5}} and {{ISBN|978-88-202-1865-2}}.
Cometti Marta, ''Guida. Museo delle Culture di Lugano'', Edizioni Città di Lugano/MCL (Antropunti/3), Lugano, 2009. {{ISBN|978-88-7777-043-1}}.<br />
*Cometti, Marta, ''Guida. Museo delle Culture di Lugano'', Edizioni Città di Lugano/MCL (Antropunti/3), Lugano, 2009. {{ISBN|978-88-7777-043-1}}.
Vago Valeria, ''In viaggio per i mari del Sud. Guida per ragazzi al Museo delle Culture'', Edizioni Città di Lugano/MCL (Antropunti/2), Lugano, 2009. {{ISBN|978-88-7777-042-4}}.
*Vago, Valeria, ''In viaggio per i mari del Sud. Guida per ragazzi al Museo delle Culture'', Edizioni Città di Lugano/MCL (Antropunti/2), Lugano, 2009. {{ISBN|978-88-7777-042-4}}.

==References==
{{reflist}}


==External links==
==External links==
* {{commonscat-inline|Museo delle Culture}}
* {{commons category-inline|Museo delle Culture}}
* [http://www.lugano.ch/museoculture/welcome.cfm Museo delle Culture official website]
* [https://www.musec.ch Museo delle Culture official website]


{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}




[[Category:Art museums and galleries in Switzerland|Cultures]]
[[Category:Art museums and galleries in Switzerland|Cultures]]
[[Category:Museums in Ticino]]
[[Category:Museums in Ticino]]
[[Category:Lugano]]
[[Category:Lugano]]
[[Category:Art museums established in 1989]]
[[Category:Art museums and galleries established in 1989]]
[[Category:1989 establishments in Switzerland|Museum of Cultures]]
[[Category:1989 establishments in Switzerland|Museum of Cultures]]
[[Category:Culture in Lugano]]
[[Category:Culture in Lugano]]

Latest revision as of 01:57, 14 October 2024

The museum's view from Riva Caccia Street, Lugano

The Museo delle Culture di Lugano (MUSEC) was opened on 23 September 1989 with the aim of preserving most of the ethnic art collected by Serge Brignoni and coming in particular from the Far East, India, South-East Asia, Indonesia and Oceania. Since then, the museum has had the honour of receiving numerous other prestigious collections of ethnic and oriental art, photography, contemporary and applied art. Works donated or deposited at MUSEC have been or will be the protagonists of dedicated temporary exhibitions. The museum was founded as the Museum of Extra-European Cultures, in 2007 it was renamed "Museo delle Culture" and since 2017 "MUSEC: Museo delle Culture". It is housed in the central Villa Malpensata, with access possible both from Via Mazzini and from Riva Caccia.

As of 1 January 2019, the Museo delle Culture (MUSEC) is entrusted to a Foundation that ensures its operation, while maintaining its identity, autonomy and image. The "Fondazione culture e musei (FCM)" allows for a more effective management, capable, thanks also to the renovated Villa Malpensata premises, of generating further synergies and economies of scope and of intensifying interaction with the territory and the public. MUSEC will thus benefit from countless advantages, which will allow it to continue and improve the work carried out so far, in all areas of its countless activities.

Villa Malpensata

[edit]
Villa Malpensata, MUSEC's venue

In 2017, MUSEC moved to Villa Malpensata. The Villa was built by the Caccia family in the mid-eighteenth century according to the style that at that time characterized the monumental and scenic rearrangement of the banks of the great alpine lakes. Used from 1893 onwards as a museum, from 1973 it became the permanent seat of the art museum and temporary exhibitions of various kinds.

The restoration designed in 2014 to give MUSEC a larger and more central location involved, in addition to the main building, both the two buildings flanking it to the north - intended for offices and the Research and Documentation Centre - and the terraced garden to the south, reorganized to house the MUSEC's outdoor spaces and the raised terrace that leads to the new main entrance. All the spaces are rearranged according to international climatic and museum-technical standards and equipped with the best safety conditions.

History

[edit]

Since its opening to the public on September 23, 1989, and until 2016, the Heleneum was the seat of MUSEC. The Heleneum is a villa on the shores of Lake Lugano built between 1930 and 1934 on the architectural model of the "Petit Trianon" in Versailles by Hélène Bieber, a strong-willed cosmopolitan lady who wanted to transform it into a centre for social and cultural entertainment and who lived there until 1967. Especially because of the economic crisis of the 1930s, Hélène Bieber failed in her intentions and the Heleneum remained a sparsely inhabited dwelling until, in 1969, it was bought by the Municipality of Castagnola, now a district of the City of Lugano.

From 1969 to 1971 the Heleneum was the venue for the piano courses held by Carlo Florindo Semini, Franco Ferrara and Arturo Benedetti Michelangeli. From 1971 to 1973, the villa hosted the summer courses and seminars of the Ticino Institute of High Studies, directed by Elémire Zolla, which brought together important scholars of different disciplines on the themes of religious knowledge.

Later, until 1976, the Heleneum was the seat of the Centre for Semantic and Cognitive Studies of the Dalle Molle Institute, which operated in the field of artificial intelligence, at that time in its early days, and which organized various seminars attended by scholars and researchers from all over the world. The villa was finally the kindergarten of Castagnola and was used as a set for film productions in which Bruno Ganz and Aldo Fabrizi, among others, took part.

The Museo delle Culture conserves most of the ethnic art that Serge Brignoni collected between 1930 and 1985. The collection shows the link between the creative forms of the "South Seas" culture and the artistic Avant-Garde of the 19th century that were inspired by those objects. The collection reflects Brignoni's selection of well-crafted objects that show an appreciation of art forms from a very different culture. The genres and the geographical origins of the Brignoni collection works are similar to those found in leading European, North American and Australian collections from the first half of the 20th century. Moreover, the collection includes all of the areas that are considered fundamental for a contemporary collection of the time.[citation needed]

Collection

[edit]

The Brignoni collection

MUSEC opened its doors in 1989 thanks to the bequest of ethnic works of art that the Swiss artist and collector Serge Brignoni (1903-2002) collected in the long period between 1930 and the mid-1980s, when he decided to donate them to the city of Lugano. The collection thus bears witness, first of all, to the link between the forms of creativity of the "South Seas" cultures and the object that the artistic avant-gardes of the 20th century discussed in their circles and tried to create in their works. The works are the expression of a refined choice that privileges the best manufactured articles and knows how to recognize phenomenologically the expressions of an art not yet acculturated. The genres and geographical origins, albeit with some significant exceptions, reflect those most widespread in the European, Australian and North American collections of the mid-twentieth century and there is almost no lack of "pieces" of what were considered the indispensable objects of collecting at the time. Particularly evident is the taste for sculptural works, marked by expressionistic content and creative methods and by a particular richness of drawing and pictorial decoration.

Other collections

Following the opening of the museum and especially since its relaunch in 2005, the MUSEC hosts and enhances many other Collections, some of which are listed below: the Ceschin Pilone-Fagioli Collection (hand-painted Japanese albumen photographs, dating back to the late nineteenth and early twentieth century); the Pilone Collection (includes over 400 works or groups of works of Chinese theatre, including painted masks and faces, headgear, make-up and costume accessories, fans, musical instruments and entire sets); the Nodari collection and fund (a thousand works of art and objects of material culture, two large river boats, about 6. 000 photographs, 71 documentary films and over sixty hours of sound recordings on cassette or tape, collected in the field, during a series of trips to Africa - especially in the Upper Congo - in the 1950s and 1960s) and the Antonini Collection (over 1100 ornamental combs from all over the world).

Exhibitions

[edit]

MUSEC preserves and enhances art collections from the Far East, India, Southeast Asia and Oceania. The new headquarters, the eighteenth-century Villa Malpensata, located on the lakeside promenade of Lugano, provides for an ever-changing setting following the most modern canons of museology. The museum, an important research centre on the anthropology of art, simultaneously offers the public at least three exhibitions able to communicate, each according to its own thematic peculiarities, the richness and the overall articulation of its cultural project.

- The "Spazio Tesoro", located at the entrance of the museum and with free access, accompanies the visitor on a periodically renewed route, with works from the Brignoni Collection and the other main collections of the museum. An itinerary full of meanings allows the visitor, among other things, to interact dynamically with the themes and works presented in the other exhibition spaces of the museum, sometimes anticipating them, sometimes providing valuable keys of interpretation, useful to grasp the unity of the museographic project.

- The "Spazio Maraini" presents the exhibitions of the "Esovisioni" cycle dedicated to travel photography and the theme of exoticism in the work of great photographers.

-The "Spazio Cielo" is entirely dedicated to hosting the exhibitions of the "Cameredarte" project, dedicated to new acquisitions, to collectors who collaborate with MUSEC and to contemporary artists who have approached the museum's activities over the years.

- Inside the "Spazio Mostre" which occupies two floors of the museum presents major exhibition.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Campione, Francesco Paolo (ed.), The Brignoni Collection; volume one, Art through Methamorphosis; volume two, Catalogue of Works, Mazzotta, Milan 2007. ISBN 978-88-202-1848-5 and ISBN 978-88-202-1865-2.
  • Cometti, Marta, Guida. Museo delle Culture di Lugano, Edizioni Città di Lugano/MCL (Antropunti/3), Lugano, 2009. ISBN 978-88-7777-043-1.
  • Vago, Valeria, In viaggio per i mari del Sud. Guida per ragazzi al Museo delle Culture, Edizioni Città di Lugano/MCL (Antropunti/2), Lugano, 2009. ISBN 978-88-7777-042-4.

References

[edit]
[edit]