Museums Museum Palace The Museum Palace, on the St. Augustine square, is an example of civil architecture from the Este period, built as a Hostel for the poor, together with the nearby Hospital in the late 18th century. Today it houses the main museums of Modena: •
Estense Gallery, with works by
Tintoretto,
Paolo Veronese,
Guido Reni,
Correggio,
Cosmé Tura and brothers
Annibale and
Agostino Carracci. The most famous works are the two portraits of Francis I d'Este, a sculpture by
Gian Lorenzo Bernini and a canvas by
Diego Velázquez. •
Estense Library, one of the most important libraries in Italy. • Museum of Medieval and Modern Art. • Municipal Museum of
Risorgimento. • Este Headstones Museum. • Roman Lapidary Museum. • Graziosi Gallery of Plaster Casts. • City Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology. The Estense Gallery and Library have reopened on 29 May 2015 after the
earthquake of 2012. The Gallery has been completely restored but some pieces are still damaged and thus cannot be seen.
Museums of the Cathedral Opened for the
Great Jubilee in 2000, the Museum of the Cathedral houses a rich collection of artistic heritage, in particular liturgical ornaments and furnishings. Apart from the finds of the cathedral building site by Wiligelmus and Lanfranco, such as romanesque metopes and roof decorations, in the Lapidary there are also reliefs, sculptures and inscriptions of the Roman, Medieval and Renaissance era found in the cathedral area during the restoration works between the 19th and the 20th century.
Museum Enzo Ferrari Inaugurated on 10 March 2012, the
museum complex includes
Enzo Ferrari's birthplace and a futuristic automotive design gallery, painted in the yellow that Enzo Ferrari chose as the background for the Prancing horse on his logo. The exhibition gallery was designed by the famous architect
Jan Kaplický, who suddenly died in 2009, and carried on by his associate and loyal assistant Andrea Morgante. The interior features a multimedia display of pictures, unpublished films and precious mementoes of Enzo Ferrari's life as a man, driver and car-maker throughout the 20th century. The Exhibition Gallery houses a flexible mounting representing story, figures, places and races of the Modenese sport motor racing.
Museum of Collectible Cards Founded in 1986 by Giuseppe Panini, who then decided to donate his collection to the city, the
Museo della figurina was opened to the public on 15 December 2006. It is located inside the Santa Margherita Palace, which also houses the Delfini Library and the City Gallery. The Museum houses several collections, including, apart from the classic stickers, cigarette cards, letter seals, matchboxes and calendars, all of which represent a very important historical document of the development of picture cards throughout the years.
Teatro Comunale Modena The
Teatro Comunale Modena (Community Theatre of Modena, but renamed in October 2007 as "Teatro Comunale Luciano Pavarotti") is an
opera house in Modena. The idea for the creation of the present theatre dates from 1838, when it became apparent that the then-existing Teatro Comunale di via Emilia (in dual private and public ownership) was no longer suitable for staging opera. However, this house had been the venue for presentations of all of the works of
Donizetti,
Bellini and
Rossini up to this time, and a flourishing operatic culture existed in Modena. Under the Mayor of Modena in collaboration with the
Conservatorio dell'Illustrissima Comunità (Conservatory of the Most Illustrious Community), architect
Francesco Vandelli was engaged to design the Teatro dell'Illustrissima Comunità, as the theatre was first called, "for the dignity of the city and for the transmission of the scenic arts". Paid for in the manner typical of the time – from the sale of boxes – in addition to a significant gift from Duke Friedrich IV, Vandelli created a design for the new theatre combining ideas from those in
Piacenza,
Mantua, and
Milan, and it opened on 2 October 1841 with a performance of
Gandini's
Adelaide di Borgogna al Castello di Canossa, an opera specially commissioned for the occasion.
Cuisine and
lentils Modena has a rich and diversified cuisine, often including meats, hams and salamis. One of the most famous
modenese dishes is
zampone (the fatter and heartier version) or
cotechino Modena (
cotechino is leaner and less fat than
zampone).
Cotechino dates back to around 1511 to
Mirandola, where, whilst besieged, the people had to find a way to preserve meat and use the less tender cuts, so made the
cotechino. By the 18th century it had become more popular than the yellowish sausage had been around at the time, and in the 19th century was in
mass production in and around the area. Modena's contribution to the Italian pasta culture are
tortellini and
tortelloni, which are squares of pasta shaped in the form of a ring and stuffed with meat or cheese.
Cappello del prete is also a popular meal, which is a very fatty pig's trotter. Other dishes include
torta Barozzi or
torta nera, which is a black tart (a dessert made with a coffee/cocoa and almond filling encased in a fine pastry dough),
ciccioli, made by slowly cooking, compressing, drying, and aging fatty, leftover pieces of pork, and
pesto modenese, which is cured pork back fat pounded with garlic, rosemary and
Parmesan, used to fill borlenghi and crescentine.
Balsamic vinegar of Modena became a
protected geographical indication under EU law in 2000. The Balsamic Vinegar is a condiment for salad, cheese, strawberries and many other dishes. The practice of cooking the must of grapes can be traced back to the ancient Romans: the so-called sapum was used both as a medicinal product and in the kitchen as a sweetener and condiment. The long history of the Balsamic Vinegar came to us through centuries and now is most consumed abroad than in Italy. Modena contains Italy's most acclaimed restaurant,
Osteria Francescana, which holds three stars in the
Michelin Guide since 2013 and, as of 2018, has been named as the best restaurant in the world in
The World's 50 Best Restaurants.
Arts Art studio
fuse* is based in Modena. ==Economy==