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From Parco Dora in Turin to the Spanish Quarters of Naples, passing through villages that host "more works of art than inhabitants" such as Camo, in Piedmont, and Stigliano, in Basilicata. Polaris Editore has published “Street art in Italy. Travel between places and people" by Anna Fornaciari and Anastasia Fontanesi, former founders of Travel on Art: the first guide to discover urban art in Italy. Over 500 works, 58 locations and 17 regions to approach a new form of tourism on the road: trips and open-air routes in which urban art, ephemeral by definition and in continuous evolution, becomes a thread that traces invisible but also indelible bonds between territories and people, through graffiti writing, street art, neo-muralism and public works that wink at the installations. Born from the pen, the gaze and above all from the direct experience of the authors - a couple in work and life and always accompanied by their dog – "Street art in Italy" proposes 58 ideas for trips on the road to discover destinations that have transformed the geography and skyline of the cities and villages of our country.
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