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The Tagliamento, known in Friulian as Tiliment, is the longest river in Friuli Venezia Giulia and is considered the only one in the Alpine region to maintain its original braided channel morphology. In its middle course, its bed can reach a width of up to one kilometer, not including the forests and fields along its banks. Michele Cesaratto’s formative experiences (1998), before attending the Italian Academies, all flow through the current of the Tagliamento, skirting the village of Gradisca di Spilimbergo (PN), where he grew up and which, over time, has become a gathering place, in harmony with its rural past and the surrounding nature.
In this ancient context, yet inseparably linked to his generation, he developed a passion for art, Eastern culture, plant studies, woodworking, music, and illustration. Just a few hundred meters from the village square, where his workshop is located, one can enter a narrow street leading straight to the riverbed of the...More
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Press Release
The Tagliamento, known in Friulian as Tiliment, is the longest river in Friuli Venezia Giulia and is considered the only one in the Alpine region to maintain its original braided channel morphology. In its middle course, its bed can reach a width of up to one kilometer, not including the forests and fields along its banks. Michele Cesaratto’s formative experiences (1998), before attending the Italian Academies, all flow through the current of the Tagliamento, skirting the village of Gradisca di Spilimbergo (PN), where he grew up and which, over time, has become a gathering place, in harmony with its rural past and the surrounding nature.
In this ancient context, yet inseparably linked to his generation, he developed a passion for art, Eastern culture, plant studies, woodworking, music, and illustration. Just a few hundred meters from the village square, where his workshop is located, one can enter a narrow street leading straight to the riverbed of the...More