Double date this weekend
at Palazzo Pallavicini
Saturday 27 April the psychologist and psychotherapist Emilio Gerboni
arrives on display
to explain how to survive the new era of “witch hunts”
Sunday 28th, for the little ones,
there is How is a witch born?,
a guided tour of the exhibition with interactive laboratory
It might seem like a phenomenon belonging to the past, now vanquished, but witch hunts still take place today, albeit with different motivations, protagonists and narratives. Just think of the continuous verbal and physical attacks, both in the real and virtual world, that many women suffer on a daily basis. To tell us about this new era of “witch hunts”, in the rooms of Witchcraft. Iconography, facts and scandals of history’s subversivesthe current exhibition in Pallavicini Palace a Bologna, Saturday 27 April arriva Emilio Gerbonipsychologist and psychotherapist, who will hold the meeting If only they didn’t burn you at the stake: how to protect yourself in the new era of witch hunts (and find fulfillment peacefully). Sunday 28instead, there is room for the little ones with How is a witch born?an exciting guided tour of the exhibition with an interactive final workshop.
In the event on Saturday 27th, which will begin at 4pm, Emilio Gerboni with his characteristic lightness and irony typical of psychomicity, will illustrate the current situation and the dynamics of the contemporary “witch hunt”, sneaky and disguised but still devastating in emotional terms and the integrity of the person. Emilio will then explain to us how we can defend ourselves and free ourselves from fear, thus finding the way to create a context in which we can feel calm and supported in the expression of our talents and in the realization of our projects, rather than blocked by the terror of judgement.
Sunday 28th, always at 4pmin How is a witch born? the young participants will be accompanied on a visit to the exhibition rooms, where with the help of an expert guide they will discover the origins of the figure of the witch in an engaging journey from ancient Rome to the most recent stories, such as the entirely Bolognese one by Gentile Budrioli, the “Huge” witch who lived in the fifteenth century, to whom a room is dedicated Witchcraft. The knowledge they learn during the visit will be the starting point for the final workshop, in which they will each be asked to invent their own contemporary witch. The appointment, intended for children aged 6 to 11, lasts approximately two hours.