Draft:Venetian Heritage

= Venetian Heritage = Venetian Heritage is a non-profit organization based in Venice and New York focused on the promotion and preservation of the art and architecture of Venice and the nations of the former Republic of Venice. It organizes and financially supports restoration and conservation projects in Venice, curates exhibitions worldwide and funds publications and research projects.

Venetian Heritage has partnered with many international corporations and hosts fundraising galas to finance its restoration projects. It frequently works in collaboration with the Italian Ministry of Culture and other nonprofits with similar aims. Venetian Heritage is also part of the executive committee of the International Private Committees for the Safeguarding of Venice, a consortium of nonprofits and countries dedicated to the conservation of Venice.

Currently, the US branch is chaired by American architect Peter Marino, and the Italian branch by Valentina Marini Clarelli Nasi.

Venetian Heritage has funded over 70 restoration projects, 30 publications and organized over 35 exhibitions.

Fundraising Events and Partnerships
Venetian Heritage hosts the Venetian Heritage Biennale Gala Weekend for its members, which coincides with the opening of the Venice Biennale, to raise funds for its projects. Since its inception, the gala has had many sponsors such as Vhernier and Bulgari, and from 2019 Venetian Heritage has partnered with French fashion house Dior to create elegant galas reminiscent of old Venetian society. The 2019 Tiepolo Ball at Palazzo Labia, the 2022 Opera Ball at the Fenice and the 2024 Naumachia Ball at the Arsenale have contributed substantially to restoration projects, most notably the Ca d'Oro Museum. During the 2023 Biennale of Architecture Venetian Heritage collaborated with wine producer Ca' del Bosco to host a sculpture prize and fundraising event.

Partnerships also include the Al Thani Collection, which has contributed to several projects such as the Ca d'Oro. In 2023, Venetian Heritage and Direzione Regionale Musei Veneto of the Italian Ministry of Culture organized the exhibition Ca' d'Oro: Masterpieces of the Renaissance in Venice at the Al Thani Collection at Hôtel de la Marine in Paris, showcasing pieces from the Ca' d'Oro. Venetian Heritage has also collaborated on projects with: JTI, Armani, Samsung, Pomellato, Bottega Veneta, and has long-term working relations with Louis Vuitton and Dior. It also partners with local Venetian companies such as Venini, Laguna~B and Rubelli.

For the 2024 TEFAF, The European Fine Art Foundation invited Venetian Heritage and the Italian Ministry of Culture as an institutional guest to exhibit and promote their renovation of the Galleria Giorgio Franchetti at the Ca d'Oro.

Founding (1999)
Venetian Heritage was founded in 1999 by Lawrence D. Lovett, an American businessman and philanthropist who was devoted to Venice and its arts, with Khalil Rizk as its first president. After the devastating floods of 1966, worldwide attention was brought to the urgent need to protect and restore the historical architecture and art of Venice and the former Venetian Republic. Lovett, keen to attract American interest and investment, organized fund-raising events in Venice and New York in order to sponsor restoration projects. With the help of Maria Teresa Rubin de Cervin Albrizzi, Lesa Marcello Alverà, and current director Toto Bergamo Rossi, Venetian Heritage was born, with the aim of "safeguarding and promoting of the entire immense cultural heritage of the ancient Republic." The immediate focus was the former Venetian Republic, with exploratory visits to Dalmatia. One of the first projects was the extensive restoration work in the 13th century Cathedral of Saint Lawrence in Trogir, Croatia, with funding provided in part by the Getty Foundation. Venetian Heritage was awarded the Europa Nostra conservation award for this project in 2003.

Expansion (2002 - 2014)
As Venetian Heritage expanded and received more European funding, a Venice-based branch, Fondazione Venetian Heritage Onlus, was founded. While projects continued abroad, such as the restoration of the 15th-century Chapel of Saint Anastasius at the Cathedral of Saint Domnius in Split in 2003, work expanded rapidly in Venice. In the 2010s Venetian Heritage also diversified from being a predominantly fundraising organization to making more direct interventions through exhibitions and publications in partnership with large corporations. For example, Venetian Heritage collaborated in 2010 with Louis Vuitton to restore the 14th-century gilt-silver altarpiece of the Church of San Salvador. From October 2010 to February 2011, the completed work was exhibited at the Bode Museum in Berlin, with over 100,000 visitors.

A notable project from this period involved the Venetian Ghetto (widely considered the oldest in the world) in 2013, in advance of its 500th anniversary. Venetian Heritage restored many of the synagogue’s liturgical treasures that are in the Jewish Museum of Venice's collection. It also organized the traveling exhibition Treasures of Venice's Ghetto restored by Venetian Heritage with the support of Vhernier which stopped at Sotheby’s in New York, the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, the Ca d'Oro in Venice, the Belvedere Museum in Vienna and the Art Gallery of Western Australia in Perth.

Further expansion: Museum work and International Exhibitions (2014-)
Since 2015 Venetian Heritage began to expand the scope of its work and focuses not just on individual restoration projects but to works together with, promotes and improves the state museums of Venice: the Gallerie dell’Accademia, Museo di Palazzo Grimani and the Ca' d'Oro. The first of such projects was with the Gallerie dell'Accademia, the famous gallery re-founded by Napoleon in 1807, a temple to Venetian art. In 2015, Venetian Heritage partnered with Samsung to fund the Ministry of Culture's expansion of the museum, creating the Samsung and Venetian Heritage Wing, featuring interactive digital learning experiences. Further renovation of the Gallerie dell’Accademia took place in 2021, with Venetian Heritage also sponsoring the renovation and hangings of the Saloni Selva-Lazzari, which now holds several famous works of Venetian painters such as Tiepolo, Régnier, and Giordano. Venetian Heritage has also restored several paintings at the Gallerie including Gianantonio Guardi's c.1750-1755 Erminia e Vafrino scoprono Tancredi ferito and is projected to start work on the restoration of Bellini's San Giobbe altarpiece in 2024. The Gallerie dell'Accademia is often used to showcase the work of Venetian Heritage such as the restoration of L'indovina (The Fortune-teller) by Giovanni Battista Piazzetta in 2018.

Another key project was the late 15th-century Giorgio Vasari ceiling, composed of nine painted wood panels, originally in the Palazzo Corner Spinelli. The panels were separated and sold off into private hands in the early 19th century. Seven were eventually reacquired by the state. Thanks to fundraising events, one in partnership with the American film director James Ivory, Venetian Heritage was able to purchase and restore the two missing panels in 2013 and 2016.

In 2017, Venetian Heritage secured the support of Bulgari to fund the restoration of two Veronese paintings, Saint Jerome of the Desert, and Saint Agatha in Prison, at the Church of San Pietro Martire, which had faded and oxidized due to neglect. The newly restored paintings were displayed at the Gallerie dell'Accademia then traveled as the Veronese in Murano: Two Venetian Renaissance Masterpieces Restored exhibition to the Frick Collection in New York and the New Orleans Museum of Art. The restoration of Antonio Rizzo's 1472 statues of Mars, Adam and Eve at the Doge's Palace was completed in 2019 thanks to Venetian Heritage, with funding coming from its New York president, Peter Marino. The restoration workshop in the palace was open to the public in order to showcase about the complex restorative process carried out by experts in collaboration with the University of Padua.

The museum of Palazzo Grimani has also undergone substantial renovations and hosted several exhibitions thanks to the work of Venetian Heritage. For one of their most famous exhibitions Domus Grimani 1594-2019 Venetian Heritage were able to bring together, after 400 years, the over a hundred sculptures originally collected by the famous Venetian patriarch Giovanni Grimani and displayed in the roman-inspired Tribuna Grimani room and in the Sala del Doge. The restoration and renovation of the main floor was also completed in 2021, and hosted a special exhibition of neo-expressionist artist George Baselitz, who made custom paintings for the vacant stucco frames. In 2023, Venetian Heritage displayed their restored bust of Filippo Parodi Ecce Homo at Palazzo Grimani and are currently hosting the exhibition Tintoretto and Giovanni Grimani there.

Ongoing Projects
In order to promote the preservation of Venetian art across Europe, Venetian Heritage has partnered with the Museum of Fine Arts in Budapest to help fund the restoration of two sculptures by Josse Le Court of Minerva and Saturnus.

Venetian Heritage's ongoing project to renovate the Galleria Giorgio Franchetti at the Ca' d'Oro is its largest to date, with over €8.5 million in funds raised so far, including a generous donation from the Giulio and Giovanna and Sacchetti Foundation. Having already completed the new lighting system for the façade of the 15th-century Venetian gothic palace in 2023, the project will see the museum restyled and modernized for the first time since the 1970s, giving the state museum a much-needed renovation.

Restorations
This is a list of some other large projects. A comprehensive list of all projects can be found on their website
 * The 12th-13th century mosaic floor and pulpit from Saint Mark's Basilica (2022)
 * Mauro Codussi's 1498 staircase at the Scuola Grande di San Giovanni Evangelista (2018-2022)
 * Antonio Rizzo's c.1472 Mars, Adam and Eve statues at the Doge's Palace (2015-2019)
 * Antoon van Dyck's c.1621-1627 portrait of Marcello Durazzo at the Ca' d'Oro (2018)
 * The 1514 funerary monument for Nicolò Orsini in the Basilica of Santi Giovanni e Paolo (2016)
 * The 1480-1500 façade of the Church of San Zaccaria (2005-2007)
 * The 16th century archway of the Scuola Grande di San Rocco (2004-2005)
 * The 12th-13th century narthex of Saint Mark's Basilica (2003-2004)
 * Gaspare Diziani's 1757 Triumh of Poetry at the Museum of Ca'Rezzonico (2003-2004)
 * The early 18th century façade of the Church of the Jesuits (2001-2002)
 * The mid 13th century monuments of the Doge Marino Morosini at St Mark's Basilica (2001-2002)

Exhibitions
Exhibitions are often organized to showcase completed restorations or bring together pieces that are of cultural significance to Venice. Most are held at the Gallerie dell'Accademia and Palazzo Grimani but many also travel to museums abroad. The list of all exhibitions can be found on their website. 

Publications
Venetian Heritage frequently publish books to record their restoration projects and exhibitions. A list of publications can be found their website