Texarkana Gazette

Young Venetians volunteer after flood of their lifetimes

- By Colleen Barry

VENICE, Italy — As soon as waters receded from this week’s devastatin­g flood, about 50 young Venetians wearing rubber boots and gripped by a sense of determinat­ion showed up at the city’s Music Conservato­ry to help save precious manuscript­s.

Thanks to their work, some 50 linear meters of archival manuscript­s, dating from as far back as the 1500s, lay strewn in the conservato­ry’s upper floors to dry when Italian Culture Minister Dario Franceschi­ni visited this weekend.

“This is our city,” said Laura Franco, a student at Venice’s Music Conservato­ry who showed up with a handful of friends Saturday morning.

A growing network of more than 2,000 young Venetians are responding to the worst flood in their lifetimes to help salvage what they can, wherever help is needed.

Modeling their network after the so-called “Mud Angels” who famously poured into Florence from all over the world after the 1966 flood swamped that city’s treasures with mud from the Arno, these youth are calling themselves “Angels of the Salt,” for the corrosive, destructiv­e saline content of the lagoon water.

Social media allows them to be mustered where there is the greatest need. On Saturday that was the island of Burano and the hardest-hit area, the barrier island of Pellestrin­a, where one man died in Tuesday night’s floods.

“We are going to bookshops, to libraries, to shops and restaurant­s, giving them a hand to try to help out. And when we find a lot of trash piling up, we organize carts to clean it up so it doesn’t go in the water,” said Vittorio da Mosto.

Many have been helping out at the aptly named “Acqua Alta” bookstore, which poked fun at the frequent high tides that until recently would typically rise playfully and recede, as if another tourist attraction.

But this week, the bookstore was completely swamped, with the invading lagoon nearly floating a gondola that serves as a book display and waterloggi­ng countless books.

“I lost thousands and thousands of books, worth thousands and thousands of euros,” Luigi Frizzo said ruefully as he instructed the volunteers to bring the ruined books to a nearby boat for disposal.

Institutio­ns like the Venice Music Conservato­ry limited the volunteers to current and former students after an enthusiast­ic first-day turnout of the so-called “Angels.”

“The problem was trying to stop all the volunteers. There were too many arriving with wet boots. We need people with some expertise,” the conservato­ry’s president, Giovanni Giol, said “We said thank you, but these are historic and they need to be handled with care.”

Giol said the manuscript­s will be saved “thanks to the work of the volunteers.”

Irene Maria Giussani, a 22-year-old viola student, has been using absorbent paper to help prevent ink on the manuscript­s from running, and standing up books, including precious volumes containing all of Wagner’s opera, to dry.

“It is mostly a disaster for the manuscript­s, because for some there aren’t even copies,” Giussani said.

“It means the music is lost forever. As musicians, we know what that means.”

The most precious manuscript­s were being transporte­d on Saturday to Bologna and Florence, where they will be frozen in order to block any mold and also help push out the salt.

The Venice Music Conservato­ry’s archive was one of the hardest hit in the city.

Renovated and reopened with fanfare just five years ago, it was — inauspicio­usly, as it turns out — put on the ground floor because the upper floors could not bear the weight, Giol said. The previous administra­tion also believed that since the area of the city is one of the higher ones, it would be safer from Venice’s frequent floods.

That perception changed dramatical­ly with Tuesday’s 1.87-meter tide — the highest since 1966 when Venice was flooded along with Florence.

Those events created a network of internatio­nal conservati­on groups that continue to work to restore treasures to this day.

The water only covered the lowest shelf of the archives by about a centimeter, Giol said, but the paper quickly absorbed the liquid, spreading the damage.

He said water damage was limited to about 5% of the documents, and just 1% of those are considered ruined.

Most of the most famous works, including by composers like Rossini, Cimarosa and Monteverdi, were not touched by the water, Giol said.

When they renovate the library now, Giol said first considerat­ion will be to raise the level by at least a meter.

“If it is touched again by water, that means the water would rise another 70 or 80 centimeter­s, which would be a catastroph­e. Books will become the last of the problems,” he said.

Damage at the nearby Accademia Gallery — home to the famed Vitruvian Man which is on loan to the Louvre for the 500th anniversar­y of Leonardo’s death — was limited to some recently acquired space in the former seat of the affiliated Fine Arts Academy.

Water seeped into the walls, up to about 10 centimeter­s, but spared a series of plaster statutes by Canova, that were on squat wooden pedestals just high enough to have avoided disaster.

The gallery was opened the day after the flood, one of the few among Venetian attraction­s, in a pointed signal of the city’s resilience; 800 visitors came.

The Biennale, the bi-annual contempora­ry art fair that closes next weekend, re-opened to the public on Thursday and received over 1,500 visitors.

Accademia Gallery Director Giulio Manieri Elia said that reinforced walls prevent water from entering the recently renovated areas of the gallery, which houses masterpiec­es by Tintoretto, Veronese and Giorgione, among others.

While relieved that the Canova plaster models were spared, Elia worried about the fate of the original tile floors.

The real damage from the lagoon floods, as has been documented at St. Mark’s Cathedral in the lowest part of the city, comes as the salt is drawn into the brick.

“In the coming months, the floors will become white with salt,” Elia said. “I don’t have a lot of experience. I think we need to wash it with fresh water to make the salt come out.”

 ?? AP Photo/Luca Bruno ?? ■ Volunteers try to save ancient music books Saturday by placing them to dry at the first floor of Venice Conservato­ry after recovering them from ground floor in Venice, Italy. High tidal waters returned to Venice on Saturday, four days after the city experience­d its worst flooding in 50 years. Young Venetians are responding to the worst flood in their lifetimes by volunteeri­ng to help salvage manuscript­s, clear out waterlogge­d books and lend a hand where needed throughout the stricken city.
AP Photo/Luca Bruno ■ Volunteers try to save ancient music books Saturday by placing them to dry at the first floor of Venice Conservato­ry after recovering them from ground floor in Venice, Italy. High tidal waters returned to Venice on Saturday, four days after the city experience­d its worst flooding in 50 years. Young Venetians are responding to the worst flood in their lifetimes by volunteeri­ng to help salvage manuscript­s, clear out waterlogge­d books and lend a hand where needed throughout the stricken city.

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