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  • Genoa, Italy. A view over the rooftops of Genoa from the gardens of Villa Di Negro, Genoa, Italy.
    SFE_180630_027_1.jpg
  • A view over the rooftops of Genoa from the Palazzo Rosso, Genoa, Italy. The Palazzo Brignole Sale or Palazzo Rosso is a house museum located in Via Garibaldi, in the historical centre of Genoa.
    SFE_180629_107_1.jpg
  • A view over the rooftops of Genoa from the Palazzo Rosso, Genoa, Italy. The Palazzo Brignole Sale or Palazzo Rosso is a house museum located in Via Garibaldi, in the historical center of Genoa.
    SFE_180629_111_1.jpg
  • The Chiesa Santa Maria Di Castello, Genoa, Italy. The church, in Romanesque style, was erected before 900 AD. It houses many artworks commissioned by the main noble families of Genoa and is flanked by the large Tower of the Embriaci.
    SFE_180702_002_1.jpg
  • Fresco on the ceiling in the Chiesa Santa Maria Di Castello, Genoa, Italy. The church, in Romanesque style, was erected before 900 AD. It houses many artworks commissioned by the main noble families of Genoa and is flanked by the large Tower of the Embriaci.
    SFE_180702_011_1.jpg
  • A doorway in the Chiesa Santa Maria Di Castello, Genoa, Italy. The church, in Romanesque style, was erected before 900 AD. It houses many artworks commissioned by the main noble families of Genoa and is flanked by the large Tower of the Embriaci.
    SFE_180702_003_1.jpg
  • Details of the Japanese screens that surround the exterior of the Edoardo Chiossone Museum of Oriental Art in Genoa, Italy<br />
Employed in Tokyo in 1875 by the Japanese Government to set up and manage the engraving division of the Imperial Printing Bureau, Chiossone amassed an extraordinary collection of oriental art now housed in a Genoa park.
    SFE_180630_013_1.jpg
  • A woman walks past a grocers shop in the Old centre of Genoa, Italy. The heart of medieval Genoa is bounded by ancient city gates Porta dei Vacca and Porta Soprana, and the streets of Via Cairoli, Via Garibaldi and Via XXV Aprile and is famed for its caruggi narrow lanes.
    SFE_180629_122_1.jpg
  • Satirical graffiti outside the Faculty of Architecture, Genoa University that reads in translation Frank Gehry is shit, Genoa, Italy.
    SFE_180627_104_1.jpg
  • The Chiesa Santa Maria Di Castello, Genoa, Italy. The church, in Romanesque style, was erected before 900 AD. It houses many artworks commissioned by the main noble families of Genoa and is flanked by the large Tower of the Embriaci.
    SFE_180702_033_1.jpg
  • The Chiesa Santa Maria Di Castello, Genoa, Italy. The church, in Romanesque style, was erected before 900 AD. It houses many artworks commissioned by the main noble families of Genoa and is flanked by the large Tower of the Embriaci.
    SFE_180702_018_1.jpg
  • The exterior of the Edoardo Chiossone Museum of Oriental Art in Genoa, Italy. Employed in Tokyo in 1875 by the Japanese Government to set up and manage the engraving division of the Imperial Printing Bureau, Chiossone amassed an extraordinary collection of oriental art now housed in a Genoa park.
    SFE_180630_003_1.jpg
  • A florist arranges a display of flowers in her shop in the Mercato Orientale, Genoa. Opened in 1899 it is the principal market in Genoa selling vegetables, meat and fish.
    SFE_180627_016_1.jpg
  • The Ribaudo family tomb in the Staglieno Cimitero Monumentale, Genoa, Italy. Famous for its monumental sculpture and covering an area of more than a square kilometre, it is one of the largest cemeteries in Europe.<br />
The tomb was used as a cover for the English Post Punk band, Joy Divisions song, Love will tear us apart again and designed by Martin Atkins and Peter Saville.
    SFE_180701_042_1.jpg
  • The Staglieno Cimitero Monumentale, Genoa, Italy. Famous for its monumental sculpture and covering an area of more than a square kilometre, it is one of the largest cemeteries in Europe.
    SFE_180701_002_1.jpg
  • The Appiani family tomb in the Staglieno Cimitero Monumentale, Genoa, Italy. Famous for its monumental sculpture and covering an area of more than a square kilometre, it is one of the largest cemeteries in Europe.<br />
The tomb was used as a cover for the English Post Punk band, Joy Divisions album Closer and designed by Martin Atkins and Peter Saville.
    SFE_180701_032_1.jpg
  • Detail of a funerary monument in the Museum of Saint Agostina, Genoa, Italy. Begun by the Augustinians in 1260, it is one of the few Gothic buildings remaining in the city, after the numerous demolitions in the 19th century. Secularised in the 1790s it eventually became a museum of architecture before being destroyed in the Second World War. It reopened as the Museo di SantAgostino in 1984.
    SFE_180627_114_1.jpg
  • Two women chat on a street corner in the morning sunshine. Genoa, Italy.
    SFE_180702_042_1.jpg
  • The Staglieno Cimitero Monumentale, Genoa, Italy.<br />
Famous for its monumental sculpture and covering an area of more than a square kilometre, it is one of the largest cemeteries in Europe.
    SFE_180701_044_1.jpg
  • The Staglieno Cimitero Monumentale, Genoa, Italy.<br />
Famous for its monumental sculpture and covering an area of more than a square kilometre, it is one of the largest cemeteries in Europe.
    SFE_180701_043_1.jpg
  • A street shrine and graffiti in a back street of mediaeval Genoa, Italy.
    SFE_180628_004_1.jpg
  • An elderly man walks through a residential district of the mediaeval centre of Genoa, Italy.
    SFE_180628_005_1.jpg
  • Detail of a funerary monument in the Museum of Saint Agostina, Genoa, Italy. Begun by the Augustinians in 1260, it is one of the few Gothic buildings remaining in the city, after the numerous demolitions in the 19th century. Secularised in the 1790s it eventually became a museum of architecture before being destroyed in the Second World War. It reopened as the Museo di SantAgostino in 1984.
    SFE_180627_117_1.jpg
  • An elderly woman and her pet dog cross the street in Genoa, Italy.
    SFE_180627_098_1.jpg
  • A moon over the skyline in Genoa, Italy
    SFE_180626_012_1.jpg
  • The Staglieno Cimitero Monumentale, Genoa, Italy.<br />
Famous for its monumental sculpture and covering an area of more than a square kilometre, it is one of the largest cemeteries in Europe.
    SFE_180701_005_1.jpg
  • Light streams through a stained glass window in the lobby of an Art Nouveau apartment building in Genoa, Italy.
    SFE_180627_033_1.jpg
  • The Caravana Crucifix, dating from 1341 in the Museum of Saint Agostina, Genoa, Italy. Begun by the Augustinians in 1260, it is one of the few Gothic buildings remaining in the city, after the numerous demolitions in the 19th century. Secularised in the 1790s it eventually became a museum of architecture before being destroyed in the Second World War. The building reopened as the Museo di SantAgostino in 1984.
    SFE_180627_110_1.jpg
  • Two men walk past a piece of modernist art in the Piazza De Ferrari in Genoa, Italy. Situated in the heart of the city between the historical and the modern centre, Piazza De Ferrari is renowned for its fountain, which was restored in recent years along with a major restyling of the square.
    SFE_180627_082_1.jpg
  • Detail of artworks in the Museum of Saint Agostina, Genoa, Italy. Begun by the Augustinians in 1260, it is one of the few Gothic buildings remaining in the city, after the numerous demolitions in the 19th century. Secularised in the 1790s it eventually became a museum of architecture before being destroyed in the Second World War. It reopened as the Museo di SantAgostino in 1984.
    SFE_180627_126_1.jpg
  • Detail of a sculpture in the Museum of Saint Agostina, Genoa, Italy. Begun by the Augustinians in 1260, it is one of the few Gothic buildings remaining in the city, after the numerous demolitions in the 19th century. Secularised in the 1790s it eventually became a museum of architecture before being destroyed in the Second World War. It reopened as the Museo di SantAgostino in 1984.
    SFE_180627_112_1.jpg
  • Detail of a sculpture in the Museum of Saint Agostina, Genoa, Italy. Begun by the Augustinians in 1260, it is one of the few Gothic buildings remaining in the city, after the numerous demolitions in the 19th century. Secularised in the 1790s it eventually became a museum of architecture before being destroyed in the Second World War. The building reopened as the Museo di SantAgostino in 1984.
    SFE_180627_107_1.jpg
  • Detail of sculptures in the Museum of Saint Agostina, Genoa, Italy. Begun by the Augustinians in 1260, it is one of the few Gothic buildings remaining in the city, after the numerous demolitions in the 19th century. Secularised in the 1790s it eventually became a museum of architecture before being destroyed in the Second World War. The building reopened as the Museo di SantAgostino in 1984.
    SFE_180627_106_1.jpg
  • The seafront at Boccadasse near Genoa, ItalyThe seafront at Boccadasse near Genoa, Italy. Boccadasse is a fishing village that has, despite its proximity to Genoa, managed to retain its charm and is very popular as a dining and swimming destination with Italian tourists.
    SFE_180629_072_1.jpg
  • The seafront at Boccadasse near Genoa, ItalyThe seafront at Boccadasse near Genoa, Italy. Boccadasse is a fishing village that has, despite its proximity to Genoa, managed to retain its charm and is very popular as a dining and swimming destination with Italian tourists.
    SFE_180629_068_1.jpg
  • Details of shadows on the wall of a restaurant overlooking the sea at Boccadasse near Genoa, Italy. Boccadasse is a fishing village that has, despite its proximity to Genoa, managed to retain its charm and is very popular as a dining and swimming destination with Italian tourists.
    SFE_180629_059_1.jpg
  • Tables and chairs at a restaurant in Boccadasse near Genoa, Italy. Boccadasse is a fishing village that has, despite its proximity to Genoa, managed to retain its charm and is very popular as a dining and swimming destination with Italian tourists.
    SFE_180629_046_1.jpg
  • A paddleboarder in the sea off Nervi, near Genoa, Italy. Nervi was, from the second half of the nineteenth century a major holiday destination for the English aristocracy. Today the towns main attractions are the coastal path along its rocky shore towards Portofino that offers excellent views.
    SFE_180629_039_1.jpg
  • A paddleboarder in the sea off Nervi, near Genoa, Italy. Nervi was, from the second half of the nineteenth century a major holiday destination for the English aristocracy. Today the towns main attractions are the coastal path along its rocky shore towards Portofino that offers excellent views.
    SFE_180629_032_1.jpg
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