The National Museum Collection Salce in Treviso continues its tribute to the great master of movie posters. In the Renato Casaro Room, following the exhibition dedicated to comedy, the second theme will be inaugurated on September 5: one of the genres that defined his international fame: the western.
A selection of drawings, sketches, posters, and placards will be on display, highlighting Casaro's extraordinary ability to capture the epic, the dust, and the heroism of western cinema, both Italian and Hollywood, through close-ups filled with tension, vast landscapes, and representations of classic shootouts.
Among the works on display, the posters and sketches from The Magnificent Seven, Dances with Wolves, and Sergio Leone's Dollar Trilogy stand out. There are even two posters the artist created for imaginary films used as props during the filming of Once Upon a Time in… Hollywood (2019) by Quentin Tarantino. Also on display is a prop, a relic: the saddle from the film My Name is Nobody, gifted by the protagonist Terence Hill to Renato Casaro.
The exhibition is open for visits from Friday to Sunday, from 10:00 AM to 6:00 PM.
Admission is paid.