ROME — On a recent weeknight, long after the swarms of tourists left Rome's Colosseum, a small group of people walked around outside the darkened amphitheater, pausing to take in a new aspect of its history, art or architecture with every sense but sight.
Michela Marcato, 54 and blind since birth, and her partially sighted partner toured the site amid Italy's new effort to make its artistic treasures more accessible to people with blindness or low vision and enhance how all visitors experience and perceive art.
As she listened to her tour guide, Marcato traced her fingers over a small souvenir model of the Colosseum. She felt the grooves of its archways and rugged rubble of its crumbled side. What she hadn't realized before holding it was the elliptical shape of building.
"Walking around it, I personally would never have realized it. I would never have understood it," she said. "But with that little model in your hand, it's obvious!"
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Michela Marcato, left, who is blind, and her partially sighted partner, Massimiliano Naccarato, examine a scale model of the Colosseum on Dec. 17 in Rome with Giorgio Guardi, right, a guide in inclusive tourism.
A different type of tourism
Italy and its art-filled cities haven't always been overly welcoming to visitors with disabilities. People who use wheelchairs often find elevators and doorways that are too narrow, stairs without ramps and uneven pavements.
In 2021, as a condition to receive COVID-19 pandemic recovery funds from the European Union, the country accelerated its accessibility initiatives, dedicating more attention and resources to removing architectural barriers and making its tourist sites and sporting venues more accessible.
The ancient city of Pompeii recently installed new signs to make the vast archaeological site more accessible to blind and disabled people. The project uses braille signs, QR-coded audio guides, tactile models and bas-relief replicas of artifacts excavated over the years.
Florence produced a guide on the accessibility options at the Uffizi Gallery and its other museums, with detailed information on routes and requirements — including the presence of companions — for sites such as the Boboli Gardens, which because of their historic structures are not fully accessible.
An inclusive tourism model doesn't just honor the human rights of people with disabilities; it also makes economic sense. Nearly half of the world's population over the age of 60 has a disability, and disabled travelers tend to bring two or more companions, according to the World Tourism Organization.
Stefania Terre, left, and Carmine Laezza, far right, both blind, touch a reproduction of St. Peter's Basilica on Jan. 15 at the Omero Tactile Museum in Ancona, Italy. Italy is making its artistic treasures more accessible to people with disabilities, including the blind.
A different way to experience art
Giorgio Guardi, a tour guide with the Radici Association, which has led tours of Rome for people with disabilities since 2015, said the aim of accessible tourism is to create an experience that is enjoyable for everyone involved, companions included.
That often means slowing down and experiencing artwork with different senses. The association often organizes walking tours at night, when there are fewer people out and less distracting ambient noise at famous landmarks.
It isn't always possible for blind people to touch artworks, so guides have to get creative.
Take Rome's central Campo dei Fiori piazza and its imposing statue of Giordano Bruno, the 16th-century philosopher burned at the stake during the Inquisition for alleged heresy.
The statue, atop a large pedestal in the middle of the piazza, is too high for visitors to touch. On a recent nighttime tour, Guardi encouraged his clients to instead assume Bruno's position: Hunched over, wearing a heavy hooded cape and clasping a book with both hands.
As one of his clients assumed the position, Guardi draped the cape over him. Others in the group lined up to touch the Bruno impersonator to feel the contours of his drooped shoulders, heavy with the weight of the Inquisition. Visitors who were deaf also were part of the tour, aided by a sign-language interpreter who recounted Bruno's tragic end.
Aldo Grassini and Daniela Bottegoni, both blind, pose for a portrait Jan. 15 in their home in Ancona, Italy. In 1993, they founded the Omero Tactile Museum, the first publicly funded tactile museum in Italy.
Museum features art by and for blind people
Aldo and Daniela Grassini, both blind, were avid travelers and art collectors who grew increasingly frustrated that they weren't allowed to touch art when they visited museums around the world. In the early 1990s, they founded what became Italy's only publicly funded tactile museum, the Museo Omero in the city of Ancona, where all the art is meant to be handled.
Named for the blind poet Homer, the museum features life-sized replicas of some of Italy's most famous artworks, from ancient Roman and Greek statues to the head of Michelangelo's David, as well as contemporary artworks.
"Touching something isn't like looking at it," Aldo Grassini said. "Not just because of the emotion it offers, but because of the type of knowledge that sensation provides."
Sight, he said, is an "overbearing sense that tends to monopolize reality," whereas touch offers a different dimension.
"We love with our eyes and with our hands. If we are in love with a person or an object that is particularly dear to us, is it enough to just look at it? No, we need to caress it, because caressing gives you a different emotion," he said.
One of the artists whose work is on display at the museum is Felice Tagliaferri, who himself is blind.
At his studio on the outskirts of Cesena, Tagliaferri points to a marble bust he sculpted of his late friend Angela. Tagliaferri recalled that before Angela died of breast cancer, he lay down in bed with her, caressing her bald head.
"When she passed away, Angela remained in my hands, and I recreated this sculpture thinking of her," he said.
Michela Marcato, left, who is blind, and her partially sighted partner, Massimiliano Naccarato, stand in front of a painting representing the sea Jan. 12 during an interview at their home in Rome.
Unpacking a picture of the sea
Marcato and her partner, Massimiliano Naccarato, live in a smart apartment on Rome's east side; its living room is dominated by a huge painting of the sea.
Naccarato, who can see using his cellphone to enlarge images and with the help of special lights, purchased the painting to celebrate a professional award, and it has pride of place in their home. He installed a special light behind the work so he can see it better.
Marcato can't see it at all, but she knows it's there. And her own experience at the beach informs the way she enjoys the painting.
For her, the painting recalls her love of the sea, "for the noise it makes, for the thousand different sounds it produces, for the smell you breathe in, for the walks you can take in any season."
It is a sensory way of appreciating art that has absolutely nothing to do with seeing it.
Making Italy's art accessible to people with disabilities
Giorgio Guardi, center, a guide from the Radici Association, walks with participants Nov. 29 during an inclusive art tour in Rome.
Michela Marcato, left, who is blind, and her partially sighted partner, Massimiliano Naccarato, examine a scale model of the Colosseum on Dec. 17 with Giorgio Guardi, right, a guide in inclusive tourism, in Rome.
Michela Marcato, who is blind, runs her fingers over a tactile panel Dec. 17 during a visit to the Colosseum in Rome.
Michela Marcato, left, who is blind, and her partially sighted partner, Massimiliano Naccarato, pose for a photo Dec. 17 during a visit to the Colosseum in Rome.
From left, Stefania Terre touches a reproduction of Michelangelo's sculpture La Pieta with Monica Bernacchia and Carmine Laezza during a Jan. 15 tour for blind people at the Omero Tactile Museum in Ancona, Italy.
A light worn on the hands of Stefania Terre, who is blind, streaks across a life-size reproduction of Michelangelo's La Pieta as she touches the sculpture for a long-exposure photograph Jan. 15 at the Omero Tactile Museum in Ancona, Italy.
Stefania Terre, left, and Carmine Laezza, far right, both blind, touch a reproduction of St. Peter's Basilica on Jan. 15 at the Omero Tactile Museum in Ancona, Italy.
Stefania Terre, who is blind, touches a reproduction of St. Peter's Basilica on Jan. 15 at the Omero Tactile Museum in Ancona, Italy.
Stefania Terre, who is blind, touches a life-size reproduction of the head of Michelangelo's David during a Jan. 15 visit to the Omero Tactile Museum in Ancona, Italy.
Stefania Terre, who is blind, uses a small light on her fingers while touching a life-size reproduction of the head of Michelangelo's David for a long-exposure photograph Jan. 15 at the Omero Tactile Museum in Ancona, Italy.
Blindfolded students of an art high school enter the pavilion of contemporary art Jan. 16 for a project on tactile experience at the Omero Tactile Museum in Ancona, Italy.
A blindfolded student of an art high school touches a piece in the pavilion of contemporary art Jan. 16 during a project on tactile experience at the Omero Tactile Museum in Ancona, Italy.
Massimiliano Trubbiani, an expert in tactile education for blind and visually impaired people, works to transform Titian's Pala Gozzi into bas-relief Jan. 16 in a laboratory at the Omero Tactile Museum in Ancona, Italy.
Massimiliano Trubbiani, an expert in tactile education for blind and visually impaired people, works to transform Titian's Pala Gozzi into bas-relief Jan. 16 in a laboratory at the Omero Tactile Museum in Ancona, Italy.
A painting transformed into bas-relief is displayed Jan. 16 at the laboratory of tactile education at the Omero Tactile Museum in Ancona, Italy.
Felice Tagliaferri, a blind sculptor, stands Jan. 16 in his studio in Cesena, Italy.
Powder covers the hammers of Felice Tagliaferri, a blind sculptor, on Jan. 16 in his studio in Cesena, Italy.
Daria Portale, a guide with the Radici Association, uses a tactile panel so Enrico Sulli, right, who is blind, can experience the architecture of Palazzo Farnese during a Nov. 29 inclusive art tour in Rome.
Francesca Inglese, who is blind, touches a marble relief Nov. 29 on the corner of a building during an inclusive art tour in Rome.
Francesca Inglese, who is blind, uses a tactile panel to experience the architecture of Palazzo Farnese during a Nov. 29 inclusive art tour in Rome.
Elena Dominici, who is blind, touches the Cancelleria fountain Nov. 29 during an inclusive art tour in Rome.

