The Thirties. The Arts
in Italy
Beyond Fascism
Palazzo Strozzi, Florence
22 September 2012 to 27 January 2013
Curated by Antonello Negri with
Silvia Bignami, Paolo Rusconi and Giorgio Zanchetti
Florence section curated by Susanna Ragionieri
In 1930s Italy, during
the Fascist era, a very vigorous artistic battle was waged, involving every
style and trend, from Classicism to Futurism, from Expressionism to
Abstraction, and from monumental art to salon painting. The scene was
enriched and complicated by the emergence of design and mass communication
– posters, wireless, films, for example – which espoused many ideas
from the “fine” arts and conveyed them to a broad public. It
was a complex and vital time of experimentation, open to the outside world, the
prelude to our modern era. The exhibition will present this decade
through a selection of works of art, while at the same time offering a
historically informed narrative, fully conveying the aesthetic, cultural and
ideological atmosphere of the time. The exhibits will include paintings,
sculpture and graphics, photographs (both experimental and documentary), models
and sketches, posters, architectural drawings, illustrated books and journals,
presented in seven sections.
Section
1. Centres and Schools
Following an interpretative
thread characteristic of the 1930s intended to recreate the atmosphere of the
time, the exhibition starts with a focus on the influential artistic centres,
each characterised by a particular style or taste: the Milan group, whose
predominant figures were Sironi and Carrà and representatives of the
Novecentismo such as Garbari, Tosi Funi and Wildt; Florence, with Soffici,
Rosai, Lega and Viani, with whom Bologna’s Morandi can also be
associated; Rome, divided between Classical and Realist schools with Donghi,
Bartoli, Carena and Ceracchini); Turin, with the neo-15th century
movement of Casorati, which also drew inspiration from France, artists included
are Chessa, Menzio, Paulucci; and Trieste, which harked back to a Mitteleuropa
suspended in time, as represented by Nathan, Bolaffio and Sbisà.
Section
2. Youngsters and ‘Irrealists’
The supranational
character of Italian 1930s art is more clearly perceptible in the work of the
Futurist and abstract avant-garde and that of the younger painters and
sculptors, who were open to European and international influences. This
section highlights their manifold and even conflicting characteristics through
a selection of particularly significant pieces by artists working mainly
between Rome and Milan:
Licini, Prampolini, Radice, Peruzzi, Crali, Scipione, Mafai, Guttuso,
Pirandello, Cagli, Capogrossi, Basaldella, Birolli, Sassu, Gentilini, Fontana, Marino and
Melotti.
Section
3. Travelling Artists
In this section the
exchanges between Italy and Europe are illustrated both through examples of
specific work by Italian artists abroad: the France of the Italiens de Paris with De Chirico, De
Pisis, Paresce, Tozzi, Savinio, and others; the United States of Depero; the
Germany of Mucchi and De Fiori and others, and then in reverse through the
presence of such foreign artists in Italy as Germany’s Max Beckmann and
Jenny Wiegmann, Russia’s Deineka and France’s Cheyssial.
Section
4. Contrasts
Aesthetic and
ideological issues gave rise to arguments and conflicts in the 1930s. The
contrast between modernity and tradition gradually increased during the decade,
culminating in the critical issue of ‘degenerate art’ in Germany,
which was reflected in some respects in Italy, around 1940, in the clash between
the ‘reactionary’ Cremona Prize and the Bergamo Prize, some entries
for which were provocatively modernistic. This tension was reflected in
metaphysical and ‘abstract’ works by Italian artists that were at
one time regarded as ‘shocking’ (De Chirico, Birolli, Carrà, Ghiringhelli,
Reggiani and later Guttuso), set against works that celebrated the regime,
somewhat symmetrically, the even more strident comparison provided by the works
of German artists such as Dix and Ziegler.
Section
5. Muralism and Public Art
The idea of art as a
means of communication and a vehicle for messages is typical of the 1930s.
This section focuses on manifestations of public art in its plastic and
painterly (muralism) forms, starting with the Milan Triennale of 1933, which
was dominated by Mario Sironi. It seeks to prompt a comparison with the
French scene of the time, presenting sketches for murals and sculptures
intended for public places, reliefs, glass panels and posters. This is
illustrated with works by Martini, Sironi, Carrà, Fontana, and others.
Section
6. Design and Applied Arts
This section covers
the range of products based on the deliberate reproducibility of images and
objects, within the context of a first mass society: from fashion to
furniture, from furnishings and domestic appliances to advertising and
political posters. An Art Déco-modernist setting will be recreated,
bearing the stylistic stamp of Gio Ponti, alongside a rationalist-abstract
setting, both featuring furniture, furnishings and art works typifying contemporary,
albeit contrasting, ideas about how to plan the domestic space.
Section
7. Florence
In the final section,
the opening group – Artists, poets and
musicians: common ground – refers
to Florence’s role as the city of the most important and dynamic cultural
journals, forming connections between poetry, painting, writing, sculpture and
music. On the other hand, there is the contrasting, albeit complementary,
theme of The Strength of the Province and
its Origins, featuring
works by Soffici, Rosai, Viani, Romanelli, Marini, Quinto Martini and Manzù.
Between these two views and portrayals of life, the small group of works,
Myth and the Mediterranean
in the representation of the Human Form, deals with a particular
approach to this topic, poised between the legacy of the Renaissance and
international influences, from Hildebrand to Berenson and De Chirico. The Modernity Myth relates the
developments of such an atypical Futurist as Thayaht, and his brother Ram, to
ideas for the city’s renewal as embodied in the two architectural
masterpieces of the new Santa Maria Novella station and the Giuseppe Berta
stadium. Lastly, the establishment of Florence’s
Maggio Musicale festival is represented by reference to two performances
emblematic in different ways of the condition of modern man: Luigi
Dallapiccola’s Volo di notte (Night
Flight), staged in 1940, and Luigi Pirandello’s I giganti della montagna (The Mountain Giants),
which was first performed, posthumously and incomplete, in the Boboli Gardens
on 5 June 1937.
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further information and images, please contact:
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Bond Public Relations
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