Giorgio Morandi

Giorgio Morandi

Natura Morta, oil on canvas, 1956,
(private collection)
Born (1890-07-20)July 20, 1890
Bologna, Italy
Died June 18, 1964(1964-06-18) (aged 73)
Bologna
Nationality Italian
Education Accademia di Belle Arti, Bologna
Known for Painting, printmaking
Movement Metaphysical art, futurism, modern realism

Giorgio Morandi (July 20, 1890 – June 18, 1964) was an Italian painter and printmaker who specialized in still life. His paintings are noted for their tonal subtlety in depicting apparently simple subjects, which were limited mainly to vases, bottles, bowls, flowers and landscapes.

Biography

Giorgio Morandi was born in Bologna to Andrea Morandi and Maria Maccaferri. He lived first on Via Lame where his brother Giuseppe (who died in 1903) and his sister Anna were born. The family then moved to via Avesella where his two other sisters were born, Dina in 1900 and Maria Teresa in 1906. From 1907 to 1913 he studied at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Bologna [Academy of Fine Arts of Bologna]. After the death of his father in 1909, the family moved to via Fondazza and Morandi became the head of the family.

At the Accademia, which based its traditions on 14th-century painting, Morandi taught himself to etch by studying books on Rembrandt. He was excellent at his studies, although his professors disapproved of the changes in his style during his final two years at the Accademia.[1] Morandi, even though he lived his whole life in Bologna, was influenced by the works of Cézanne, Derain, and Picasso. In 1910 he visited Florence, where the works of artists such as Giotto, Masaccio, Piero Della Francesca, and Paolo Uccello made a profound impression on him.[2] He had a brief digression into a Futurist style in 1914. In that same year, Morandi was appointed instructor of drawing for elementary schools in Bologna—a post he held until 1929.

In 1915, he joined the army but suffered a breakdown and was indefinitely discharged. During the war, Morandi's still lifes became more reduced in their compositional elements and purer in form, revealing his admiration for both Cézanne and the Douanier Rousseau.[3]

The Metaphysical painting (Pittura Metafisica) phase in Morandi's work lasted from 1918 to 1922. This was to be his last major stylistic shift; thereafter, he focused increasingly on subtle gradations of hue, tone, and objects arranged in a unifying atmospheric haze, establishing the direction his art was to take for the rest of his life. Morandi showed in the Novecento Italiano exhibitions of 1926 and 1929, but was more specifically associated with the regional Strapaese group by the end of the decade, a fascist-influenced group emphasizing local cultural traditions. He was sympathetic to the Fascist party in the 1920s,[4] although his friendships with anti-Fascist figures led authorities to arrest him briefly in 1943.[5] From 1928 Morandi participated in some of the Venice Biennale exhibitions, in the Quadriennale in Rome and also exhibited in different Italian and foreign cities.

In 1929 Giorgio Morandi illustrated the work Il sole a picco by Vincenzo Cardarelli, winner of the Premio Bagutta. From 1930 to 1956, Morandi was a professor of etching at Accademia di Belle Arti. The 1948 Venice Biennale awarded him first prize for painting. He visited Paris for the first time in 1956, and in 1957 he won the grand prize in São Paulo's Biennial.

Quiet and polite, both in his private and public life, Morandi was much talked about in Bologna for his enigmatic yet very optimistic personality. Morandi lived on Via Fondazza, in Bologna, with his three sisters Anna, Dina and Maria Teresa. Morandi died of lung cancer on June 18, 1964.[6]

Legacy

Morandi is buried at Certosa cemetery in Bologna in the family tomb together with his three sisters. On his tomb there is a portrait of him donated by his friend the sculptor Giacomo Manzù.

Throughout his career, Morandi concentrated almost exclusively on still lifes and landscapes, except for a few self-portraits. With great sensitivity to tone, color, and compositional balance, he would depict the same familiar bottles and vases again and again in paintings notable for their simplicity of execution. A prolific painter, he completed some 1350 oil paintings.[7] He also executed 133 etchings, a significant body of work in its own right, and his drawings and watercolors often approach abstraction in their economy of means. He explained: "What interests me most is expressing what’s in nature, in the visible world, that is".

Morandi was perceived as one of the few Italian artists of his generation to have escaped the taint of Fascism, and to have evolved a style of pure pictorial values congenial to modernist abstraction. Through his simple and repetitive motifs and economical use of color, value and surface, Morandi became a prescient and important forerunner of Minimalism.

He has been written about by Philippe Jaccottet, Jean Leymarie, Jean Clair, Yves Bonnefoy, Roberto Longhi, Francesco Arcangeli, Cesare Brandi, Lambeto Vitali, Luigi Magnani, Marilena Pasquali and many other critics.

Federico Fellini paid tribute to him in his 1960 film La Dolce Vita, which featured Morandi's paintings, as does La notte by Michelangelo Antonioni. One of the main characters in Sarah Hall's novel How to Paint a Dead Man is loosely based on Morandi.[8] Don DeLillo's 9/11 novel "Falling Man" (2007) includes two Morandi still-life paintings on the wall of Nina's New York apartment, as well as "a show of Morandi paintings at a gallery in Chelsea" at the beginning of Chapter 12. Morandi was a particular favorite of eccentic Scottish poet Ivor Cutler, who included a poem about the painter in his first anthology Many Flies Have Feathers (1973)

Two oil paintings by Morandi were chosen by the President of the United States Barack Obama in 2009 and are now part of the White House collection.

In 1993, Marilena Pasquali and Bologna Municipality created the Giorgio Morandi Museum, thanks to the donation, made by his sister Maria Teresa Morandi, of his works and his atelier, which were owned by the family. Today the museum includes a reconstruction of his studio.

Exhibitions

Although Morandi was not greatly concerned with exhibitions during his own lifetime, his works have been displayed in the Modern Art Museum of Bologna and in many other cities, due largely to the Centro Studi Giorgio Morandi and to his President Marilena Pasquali, who founded in 1993 the Museo Morandi in Bologna. In December 2008 an exhibition was dedicated to Giorgio Morandi at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. From 7 June until 22 September 2013, an exhibition was dedicated to Morandi at the Centre for Fine Arts in Brussels, Belgium (with guest artist Luc Tuymans). In 2015, David Zwirner Gallery had an exhibition of Morandi's work in New York.[9] From October 9 until June 25, 2016, the Center for Italian Modern Art, in New York, had an exhibition featuring about 40 paintings, etchings, and drawings by Morandi.[10]

Photography and Giorgio Morandi

Some of the most famous photographers of the 20th century took photographs of Morandi, at his house on via Fondazza, at Grizzana Morandi's house, and at the Venice Biennal. Photographers who took pictures of Morandi or his studio include: Herbert List, Duane Michals, Jean Francois Bauret, Paolo Prandi, Paolo Ferrari, Lamberto Vitali, Libero Grandi, Franz Hubmann, Leo Lionni, Antonio Masotti, Carlo Ludovico Ragghianti, Lee Miller, Giancolombo, Ugo Mulas, Luigi Ghirri, Gianni Berengo Gardin, and Luciano Calzolari. As part of his series Das Meisterstück, Matthias Schaller photographed Morandi's palette.[11]

The film-maker Tacita Dean filmed the inside of Morandi's house on via Fondazza. An exhibition of stills from one of the two films, Still Life, was held at the Center for Italian Modern Art, in New York, in 2016.[12]

In 2016 the American photographer Joel Meyerowitz published "Morandi's Object", a book where he photographed more than 260 objects that the painter collected during his life.[13]

Notes

  1. Morandi 1988, p. 139.
  2. Morandi 1988, pp. 139–140.
  3. Cowling and Mundy 1990, p. 191.
  4. Abramowicz and Morandi 2004, p. 125 at googlebooks
  5. Abramowicz and Morandi 2004, p. 179 at googlebooks
  6. "Giorgio Morandi". Ketterer Kunst. Retrieved 23 June 2016.
  7. Bell 1982
  8. review by Jonathan Beckman of How to Paint a Dead Man, The Independent, June 26, 2009 (accessed April 26, 2011)
  9. "Giorgio Morandi » David Zwirner". www.davidzwirner.com. Retrieved 2016-03-03.
  10. "Giorgio Morandi". Italian Modern Art. Retrieved 23 June 2016.
  11. "Das Meisterstuck". Matthias Schaller.
  12. "Books - The Photographers' Gallery". thephotographersgallery.org.uk. Retrieved 16 October 2016.

References

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.