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The work of Giorgio de Chirico represents an unexpected form of classicism in early avant-garde painting. This canvas, one of six in a series, combines a Mediterranean cityscape with still-life objects. Familiar elements appear in many of de Chirico’s paintings like pieces of a mysterious puzzle: a classical arcade, oddly oversize artichokes, a cannon and cannonballs, a clock, an industrial brick chimney, a monumental tower, a running train, and a square-rigged sailing ship. Here the stage set for this extraordinary juxtaposition of objects is an Italian piazza, virtually deserted except for the menacing shadowy figures outside the edge of the scene.
De Chirico represented objects with a matter-of-fact, though intentionally crude, precision. He painted his scenes flatly, in bright colors, and illuminated them with a cold white light. Rendered in this clear style, works like The Philosopher’s Conquest seem rife with meaning, though they remain resolutely enigmatic. Indeed, by juxtaposing incongruous objects, the artist sought to produce a metaphysical quality, what he called “art that in certain aspects resembles … the restlessness of myth.” De Chirico’s works would profoundly affect the Surrealists, who in the 1920s and 1930s attempted to portray dreams and images of the subconscious in their work.

The work of Giorgio de Chirico represents an unexpected form of classicism in early avant-garde painting. This canvas, one of six in a series, combines a Mediterranean cityscape with still-life objects. Familiar elements appear in many of de Chirico’s paintings like pieces of a mysterious puzzle: a classical arcade, oddly oversize artichokes, a cannon and cannonballs, a clock, an industrial brick chimney, a monumental tower, a running train, and a square-rigged sailing ship. Here the stage set for this extraordinary juxtaposition of objects is an Italian piazza, virtually deserted except for the menacing shadowy figures outside the edge of the scene. De Chirico represented objects with a matter-of-fact, though intentionally crude, precision. He painted his scenes flatly, in bright colors, and illuminated them with a cold white light. Rendered in this clear style, works like The Philosopher’s Conquest seem rife with meaning, though they remain resolutely enigmatic. Indeed, by juxtaposing incongruous objects, the artist sought to produce a metaphysical quality, what he called “art that in certain aspects resembles … the restlessness of myth.” De Chirico’s works would profoundly affect the Surrealists, who in the 1920s and 1930s attempted to portray dreams and images of the subconscious in their work.

The Philosopher’s Conquest
oil on canvas
1913–14
Giorgio de Chirico (1888–1978)
Italian, born Greece

#surrealism #surrealistart #dechirico #thephilosophersconquest #oilpainting #c1913 #art #modernart #italianart #italianmodernism #modernism

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Giacomo Manzù, Bust of a Woman, 1952. Bronze portrait of Signora Lampugnani, first version won the Grand Prize for Sculpture at the 1948 Venice Biennale.

#sculpture #sculptor #GiacomoManzù #ItalianModernism

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Gianni & Joe Colombo
(1963/64). Note: Since 1976 produced Oluce Italia S.p.A.

#JoeColombo
#GianniColombo
#ItalianDesign
#ItalianModernism
#DesignLighting
#VintageLighting

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Modern vase
hand blown glass
circa 1950s
Anzolo Fuga, A.V.E.M.
Murano, Italy

#glass #glassart #glassvase #modernglass #mcm #moderndesign #handmade #handblown #muranoglass #venetianglass #italianglass #avem #anzolofuga #modernism #italianmodernism #italiandesign #artglass #studioglass #oneofakind

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Blue Sky Lean
#popart #digitalart #contemporaryart #surrealism #retrofuturism #architectureart #pisatower #italianmodernism #newmedia #sacredgeometry #artcollectorsfeed

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Office Building for sale, Architect unknown, in the outskirts of Rome / Italy

photographed 1995

#photography
#analoguephotography
#architecture #rome
#romearchitecture
#italianarchitecture
#italianmodernism
#modernism #italy

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#italianarchitecture
#italianmodernism
#modernism #italy
#fiat #fiatmoretti

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Quartiere tre fontane /
Arch.: u.a. M.Fiorentini, G.DeRossi, Richard Neutra, 1962 -1967
Rome / Italy

photographed 1998

#photography
#analoguephotography
#architecture #rome
#romearchitecture
#italianarchitecture
#italianmodernism
#modernism #italy

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Quartiere tre fontane /
Arch.: u.a. M.Fiorentini, G.DeRossi, Richard Neutra, 1962 -1967
Rome / Italy

photographed 1998

#photography
#analoguephotography
#architecture #rome
#romearchitecture
#italianarchitecture
#italianmodernism
#modernism #italy

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#architecture #rome #romearchitecture #italianarchitecture
#italy #mamiya #modernism
#italianmodernism

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Ceiling structure at the Olivetti Headquarter by Architects Bernasconi / Fiocchi / Nizzoli, built 1960-1967, Ivrea / Italy
photographed 1997

#architecture
#italianarchitecture
#olivetti
#olivettiarchitecture
#modernism
#italianmodernism

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from the Archive:

Nuovo Corviale (Arch. Mario Fiorentino) 1975 - 1982 / Rome / Italy
c- print 1998

#photography
#analoguephptography
#architecture
#architecturerome
#modernism
#italianmodernism

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The Chiesa Madre in Gibellina (1972), designed by Ludovico Quaroni and Luisa Aversa, emerged as part of the post-earthquake reconstruction of the Sicilian town.

#LudovicoQuaroni #BrutalistChurch #ItalianModernism

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