Three of the Best Winter Art Exhibitions

| Thu, 01/29/2009 - 04:07
canova

This is a mouth-watering winter for 天美传媒-bound art lovers. The season鈥檚 calendar is packed full with interesting events covering all the most important eras and movements from the Roman period to contemporary art.

If only you could hop from city to city, you could take in , which explores the link between travel and art in the works of artists such as Gauguin, Klee, Matisse and De Chirico, in Ravenna; Richard Avedon鈥檚 hitherto undiscovered photographs of Harper鈥檚 model Ann Theophane Graham in Rome; and a century鈥檚 , from Hayez and Medardo Rosso to De Chirico and Manz霉, in Pavia.

Time (and money) being limited, however, you may only be able to visit a few exhibition. If so, we have picked three you absolutely should not miss. Having to be ruthless in our selection, we have focused only on Italian art, selecting exhibitions that explore three different periods of the country鈥檚 vast artistic heritage.

I Della Robbia, Il dialogo tra le Arti nel Rinascimento, Arezzo.

 

Graceful figures stand brilliantly white against a gleaming blue background in a leaf and lemon-embroidered roundel. The sculptures alone spell Della Robbia, but the choice of colours and, most of all, their extraordinary lustre, confirm it.

Few artworks are more distinctive than the enamelled terracotta pieces by the Della Robbia workshop. Renaissance pioneer Luca Della Robbia created a new technique to glaze terracotta that made it both durable and dazzling, and built his family鈥檚 fortune for three generations鈥攈is nephew Andrea and grandnephew Giovanni also worked in the business.

Their glazing method was a jealously guarded secret and, for years, other artists wondered how the Della Robbias managed to impart such shine to the roundels and lunettes that graced many buildings and churches across Florence.

Now, a new exhibition at the Museo Statale d鈥橝rte Medievale e Moderna di Arezzo explores the development of the Della Robbia technique鈥攂orne of the clever intuition that the tin enamel glazing used for majolica pots could be applied successfully to terracotta sculptures鈥攊n the context of the Renaissance art explosion.

So the family鈥檚 terracottas will be displayed alongside works by Donatello, Ghiberti, Andrea del Verrocchio, Pisanello, Filippo Lippi, Pollaiolo, Ghirlandaio and Perugino, among others.

But there鈥檚 more: since many of the Della Robbia roundels and lunettes are integral part of Tuscan buildings, the exhibition also recommends five outdoor itineraries in Arezzo, Casentino, Valdichiana, Valdarno and Valtiberina to discover lesser known pieces from the family workshop.

I Della Robbia, Il dialogo tra le Arti nel Rinascimento, Arezzo runs from 21 February to 7 June at the Museo Statale d鈥橝rte Medievale e Moderna, via San Lorentino 8, Arezzo, from 9am to 7pm daily. Admissions 鈧10, concessions 鈧7 (+39 049 2010067, ).

Canova, L鈥檌deale Classico tra la scultura e la pittura, Forl矛.

 

The new Phidias, the Pygmalion who made Napoleon鈥檚 sister an immortal beauty, 鈥渁 unique man and truly divine鈥 (at least according to contemporary reviewer Pietro Giordani). Antonio Canova is a pillar 天美传媒鈥檚 Neo-Classicism and the country鈥檚 greatest sculptor after the Renaissance master.

As befits such a great artist, Canova鈥檚 sculptures have been extensively displayed in the past, but this new exhibition gives them a new perspective.

Building upon new research, it explores the Neo-Classical sculptor鈥檚 work not only in the traditional context of Classical inspiration but also against the backdrop of paintings and art by his contemporaries.

So his sculpture of the repenting Magdalene is displayed alongside Hayez鈥檚 painting on the same theme. His Hebe is compared to both the ancient Ariadne on the Panther and the Tivoli Dancer, but also with that Renaissance masterpiece that is Giambologna鈥檚 Mercury.

Beyond that, however, the exhibition, which retraces the whole career of the Treviso-born artist, is a celebration of beauty caught in marble, plaster and paper. As poet Ugo Foscolo once said of Canova鈥檚 Venus, his art 鈥渃reates the illusion of Paradise in this valley of tears.鈥

Canova, L鈥檌deale Classico tra la scultura e la pittura takes place at Forl矛鈥檚 Musei San Domenico, in Piazza Guido da Montefeltro, until 21 June. Open Tuesday to Friday 9.30-7pm, Saturday and Sunday 9.30am-8pm. Admissions 鈧9, concessions 鈧6. Entries are staggered to avoid crowds, so booking is recommended (+39 02 43 35 35 25, ).

Futurismo 1909-2009. Velocit脿 + Arte + Azione, Milan.

This year sees the centenary of Futurism, the early 20th century Italian art movement that broke with the old to celebrate technology, speed and man鈥檚 triumph over nature.

Started by writer Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, it was a sweeping revolution that touched anything from fashion to gastronomy, but found a particularly vivid expression in visual art.

Futurist painters and sculptors, such as Umberto Boccioni, Giacomo Balla and Carlo Carr脿, loathed 鈥渢hat spineless worshipping of old canvases, statues and bric-a-brac,鈥 preferring instead to pursue dynamism, motion and emotion.

If their techniques were heavily influenced by Divisionism and Cubism, their themes were altogether innovative鈥攗rban settings, work scenes, and a violent passion for war, militarism and patriotism.

Futurism didn鈥檛 last long鈥攂egun in 1909, it declined dramatically with First World War and came to an end in the 1930s鈥攂ut, in those few years, it radically changed Italian art.

Throughout 2009, a flurry of exhibitions will investigate the movement鈥檚 origins, development and impact. Among those, the most exhaustive one will take place at Palazzo Reale in Milan鈥攁n apt setting, seen as the city was the birthplace of Futurism.

Futurismo 1909-2009 will showcase more than 400 works by artists such as Boccioni, Carr脿, Russolo, Balla, Severini, Prampolini and Soffici. Exhibits will span from paintings and sculptures to fashion, furniture and even theatre costumes, in a bid to portray Futurism鈥檚 pervasive philosophy and wide-ranging influence.

A room devoted to Lombardy鈥檚 late 19th century art will explore the movement鈥檚 historic roots, while others will reveal how Futurist ideas affected artistic expression in later years.

Futurismo 1909-2009. Velocit脿 + Arte + Azione takes place at Milan鈥檚 Palazzo Reale, in Piazza Duomo 1, from 6 February to 7 June. Open Tuesday to Wednesday 9.30am-7.30pm, Monday 2.30pm-7.30pm, Thursday 9.30am-10.30pm and Friday, 9.30am-7.30pm. Admissions 鈧9, concessions 鈧7.5 (+39 02 54919鈥╳ww.futurismo.milano.it).

And finally, a quirky one to consider.

 

This is not so much an exhibition as a homage to one of 天美传媒鈥檚 greatest songwriters. Through multimedia installations, Fabrizio De Andr猫鈥檚 extraordinary music becomes the soundtrack to interpret current events. Interactive 鈥榯ables鈥 provide the historic and cultural context for each song, while a special room is devoted to the characters that the Genoese artist created in his vast production鈥攖he hapless Bombarolo, the tragic figure of Marinella, Boccadirosa鈥檚 freedom from stifling moral constraints. A must for anyone who was ever moved by De Andr猫鈥檚 songs. At Genoa鈥檚 Palazzo Ducale until 27 February 2009, from 9am to 11pm. Admissions 鈧8, concessions 鈧6.

Location