Ink Drawing by Mario Sironi Figures Italy XX Century - Two Figures
Features
Two Figures
Artist: Mario Sironi (1885-1961)
Artwork title: Due figure
Age: 20th Century / 1901 - 2000
Subject: Human Figures
Artistic technique: Drawing
Technical specification: Ink
Description : Due figure
India ink on paper. Signed lower right. Accompanied by authentication on photo by his wife Matilde Sironi dated September 1963 and by certificate on photo from the JA PF archive. with number 031 and data of the work. Mario Sironi dedicated himself a lot to drawing and figure study, and his production included many drawings, figure studies, sketches for subsequent paintings. All the power and expressive force of Sironi's bodies can already be seen in these drawings, whose mind, an incessant forge of ideas and projects often created on a large scale (he created numerous murals), often made use of makeshift paper supports to draw, even of small dimensions, on which he traced, in just a few centimetres, large projects, provocative ideas and poetic images. The work comes from an important Milanese private collection. It is presented in a frame.
Product Condition:
Product in good condition, shows small signs of wear. We try to present the real state as fully as possible with photos. If some details are not clear from the photos, what is reported in the description will prevail.
Frame Size (cm):
Height: 53
Width: 46
Depth: 3
Artwork dimensions (cm):
Height: 27
Width: 19
Additional Information
Artist: Mario Sironi (1885-1961)
Born in Sassari on May 12, 1885, Mario Sironi completed his training in Rome, where the family had moved the year after his birth, so much so that he "considered himself more than anything else a Roman, and he also had a Roman accent". His adolescence was marked not only by the suggestions of the Eternal City, but also by passionate readings (Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, Heine, Leopardi, the French novelists) and by the study of music, above all by Wagner, who he played on the piano with his older sister Cristina, future concert artist. In 1902 he enrolled in the engineering faculty, but the following year he was struck by a depressive crisis, the first symptom of the existential malaise that would accompany him throughout his life. Having therefore abandoned university and encouraged by the positive judgment of the old sculptor Ximenes and the pointillist Discovolo, Sironi devoted himself to painting, attending the Scuola Libera del Nudo in via Ripetta and Balla's studio. Here he meets Boccioni (who, despite some moments of misunderstanding, becomes the closest friend of his youth), Severini and other artists. He also began to perform illustrations, drawing three covers for "L'Avanti della Domenica" and, in 1905, he participated in an exhibition for the first time. In the same period Sironi began to undertake his first trips: in 1906 to Paris, where Boccioni was also at the time; in 1908 in Erfurt, Germany, where he also returned in 1910-1911, as a guest of the sculptor Tannenbaum. Boccioni's diaries and letters inform us of Sironi's recurrent depressive crises, which led him to shut himself up at home, seeing no one, concentrating obsessively on drawing. But they also reveal his deep love for the classics, just as the futurist manifestos call for the destruction of museums. Starting in 1913, inspired by the work of Boccioni, he approached futurism, which he however interpreted in the light of his incessant volumetric research. In 1915 he moved briefly to Milan, where he collaborated with the magazine "Gli Avvenimenti" and entered the core of futurism. At the outbreak of war he enlisted in the Cyclist Volunteer Battalion, which also included Boccioni, Marinetti, Sant'Elia, Funi, Russolo, and in December he signed the Futurist manifesto L'orgoglio italiano. He was at the forefront until 1918, when he was moved to the Propaganda Office, where he collaborated with Bontempelli on the trench magazine "Il Montello". Returning to Rome in 1919, he participated in the Great National Futurist Exhibition, exhibiting fifteen works mainly on the theme of war. By now, however, metaphysical suggestions borrowed from Carlo Carrà and Giorgio De Chirico pervade his painting. In January 1920, with Achille Funi, Leonardo Dudreville and Luigi Russolo, Sironi signed the Futurist manifesto Against all returns to painting, which despite its title already contains many instances of the future Novecento Italiano. In addition to painting, Sironi continued to devote himself to drawing and illustration: from 1922 to 25 July 1943 he was the main illustrator of Il Popolo d'Italia, Benito Mussolini's newspaper on which from 1922 to 1926 he made very heavy caricatures of the anti-fascists of the time. In December 1922 he founded with Anselmo Bucci, Gian Emilio Malerba, Pietro Marussig, Ubaldo Oppi and again with Dudreville and Funi, the Novecento Italiano, the movement aspiring to a "modern classicism", that is to say a classical form, devoid of nineteenth-century pictorialisms, filtered through a purist synthesis. In 1924 Sironi participated in the Venice Biennale with the Novecento group. Around the 1930s his painting abandoned the clear sign of the first twentieth-century season and went through an expressionist period, characterized by an approximation of the figure and by a violence of the brushstroke that disoriented most of the critics. Over the following decade he devoted himself more and more to large decoration, neglecting the easel picture, which he now considered an insufficient form. Mural painting, for him, was not just a technique, but a radically different way, ancient and classic, but also new and fascist, because, as he himself stated, "social par excellence" of thinking about art. The whole decade saw him engaged in a series of monumental works, in which, having overcome the expressionist sprezzature, he adopted a multicentric composition, often in squares, governed by a pre-Renaissance spatiality and perspective. In September 1943 Sironi joined the Republic of Salò, following the evolution of events with growing anguish. On 25 April he also risked being shot: stopped at a checkpoint in Milan by a partisan brigade, he would have been killed if Gianni Rodari, who was part of the brigade and had recognized him, hadn't signed a pass for him. However, he did not stop working, but in the last few years, he polemically refused to participate in the Venice Biennials, while continuing to exhibit in Italy (Milan Triennale, 1951; Rome Quadrennial, 1955) and abroad (travelling exhibition in the United States , with Marino Marini, in 1953). He also made sets and costumes for various theatres. In the meantime, his health deteriorated, also due to the onset of progressive arthritis and he died in Milan on August 13, 1961, following a bronchopneumonia.Age: 20th Century / 1901 - 2000
20th Century / 1901 - 2000Subject: Human Figures
Artistic technique: Drawing
Il disegno è il processo di tracciare segni su una superficie tramite l'applicazione di una pressione o il trascinamento di un apposito strumento sulla superficie. Gli strumenti sono: matite in grafite o colorate, penna, pennelli fini con inchiostro, pastelli a cera o carboncini; i supporti tradizionali più frequenti sono carta, cartoncino, tavola, muro, tela, rame, vetro.Technical specification: Ink
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Sapevi che l'arte può essere anche un ottimo investimento (e non solo per grandi portafogli)?
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Dai un'occhiata alle nostre rubriche di divulgazione sull'arte:
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Leggi di più
Ecco alcuni tra i principali articoli:Vedute
Falsi nell'arte antica
Un messaggio di fiducia per ripartire
La potenza espressiva dell'arte figurativa etiope
Breve Storia del Collezionismo
Giorgio Upiglio, maestro dei libri d'artista
Matthias Withoos detto "Calzetta bianca"
San Rocco pensaci tu - Classic Monday
Ecco alcuni esempi dell'arte del Novecento più bella che puoi trovare da noi:
I Raccoglitori di patate - Lavoro estivo - Augusto Colombo, 1935
I Taglialegna - Lavoro invernale - Augusto Colombo, 1933
Il lavoro femminile, Contardo Barbieri, 1954 ca.
Sapevi che l'arte può essere anche un ottimo investimento (e non solo per grandi portafogli)?
L'Arte tra Collezionismo e Investimento
FineArt: Arte come investimento
Dai un'occhiata alle nostre rubriche di divulgazione sull'arte:
Epoche
Lavorazioni e tecniche
Mostre ed Eventi
Protagonisti