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Wednesday, April 03, 2013

Scenes from Nineteenth Century Italy



Luigi Ferrazzi (Italian, 19th/20th Century)
Un San Giovannino che torna dalla processione/ A young St. John back from the procession 
1881 
Oil on canvas
121 x 85 cm
Private collection


Stefano Novo (1862 – 1927)
La prima comunione (Interno della Basilica di San Marco), Venezia/ The first Communion (Inside of Basilica of San Marco), Venice
1889 
Oil on canvas
110 x 80 cm
Private collection



Vincenzo Irolli (1860 – 1949)
Pray to the Virgin Mary
Oil on canvas  
50 x 47 cm
Private collection

Much of nineteenth century Italian art is not appreciated outside Italy. Some regard a lot of it as too much of the “chocolate box” school of art.

True there is a touch of too much saccharine but the works were and are popular

The prejudice against it is still with us. The balance of opinion is still in favour of a more austere and abstract composition. We prefer more intellectual, ideological  works. Such works as above appear to be too “simple”

But there is no mistaking the feeling and the joy and happiness which are at the root of such works. 

As pictures they are pleasant company if they hang on walls of houses and seen in museums and art galleries. Yes they are sentimental and the emotion is not purified and refined. 

But they depict every day people going about their lives. They are not pictures of despair and misery but happiness. And the intent is to communicate that happiness

True, the artists are what are called painters of portraits and genre scenes. But alongside intense maternal figures, portraits of children and colourful scenes of everyday life, they also depicted religious subjects. Religion was part of Italian life at the time. It suffused the culture or cultures. One was either with it or against it or, in some cases, both. One could not ignore it. However it such art did not and does not seem to travel well outside Italy. It is perhaps bound in space and time

Some artists of the time were Symbolists; others were Decadents; others were members of other Groups or refused to join Movements or ideological clubs. It could get like the Guelphs and the Ghibelines; or the Zelanti and the Modernists.  All movements had, of course, Manifestoes.

Although Irolli was a Symbolist, he never forgot his religious roots and his religious works do, on occasion, inspire


The pictures above are from an exhibition in a gallery in Milan, Italy called Bottegantica

The exhibition is entitled OTTOCENTO VENETO da Favretto a Zandomeneghi (Veneto in the Nineteenth century: From Favaretto to Zandomeneghi)

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