Josef Cusimano's note on Metaphysical Art |
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Metaphysical Art(a Compendious Sketch)
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Preamble |
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It was the beginning of the XX century, it was
a period of artistic turmoil that saw the birth of "Fauvism" (André
Derain, Raul Dufy, Henry Matisse...), "Cubism" (George Braque, Fernard
Léger, Pablo Picasso...), "Futurism" (Giacomo Balla, Umberto
Boccioni, Carlo Carr¡...) and "Dada" (Jean (Hans) Arp, Marcel
Duchamp, Francis Picabia...). Paris became the mecca of the creative
geniuses of Europe and Europe became the cradle of the major art movements
of this century and the sanguinary battlefield of the "First World
War".
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I think that reading the history of that period
would help understand the history of its art. As you probably know,
reading is essential to acquiring knowledge and knowledge is the only
road that leads to the garden of wisdom. Whether you buy a book or
borrow it from your local library branch, it is immaterial, the importance
is that you will learn how to read and read for learning.
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The Artists |
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Carlo Carrá, Giorgio de Chirico and Giorgio
Morandi were the architects of the movement that saw the participation
of Filippo de Pisis, Mario Sironi, Alberto Savinio (pseudonym for
Andrea de Chirico) and Oskar Schlemmer. These were the Painters that
few years later nurtured the new born "Surrealism".
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Representational Peculiarities |
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"Metaphysical Art", in its etymological meaning,
ascends beyond naturalistic reality where the mystery and the magic
of appearance dissolve the enigma of perception, and settles in the
realm of dreams where the classical Past challenges the modernism
of the Future. The art thus created, far removed from everyday life,
as if stolen from an unknown world, acquired an unreal almost supernatural
presence which appealed to the subconscious mind and stimulated the
imagination of the viewer who witnessed the denudation of nature and
not its idealization.
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Against a background of classical architecture
and modern factories, mysterious squares, inhabited by statues frozen
in time and pinned to the ground by foreboding shadows, welcome the
taylor's dummy, the plaster busts, the gloves, the towers and the
railway stations with their noiseless clocks, the gloves and the bottles,
the artichokes and the bananas, the biscuits and ..., while deserted
beaches, nostalgic countrysides and mythological settings, painted
in a meticulous and fascinating style, seem to question the essence
of silence and the whole spectrum of early XX century artistic creations.
Whether there is such a square, beach or still life, the concept of
the painting as a symbolic vision is already "fait accompli". Look
at those deserted city squares in a late autumn afternoon when the
shadows stretch to their limits beyond the boundaries of the visual
plane, and think about their impending drama when they will be annihilated
by the setting sun, only then you will realize that the shadow is
the life of every statue, every mannequin and every portico represented
within the space of a canvas.
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The squares, the beaches, the interiors are often
devoid of human beings thus enhancing the mystery of the composition
in a well defined and often distorted perspective used only for emotional
efficacy, oblivious of any reference to actual reality. Although some
of the paintings may suggest a sense of loneliness aggravated by isolation
and prompted by fear in a variety of empty spaces, in fact they reaffirm
man's forbidden love for the unknown and his ceaseless efforts for
self realization.
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The Beginning |
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Historically, "Metaphysical
Art" was born in 1917 in Ferrara when de Chirico met Carlo
Carrá and Filippo de Pisis. Within a year, Carrá became
the theoretician of "Pittura Metafisica" with the publication of a
book with the same title enunciating its philosophy. Another interpreter
of the ideology of the movement was de Chirico's brother Andrea, known
as Alberto Savinio. I am referring only to the writings of two of
the members Artists, to emphasize, once more, that writing and painting
seem to be an integral part of the "modus vivendi" of the true creative
minds from the Renaissance to Modern Times. By 1920, Giorgio de Chirico
had taken his art on a classical voyage, never repudiating his past
and returning to it long before the end of his life.
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Giorgio de Chirico was considered the "principal
precursor of Surrealism" and his paintings have been included in every
major surrealist exhibition since 1925. "Metaphysical
Art" and "Surrealism" live today the dreams of yesterday and
the expectations of tomorrow. The end of a day is the beginning of
another.
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| . | Joseph Cusimanorevised: February 18, 1997 (c) Archiavv Inc. and Joseph Cusimano, 1997 |
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