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Mario Sironi

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Composizione o Composizione e figure, 1957 (Fondazione Cariplo)

Mario Sironi (May 12, 1885 – August 13, 1961) was an Italian modernist artist who was active as a painter, sculptor, illustrator, and designer. His typically somber paintings are characterized by massive, immobile forms.

Biography

He was born in Sassari on the island of Sardinia. His father was an engineer; his maternal grandfather was the architect and sculptor Ignazio Villa.[1] Sironi spent his childhood in Rome. He embarked on the study of engineering at the University of Rome but quit after a nervous breakdown in 1903, one of many severe depressions that would recur throughout his life.[2] Thereafter he decided to study painting, and began attending the Scuola Libera del Nudo of the Accademia di Belle Arti di Roma. There he met Giacomo Balla, who became "his first real teacher".[3] Sironi also met Gino Severini and Umberto Boccioni, and like them he began painting in a Divisionist style under the guidance of Balla. By 1913, Balla, Boccioni and Severini had developed a new style—Futurism—which Sironi also adopted for a brief time.

Sironi served in World War I as a member of the Lombard Volunteer Cyclists and Drivers.[4] After the war, his version of Futurism gave way to an art of massive, immobile forms. In paintings such as La Lampada of 1919 (Pinateca di Brera, Milan), mannequins substitute for figures, as in the metaphysical paintings of Giorgio de Chirico and Carlo Carrà. In 1922, Sironi was one of the founders of the Novecento Italiano movement, which was part of the return to order in European art during the post-war period. Paintings such as Venere of 1921–1923 (Galleria Civica d'Arte Moderna, Turin) and Solitudine ("Solitude", 1925; Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Moderna, Rome), with their contained, geometric forms, bear some kinship to the neoclassicism evident in works produced at the same time by Picasso.[5]

La lampada, 1919, oil on canvas, 78 x 56 cm, Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan

In the late 1920s, Sironi painted monumental figures of nudes, peasants, and family groupings in bare, mountainous landscapes. In these works—described by Fabio Benzi as "marked by a sense of humanity burdened with history ... [and] an almost Romanesque spirit of a solemn expressionism"[6]—the pure forms of Sironi's earlier work were replaced by a primitivist form of classicism, and his style became more painterly.[7]

A supporter of Mussolini, Sironi contributed a large number of cartoons—over 1700 in all—to Il Popolo d'Italia and La Rivista Illustrata del Popola d'Italia, the Fascist newspapers.[7] Rejecting the art market and the concept of the easel painting, he became committed to the ideal of a fusion of decoration and architecture, as exemplified by Gothic cathedrals. He felt that the mural was the proper basis of a popular national art.[8] The state commissioned from him several large-scale decorative works in the 1930s, such as the mural L'Italia fra le arti e le scienze (Italy Between the Arts and Sciences) of 1935, and he also contributed to the Exhibition of the Fascist Revolution in 1932. Although his esthetic of brutal monumentality represented the dominant style of Italian Fascism, his work was attacked by right-wing critics for its lack of overt ideological content.[9]

As an artist closely identified with Fascism, Sironi's reputation declined dramatically in the post-World War II period. Embittered by the course of events, he had returned to easel painting in 1943, and worked in relative isolation. His withdrawal from society increased after the death of his daughter Rossana by suicide in 1948. The paintings of his later years sometimes approach abstraction, resembling assemblages of archaeological fragments, or juxtaposed sketches. He continued working until shortly before his death on August 13, 1961, in Milan.

Legacy

During his lifetime Sironi exhibited internationally. It is possible that the cellular style of his compositions exhibited in the US during the 1930s influenced WPA muralists.[4] In the postwar years, Sironi fell from favor due to his earlier association with Fascism, and was accorded little attention from art historians.[10] A revival of interest in Sironi's work began in the 1980s, when his work was featured in major exhibitions, notably Les Réalismes at the Centre Georges Pompidou (1981) and Italian Art in the Twentieth Century at the Royal Academy, London (1989).[4]

Notes

  1. ^ Sironi and Ferrari 2002, p. 159
  2. ^ Baldacci et al. 1989, p. 99
  3. ^ Sironi and Ferrari 2002, p. 26
  4. ^ a b c Adams 1989
  5. ^ Baldacci et al. 1989, p. 20
  6. ^ Baldacci et al. 1989, p. 22
  7. ^ a b Cowling and Mundy 1990, p. 241
  8. ^ Baldacci et al. 1989, pp. 22-23
  9. ^ Cowling and Mundy 1990, pp. 247-248
  10. ^ Sironi and Ferrari 2002, p. 16

References

  • Adams, Brooks (December 1989), "Mario Sironi at Daverio", Art in America, 77 (12): 177
  • Baldacci, P., Benzi, F., Sironi, A., Sironi, M., & Galleria Philippe Daverio (Milan, Italy). (1989). Mario Sironi. Milano: P. Daverio. OCLC 21293509
  • Cowling, Elizabeth; Mundy, Jennifer (1990). On Classic Ground: Picasso, Léger, de Chirico and the New Classicism 1910-1930. London: Tate Gallery. ISBN 1-85437-043-X
  • Sironi, Mario, and Claudia Gian Ferrari. (2002). Sironi: opere 1919-1959 = works 1919-1959. Milano: Charta. ISBN 88-8158-394-1