拍品专文
Giacomo Balla’s Futurist programme found its most forceful articulation in 1915 with the manifesto Ricostruzione futurista dell’universo, co-authored with Fortunato Depero. Having pushed the formal dynamism of Futurist painting towards pure abstraction, an achievement further refined and developed throughout the 1920s, to which the present gouache, Forme Rumore, is dateable, Balla articulated a vision of art that moved beyond representation towards a synthesis of form, energy, and sensation, as demonstrated here.
As Elena Gigli has observed, the work brings together two fundamental elements of the universe; form and noise, in a dynamic orchestration of vivid colour: orange and red, cornflower blue and white, set against a terracotta-toned support. Balla’s inscription and signature, executed in the same red, reinforce the sense of immediacy and formal unity that characterises the composition.
The present work forms part of the group that was preserved in Balla’s Roman home and studio, Casa Balla, after his death, and later inherited by his daughters, Luce and Elica Balla. Acquired at Christie’s in 1988 by the Swiss industrialist and collector Dr Branco Weiss, it entered a collection shaped by a sustained engagement with the early twentieth-century avant-garde. Weiss’s particular sensitivity to movements that redefined the relationship between art, science, and perception finds a natural parallel in Balla’s own project of translating energy, vibration, and sensation into abstract visual form, underscoring the enduring intellectual resonance of the artist’s Futurist vision.
As Elena Gigli has observed, the work brings together two fundamental elements of the universe; form and noise, in a dynamic orchestration of vivid colour: orange and red, cornflower blue and white, set against a terracotta-toned support. Balla’s inscription and signature, executed in the same red, reinforce the sense of immediacy and formal unity that characterises the composition.
The present work forms part of the group that was preserved in Balla’s Roman home and studio, Casa Balla, after his death, and later inherited by his daughters, Luce and Elica Balla. Acquired at Christie’s in 1988 by the Swiss industrialist and collector Dr Branco Weiss, it entered a collection shaped by a sustained engagement with the early twentieth-century avant-garde. Weiss’s particular sensitivity to movements that redefined the relationship between art, science, and perception finds a natural parallel in Balla’s own project of translating energy, vibration, and sensation into abstract visual form, underscoring the enduring intellectual resonance of the artist’s Futurist vision.
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