Giorgio Morandi (1890-1964)
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's… 顯示更多 歐洲重要珍藏
喬治·莫蘭迪(1890 – 1064)

《靜物》

細節
喬治·莫蘭迪(1890 – 1064)
《靜物》
簽名:Morandi(左下)
油彩 畫布
8 3/4 x 13 7/8吋(22.2 x 35.2公分)
1950年作
來源
米蘭百萬畫廊(編號5747)
佛羅倫薩卡洛·盧多維科·拉吉安蒂
現藏家父親於1951年購自上述收藏
出版
L. Vitali著《Morandi, Dipinti, Catalogo generale, 1948-1964》,第II冊,米蘭,1994年,無頁碼,編號732(插圖)
展覽
1951年 「Mostra della pittura italiana contemporanea in Germania」展覽 斯特羅齊宮 佛羅倫薩 編號323
注意事項
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's Resale Right Regulations 2006 apply to this lot, the buyer agrees to pay us an amount equal to the resale royalty provided for in those Regulations, and we undertake to the buyer to pay such amount to the artist's collection agent.

拍品專文


‘Nature is no longer the model for this painter… He not only chooses his models, he builds them… It is nature that must bend to art and not art to nature’
Mario Broglio

Huddled together amidst the seemingly endless plane of the tabletop, across which their dark shadows stretch ghost-like and ephemeral, the three protagonists of Giorgio Morandi’s Natura morta of 1950 are at once identifiable, quotidian objects yet at the same time, abstract configurations of soft, luminous colour. This compelling dichotomy between reality and abstraction defines Morandi’s work of the post-war era. Using lavish swathes of paint, he often blurred the edges of the objects in his still-lifes so that they appear to float within an indefinable space, seemingly dissolving into one another and their setting. As a result, these works are infused with a beguiling yet subtle poeticism, inspired by nature and yet transcending the genre of the still-life to become symphonic visions of colour and light.

Having remained in the same family’s collection for over half a century, the present Natura morta was formerly owned by Carlo Ludovico Ragghianti, a renowned art historian, critic and theorist, and close confidant of Morandi. A friend of the artist since the early 1930s, Ragghianti was a prominent anti-fascist and one of the founders of the Partito d’Azione. Indeed, it was Morandi’s friendship with the writer that led to his brief arrest in 1943 during a crackdown on anti-fascist activities. The police had found letters from the artist among Ragghianti’s possessions, and so assumed that he too was part of this resistance group. Following the war, Ragghianti became a prominent figure within the Italian art world, working both as a professor as well as the founder and director of the art magazine ‘seleArte’. He perceptively described Morandi’s work, writing in an essay of 1954, ‘Morandi’s painting, despite appearing in front of the viewer as one of the most stable and comparatively simple among the works of the modern era, is amongst the most complex and articulate, with a deep meaning’ (C.L. Ragghianti, Giorgio Morandi, 1890-1990, exh. cat., Milan, 1990, p. 366).

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