Schirolli's House

In a beatiful home, bult by architect Aldo Andreani in 1911, near the flowing Rio, a collection showing paintings of the Renaissance period and contemporary masters

Duke Vincenzo I Gonzaga by Unknown artist, 17th centuryMantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

Duke Vincenzo I Gonzaga

This beautiful portrait of Vincenzo I, Duke of Mantua, can easily be ascribed to the circle of Frans Pourbus the Younger. The artist, son of Frans the Elder, was appreciated throughout Europe for his ability to paint lifelike faces of the greats of the time. He moved to Mantua after 1599, just following the Duke, whom he had met in Brussels. In the ten years he spent at the Gonzaga court he was active alongside Rubens, although the two careers did not influence each other. The rather wooden ways of the painting presented here, however, prevent it from being directly attributed to the master. Vincenzo still looks realatively young while he is wearing the emblem of the Golden Fleece, the highest imperial honor, a legacy of Burgundian descent, granted only to a few illustrious men of the time. As is known, this privilege had no perpetual value, nor could it be handed down, but had to be returned after the death of the beneficiary to the only legitimate owner, or the Emperor. As for Vincent, the golden fleece was granted to him in 1589.

Duchess Eleonora Gonzaga de' Medici by Unknown artist, 17th centuryMantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

Duchess Eleonora de' Medici

This alleged portrait of the bride of Vincenzo Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua, has greater historical then artistic value. However, the monumental dress of the duchess and her very large lace collar denounce the presence of an anonymous painter in a northern or Spanish court. He outlines a hard face, embellished with pink spots on the cheeks. The sharp look, the pearl earring and the magnificence of the dress stand out. As for Eleonora, she was born in Florence in 1567, the eldest daughter of Francesco I de’ Medici and Giovanna of Austria. In turn, the mother was the daughter of Emperor Ferdinand of Hapsburg. In marrying Vincenzo, in his second marriage, two illustrious families united, and the Gonzagas strengthened their relations with the great imperial power. Furthermore, Eleonora's sister was Maria de 'Medici, wife of Henry IV of France.

Gonzaga Dynasty's boy by Sofonisba AnguissolaMantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

Gonzaga Dynasty's boy

This delicate portrait is not by a certain author, nor is the identity of the portrayed character evident. The incisive and subtly evocative way of recreating the face and pose recalls the hand of Sofonisba Anguissola, an excellent painter who for a long time gravitated, for a part of her life, in the orbit of the Spanish court, before marrying in Palermo and then returning to Northern Italy. In any case, the child who shows us part of his face here has eyes full of suffused melancholy. Although the dress is already in the seventeenth-century style, the general attitude is more of the sixteenth century, precisely because the pensiveness of the protagonist steals space from the description of the splendor of his social position. His agnificent pinkish lips seem to tighten slightly to indicate a movement of reluctance or perennial inner reflection.

Abbazia di Saint Germaine de Pres by CorotMantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

Abbaye de Saint-Germain-des-Prés

The personality of Camille Corot, to whom this work is attributed, decisively influenced not only nineteenth-century French art but the overall development of European figurative culture, placing itself in fact as a brilliant precursor of the Impressionists. His landscape painting is rightly famous for the sublime touch in the details, for the play of color tones, for the effective care of every detail, and especially for the rendering of light, which in each case is pervasive and strong. This view of the Abbey of Saint-Germain, then placed in the still green outskirt of the capital, translates into a decidedly romantic impact, sublimating itself in the foliage of the trees. They seem to graze the medieval masonry, placing themselves as an ornament and exaltation of the stones under a magnificent, almost vernal sky. Corot's paintings are full of things, for he never gives up using his synthetic talent to illustrate reality. Thus, he is indeed the happy trailblazer of modern art that would soon flourish in Paris. Its sublime intelligence emerges from every area of ​​this table, which can therefore be truly associated with its intense production.

 

Italia by Emilio VedovaMantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

Italia

Vedova is a great master of Italian abstractionism. His personal sensitivity actually derives from the great history of Venetian art, particularly from the eighteenth century, but his expressive temperament challenges European and American artists. He explores the vicissitudes of matter and color, in paintings in which he loves to contrast different colors, yet remaining rigorous and almost maniacal. In this stupendous work we see the conflict between black and white, following a brushstroke of excruciating power, which seems to describe skeletons and carcasses, almost composing a Guernica updated for the fifties. Vedova therefore overcomes the limits of abstract expressionism by transforming the act of the brush into current art. To do this, he needs all the wisdom of a Venice reinvented and bestowed on him through his thoughts. Truly and honestly, the artist builds his own universe. Thus, thanks to its disruptive energy, he projects itself into our imagination.

San Carlo by Piero Pizzi CannellaMantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

San Carlo

In this work it is shown how much the artist can move away from the figurative, choosing to paint a simple wall, almost tiled with shadowy presences. However, in each of the exposed rectangles

or squares there is a variation that makes it unique compared to all others. A trace, an incision, a reflection that segments the darkness and contrasts with the reticular cage in which we seem prisoners. Thus, the intensity of Pizzi Cannella's painting prevails, drawing microcosms where there appeared to be only a dull surface. As happens to all the masters of chiselling, a background music seems to rise in the moment of representation, giving a grace to the just finished work.

World Map by Piero Pizzi CannellaMantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

World Map

A big eye is watching us. Indeed, this is not true either. It is an egg, an empty embryo, but jagged inside. It is the world, precisely, as the title states. Pizzi Cannella often performs artistic operations that live on the vague yet fascinating border between the abstract and the figurative. This evidently happens because he believes that the universe around us continually generates details that often do not reach our senses completely, but nevertheless remain within a fruitful unconsciousness. His mastery, moreover, leads to a refined synthesis between the sign, a tormented but happy handwriting, and the overall impact of the work. That is, the creations of Pizzi Cannella can be seen from different points of height. Approaching and moving away reveal surprising details, which hatch and accumulate in the perception of those attending an ultra-natural show.

From the diary of the fool by Piero Pizzi CanellaMantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

From the diary of the fool

Cofounder with Ceccobelli and Tirelli of the so-called Nuova Scuola Romana or School of San Lorenzo, Pizzi Cannella recovers a new type of figuration, which, unlike Transavanguardia, confronts the many materials produced by contemporary civilization. The location of the district of San Lorenzo, a proletarian district of Rome at the time, is indicative of the desire for urban regeneration of these then young artists. So, for the author, the man as a painted subject is confronted with the objects produced by the world of consumption and then reinterpreted. In this work of 1983, in particular, the character who appears on the right seems almost an exhausted descendant of the famous scream of Munch. Hooks gravitate across the background of brownish color, perhaps parts of the reinforcing of  concrete clinging and preventing movement. Wise is the color rendering, otherworldly and fickle the physiognomy of the protagonist, whose delicate gray hands become diaphanous until they disappear.

White and black marks by Marco TirelliMantova Museo Urbano Diffuso

White and black marks

Also Marco Tirelli belongs to the so-called New Roman School. His artistic research moves towards a continuous rarefaction of the work as such, following geometric games of false perspectives in space and preferring colors of elusive visual impact. But at the beginning of this adventure the artist, still in his twenties, was exhibited at the 1982 Venice Biennale with three paintings, one of which is the one shown here. It is a universe of signs that impact on matter, demonstrating evident influences by, for example, Antoni Tàpies. Here, however, the large dimensions of the work allow us to visualize a nascent conflict of figures in the larval state. Almost graffiti of an archaic civilization, yet exposed to the precariousness of the contemporary, the shapes suspended above a desert or on a cliff strike us with their evident effectiveness of symbols whose profound significance has been lost.

Credits: Story

Ideato e promosso da / Founded and Promoted by: Mattia Palazzi (Sindaco del Comune di Mantova) con Lorenza Baroncelli (Assessore alla rigenerazione urbana e del territorio, marketing urbano, progetti e relazioni internazionali del Comune di Mantova) Coordinamento Scientifico / Scientific Coordinator: Sebastiano Sali Curatore testi e immagini / Superintendent texts and images: Giovanni Pasetti Foto di / Photo by: Art Camera Redazione / Editor: Erica Beccalossi Assistente / Assistant: Fabrizio Foresio

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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