Arturo Tosi (1871–1956) started his creative career at a young age by enrolling at the Brera Academy, and he displayed his work at the Permanente in Milan as early as 1891. He first participated in the Venice Biennale in 1909, and he attended every edition up through 1942, as well as a few following the war. After his exhibition at the Pesaro Gallery in Milan (1923), the extremely successful painter became one of the principal representatives and leaders of the group “Novecento”. Throughout Tosi's strong work, landscape painting evolved in essentially the same patterns. The name Pierre Bonnard has come up because of his focus on the exquisiteness of the chromatic surface texture, but his paintings are even more illuminating in the reference to Paul Cézanne in his paintings. "Landscape" showcases Tosi's appreciation for the opulence of the visual medium, which is characterized by the palette's luminosity and the directness of sight. The artwork embodies the traditional simplicity that defines his painting style.