Man Who Enters the Room (1927) by Niklāvs StrunkeLatvian National Museum of Art
Italy
While his peers were rushing to Paris, the most famous “Latvian Italian” Niklāvs Strunke from 1923 to 1927 lived in Italy.
Modernist aesthetic
He took inspiration not only from the French cubists but also the art of the Italian Futurists and Early Renaissance.
Avant-garde theatre
A study for this painting was made already in 1924 in Rome and shows evidence of the artist's links to the world of Italian avant-garde theatre.
The movement
In line with the futurist desire to bring movement into the work of art, Strunke shows a man who is entering a room yet is neither completely in nor outside of it.
The painting
The empty room, containing a table and an electric lightbulb as the only source of light, gives the work an additional emotional dimension, causing a mild sense of anxiety.
The impression
It gives the impression that the depiction of the real world in the painting has merged with the imagery of subconscious moods.
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