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- <text id=89TT0929>
- <title>
- Apr. 03, 1989: Raw Talk, But Cooked Painting
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Apr. 03, 1989 The College Trap
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ART, Page 77
- Raw Talk, but Cooked Painting
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A show surveys innovation and tradition in 20th century Italy
- </p>
- <p>By Robert Hughes
- </p>
- <p> The Royal Academy of Arts in London, long since shaken from
- its ancestral mustiness by its energetic exhibitions secretary
- Norman Rosenthal, has made a speciality of packaging national
- surveys. It did German art in 1985, British art in 1987; now
- Italy's turn has come. "Italian Art in the 20th Century,"
- curated by Rosenthal and the Italian art critic and historian
- Germano Celant, tells its narrative in some 230 paintings and
- sculptures, and will fill Burlington House, the site of the
- academy's galleries, through April 9.
- </p>
- <p> It is hard to imagine a useful century-wide show of French
- or American art. The subject, in either case, is too big,
- various, richly inflected and unwieldy to be stuffed into one
- trunk -- at least, without the kind of editing that amounts to
- severe mutilation. But 20th century Italy, like Germany and
- Britain, is somewhat more compressible. Italian modernism can
- be summarized because its achievement was small next to the
- School of Paris', and smaller yet beside the glories of Italy's
- own past. From the emergence of Giotto in the 13th century to
- the death of Bernini in the 17th, Italian painters and
- sculptors ruled the European roost, setting the standards of
- achievement by which Western culture judged itself. By the 19th
- century this primacy was lost, and throughout the modernist era
- Italy produced no equivalents to Picasso, Matisse or Mondrian,
- and, of course, nothing even faintly comparable to Titian or
- Michelangelo.
- </p>
- <p> It is the very presence of its past that seems to determine
- the shape of Italian modernism: a systole and diastole between
- innovation and tradition. Particularly in the 1950s and '60s,
- Italian artists had a way of talking raw but painting cooked.
- In the early '50s, when Alberto Burri began to exhibit his
- paintings assembled from torn sacks and burnt strips of wood,
- they looked as leprous as Dubuffets. Today they seem tender,
- full of regard for discarded things, and about as threatening
- as sunlight on an old wall; one realizes this was always part
- of their intent. Even the Italian artists dealing with popular
- imagery in the early '60s, like Mimmo Rotella, lack the
- bluntness of their American counterparts. Rotella's Marilyn,
- 1962, a torn poster "found" and peeled from the wall, is partly
- about abstract expressionist gesture, partly about the ruin of
- images by time, and not in the least concerned with the shiny
- newness Pop art liked.
- </p>
- <p> The Italian avant-garde before World War I, where this show
- begins, found itself in a fix under the immense shadow of its
- own cultural history. Either it made a diverting Oedipal
- commotion about the loathsome oppressiveness of the past, like
- the futurists, or immersed itself in poignant reveries about its
- authoritarian and alienating beauty, like Giorgio de Chirico and
- his associates in metaphysical painting.
- </p>
- <p> Futurism made the most noise at the start. The futurist
- painters' manifestos of 1910, written by that inspired poet and
- arch-hypester Filippo T. Marinetti and signed by a clutch of
- brilliantly gifted artists (Giacomo Balla, Umberto Boccioni,
- Carlo Carra, Luigi Russolo and Gino Severini), declared war on
- cultural history -- "the enthusiasm for everything worm-eaten,
- rotting with filth, eaten away by time."
- </p>
- <p> The futurists promised a bright churning world of dynamism,
- machine worship, speed and conflict. As the machines dated, so
- did some of the paintings. A work like Severini's Plastic
- Synthesis of the Idea "War," 1915 -- his response to the general
- mobilization of the French army, painted in Paris -- seems, with
- its antique gun limber and biplane wings, almost as nostalgic
- an image as a battle piece by Paolo Uccello. But others have not
- dated. In particular, the spiking and whorling of translucent
- mechanical forms in Balla's Abstract Speed, 1913, can be seen
- as one of the great pictorial images of our century, as fresh
- in impact as the day it was painted.
- </p>
- <p> If Balla was the best painter associated with Futurism, the
- idea of metaphysical painting is all but synonymous with De
- Chirico. Just as futurist cells sprang up all over the world,
- and futurism was for most people synonymous with modern art up
- to at least 1925, so De Chirico's dreaming, spatially deceitful
- piazzas and arcades, with their phallic locomotives and
- long-shadowed statues, had an immense resonance both inside and
- outside Italy. Their influence on surrealism was crucial, but
- their reveries about past and present, nature and culture,
- memory and desire also hover behind much Italian art from the
- '60s to the '80s, such as the richly metaphoric sculptures of
- Giovanni Anselmo or even (more distantly) the structures of
- Mario Merz.
- </p>
- <p> The Royal Academy show includes quite a lot of De Chirico's
- more debatable pseudoclassical work from the '20s -- this is
- now de rigueur, thanks to its popularity among postmodernists,
- who see it as a daring and prophetic form of backwardness -- as
- well as the paintings of his hardly less talented brother, the
- painter-composer-dramatist who worked under the name of Alberto
- Savinio and turned the late scheme of metaphysical painting
- into an even wilder pastiche than it had already become.
- </p>
- <p> On the whole, the rooms devoted to 1910-35 are the best.
- The show does a particular service by exhuming the impressive
- work of Mario Sironi (1885-1961) and, at long last,
- intelligently describing the relations between Italian
- modernists and Fascism in the 1920s and '30s. The pieties of art
- politics, up to the present, have tended to discourage this,
- since the arrival of Mussolini was greeted with rapture by so
- many leading artists and intellectuals. The Fascist rhetoric of
- dynamism and machine efficiency meshed with (and was partly
- inspired by) that of futurism; while the Duce's promise of a
- renewed empire, a "third Rome" that would replay the Augustan
- past, had immediate appeal to nostalgists like De Chirico, Carra
- and even Giorgio Morandi.
- </p>
- <p> By far the best of the "classicists" was Sironi, whose
- reputation as an artist has badly suffered from his devotion to
- Fascism: he stayed loyal to Mussolini right through to 1943.
- The figure on horseback in The White Horse and the Pier,
- 1920-22, draws on Italy's long history of equestrian hero images
- and may refer to the Duce. Nevertheless, as painting, Sironi's
- dark, emphatically delineated compositions, with their massive
- figures and Brunelleschian weight of architecture, are often
- quite superb, a reminder that you cannot necessarily judge an
- artist by his or her political ideology.
- </p>
- <p> The show contains a few further surprises, such as the
- gritty and beautifully painted domestic dramas of Fausto
- Pirandello (1889-1975) and the best of all younger Duchampians,
- Piero Manzoni (1933-63), whose balloon full of artist's breath
- and cans full of artist's feces are wonderfully prophetic
- satires on a market mania whose present inflation he could
- scarcely have imagined.
- </p>
- <p> The show has a dying fall into the rhetoric of the '80s,
- represented here for the umpteenth time by Sandro Chia, Enzo
- Cucchi, Francesco Clemente and Mimmo Paladino. These figures
- have become quasi-official artists, like the stars of the Paris
- salons a century ago. Yet when the '80s have receded, it will
- seem odd that the feeble draftsmanship in Clemente's washed-out
- frescoes should once have been applauded, or that the lurid
- bombast of even the better works of Cucchi, such as the droopy
- head that lies like a huge Dalinian watch along the cemetery
- roof in Stupid Picture, 1982, could have been thought heroic in
- scale. In fact, there is less scale in such work than brute
- size. To see what the scale of an image can mean in terms of
- real address to the eye, one must go a few rooms back and look,
- once more, at early De Chirico and Sironi.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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