Ereignis

Gino Rossi in Venice.

Dialogue between the collections of Fondazione Cariverona and Ca 'Pesaro

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23 February – 20 May 2018 Venice, Ca’ Pesaro – International Gallery of Modern Art _ The sensational Ca’ Pesaro avant-garde seen through the eyes of one of its most cosmopolitan and innovative exponents, seventy years after his death. The Fondazione Musei Civici di Venezia, together with the Fondazione Cariverona, presents at Ca’ Pesaro a collection of the most interesting masterpieces by Gino Rossi (Venice, 1884 – Treviso, 1947), selected from the collections of both institutions and in dialogue with works by Rossi’s Ca’ Pesaro contemporaries, among them Felice Casorati, Umberto Boccioni, Arturo Martini and Pio Semeghini. The exhibition celebrates the brief and intense parabola of an artist who in just twenty years, from 1907 to 1926, was able to anticipate the Italian avant-gardes before tragically ending his days in the Sant’Artemio asylum in Treviso. In Paris, where he went in 1907, Rossi breathed the atmosphere of the European artistic movements of the period and encountered the ideas of Gauguin, the Fauves and Cubism. On his return to Venice, he joined the inner circle around Nino Barbantini, the new director of Ca’ Pesaro, who promoted the latest artistic currents in opposition to the academic approach pursued by the first editions of the Biennale. Rossi’s work was immediately distinctive for its powerful portraits of the unfortunate and marginalised, for its sublimation of colour in the dreamlike landscapes of the Venetian lagoon, and for its return to an original, almost archaic expressiveness. For Rossi, form was an ‘anti-graceful’ element and, as such, far removed from the affectation of so much early twentieth-century art and in open contrast with the decadent aesthetics of many of his contemporaries. These were the years when the island of Burano became his Brittany, an ideal place but absolutelynot idyllic, where he spent long periods of time and also moved to live, experiencing hardship and absolute discomfort.

Among the portraits on display at Ca’ Pesaro is Bruto (1913), one of the best examples of Rossi’s attention to the poor and the marginalised, juxtaposed with the sculpture Buffone (1913-14) by Arturo Martini: a large painted plaster bust, which, in a game of aesthetic references, clearly illustrates the affinity between the two artists and the similarities in their research.
 

Date: 
Freitag, Februar 23, 2018 bis Sonntag, Mai 20, 2018
Mo Di Mi Do Fr Sa So
 
 
 
 
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Price: 
Paid admission