Scuola romana or Scuola di via Cavour was a 20th-century art movement defined by a group of painters within Expressionism and active in Rome between 1928 and 1945, and with a second phase in the mid-1950s.
Scuola romana or Scuola di via Cavour was a 20th-century art movement defined by a group of painters within Expressionism and active in Rome between 1928 and 1945, and with a second phase in the mid-1950s.
Contents |
In November 1927, artists Antonietta Raphaël and Mario Mafai[1] move to No. 325 of Roman street via Cavour, in a Savoyan palace subsequently demolished in 1930 in order to allow the fascist construction of the New Empire Way (currently the via dei Fori Imperiali). The apartment's larger room is transformed into a studio.
Within a short time, this studio becomes a meeting point for literati such as Enrico Falqui, Giuseppe Ungaretti, Libero de Libero, Leonardo Sinisgalli, as well as young artists Scipione, Renato Marino Mazzacurati,[2] and Corrado Cagli.
From start, this spontaneous confluence of artists at the via Cavour studio does not appear to be led by true and proper programmes or manifestos, but rather by friendship, cultural syntheses and a singular pictorial cohesion. With their firm approach to European expressionism, they formally contrapose the solid and orderly painting of neoclassic character, promoted by the socalled Return to order current of the 1920s, particularly strong in the Italian sensitivity of post-World War II.
The first identification of this artistic group should be attributed to Roberto Longhi, who writes:[3]
From its very address, I'd call this the Scuola di via Cavour, where Mafai and Raphaël used to work...
and adds:
An eccentric and anarchoid art that could hardly be accepted by us, but it's all the same a notable sign of today's mores.
Longhi uses this definition precisely because he wishes to indicate the special work these artists are performing within the expressionist universe, breaking off from official art movements.[4]
During those years, painter Corrado Cagli too uses the appellative of Scuola romana.[5] His critique does not linger on name identification for the "nuovi pittori romani (new Roman painters)" canimating this new movement. Cagli describes a spreading sensitivity and speaks of an Astro di Roma (Roman Star), affirming that is the real poetic basis of the "new Romans" :
In a primordial dawn all has to be reconsidered, and Imagination relives all wonders and trembles for all mysteries.
thus highlighting the complex and articulated Roman situation, as opposed to what Cagli called the imperating Neoclassicism of the Novecento Italiano. The Scuola romana offers a wild painting style, expressive and disorderly, violent and with warm ochre and maroon tones. The formal rigour is replaced by a distinctly expressionist visionariness.[6]
Scipione, for instance, brings to life a sort of Roman baroque expressionism, where often decadent landscapes appear of Rome's historical baroque centre, populated by priests and cardinals, seen with a vigorously expressive and hallucinated eye. Similar themes will be present in Raffaele Frumenti's paintings in the Second Season of the Scuola, with vivid red hues and soft brush strokes.
After 1930, instead of dying out due its major representatives' death (i.e., Scipione, Mafai and wife Antonietta Raphaël), the Scuola Romana continued with various other artists of a "second season", which developed during the 1930s and matured soon after World War II. Among them Roberto Melli, Renato Marino Mazzacurati, Guglielmo Janni, Renzo Vespignani and the socalled tonalists led by Corrado Cagli, Carlo Levi, Emanuele Cavalli and Capogrossi, all gravitating around the activities of the "Galleria della Cometa”.[7]
Later members include personalities such as Fausto Pirandello (son of Nobel Prize Luigi),[8] Renato Guttuso, the brothers Afro and Mirko Basaldella,[9] Leoncillo Leonardi, Raffaele Frumenti, Sante Monachesi, Giovanni Omiccioli and Toti Scialoja.[10]
The Villa Torlonia in Rome hosts, in its classic "Casino Nobile", the renowned Museums of Villa Torlonia,[11] part of the Museum System of the Comune di Roma: on its 2nd floor one can visit the Museum of the Scuola Romana, offering a comprehensive view of this art movement, deemed one of the most interesting and captivating movements in the vital Roman figurative research of the 20th century.
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||