Estorick Collection of Modern Italian Art
London
39a Canonbury Square
+44 020 77049522 FAX +44 020 77049531
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Giorgio de Chirico
dal 14/1/2014 al 18/4/2014

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Giorgio de Chirico



 
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14/1/2014

Giorgio de Chirico

Estorick Collection of Modern Italian Art, London

Myth and Mystery. Although best known as a painter, de Chirico was fascinated by sculpture throughout his career, believing it to possess a mysterious spectral quality. Statues set in deserted city squares were a key element of his iconography from 1909 onward.


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The visionary work of Giorgio de Chirico (1888-1978) had an enormous impact on the course of twentieth-century art. His unsettling ‘Metaphysical’ imagery – with its illogical perspectives, looming mannequins and bizarre juxtapositions of objects – anticipated Surrealism’s fascination with the irrational and the workings of the subconscious by many years. Even before the First World War, de Chirico had declared: ‘To be really immortal a work of art must go beyond the limits of the human: good sense and logic will be missing from it. In this way it will come close to the dream state, and also to the mentality of children.’

Although best known as a painter, de Chirico was fascinated by sculpture throughout his career, believing it to possess a mysterious spectral quality. Statues set in deserted city squares were a key element of his iconography from 1909 onward, and toward the end of the 1930s the artist began to experiment with sculpture, creating terracotta versions of the enigmatic figures that had long populated his paintings. In these works, which reflect de Chirico’s enduring fascination with classical subjects, characters from mythology such as Hector and Andromache take on the forms of tailors’ dummies or intricately constructed automatons. During the 1960s he produced bronze versions of such works, and subsequently began to create multiples, often with highly polished gold or silver finishes. The exhibition focuses on these late pieces in particular and also includes a number of drawings and paintings on related themes. Such was the success of his work in this field that in 1972 de Chirico was awarded the prestigious Ibico Reggino Prize for Sculpture, alongside Henry Moore.

Organised in collaboration with Galleria d’Arte Maggiore – Bologna (Italy), Myth and Mystery illuminates an aspect of de Chirico’s career that will be unfamiliar to many, vividly evoking that sense of magic and surprise which the artist associated with sculpture, and reaffirming his position as one of the most important and consistently imaginative figures of modern Italian art.

Image: Hector and Andromache, 1942

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Estorick Collection of Modern Italian Art
39a Canonbury Square, London N1 2AN
Opening times
Wednesday to Saturday 11.00 - 18.00
Sunday 12.00 - 17.00
Closed Mondays, Tuesdays.
Admission
£5.00, Concessions £3.50
National Art Pass, £2.50
Free to school children and full time students with valid NUS ID card.
Admission to café and shop free

IN ARCHIVIO [38]
Fausto Pirandello
dal 7/6/2015 al 5/9/2015

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