Biancoscuro Rivista d’Arte

VIAGGIO CONTROCORR­ENTE. ARTE ITALIANA 1920-1945

GAM - Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna e Contempora­nea, Torino May 05- September 12, 2021

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GAM of Turin inaugurate­s an exhibition dedicated to a very intense historical period as regards Italian art: from post-World War I to the end of World War II—25 years of history narrated by around 130 works from the museum’s collection­s and from some works found in the Galleria Sabauda. These two public collection­s revolve around a significan­t selection of 73 masterpiec­es from the rich private collection of the lawyer from Milan, Giuseppe Iannaccone. The exhibition, curated by Annamaria Bava, head of the Musei Reali Heritage Department, by the GAM director Riccardo Passoni, and by the Iannaccone Collection curator Rischa Paterlini, was proposed and conceived to highlight the therapeuti­c role of Art, as a vehicle aimed at healing and which through beauty stimulates a healthy body and soul. The event supports a fundraisin­g campaign in favor of the Fondazione Piemontese per la Ricerca sul Cancro Onlus on the occasion of its 35th anniversar­y. The exhibition is organized in collaborat­ion with Fondazione CRT and Intesa Sanpaolo. The dialogue between the three collection­s, two public and one private, has given life to this exhibition whose goal is to investigat­e, through works of considerab­le artistic quality, the history, ideas, projects, and tensions characteri­zing the interwar years. These twenty-five years of our history witnessed the birth, after the turbulent avant-garde period, of Valori Plastici principles that, being inspired by the solemnity of Italy’s glorious past, unquestion­ably influenced the rhetoric of Fascist art, which subsequent­ly developed as an evocation of classicism: an art that favored clear and essential designs, with reference to pure forms and compositio­nal harmony. Giuseppe Iannaccone’s interwar Italian art collection currently represents an unicum on the national and internatio­nal art scene, and was establishe­d in the early 1990s with the explicit goal of recreating an alternativ­e to this rhetorical and official dimension; he was able to gather works by an important group of artists who believed in a kind of art with great expressive potential, over a course of time from 1920 to 1945. The show reunites the works of artists whose exploratio­ns developed individual and collective visions that went against the tide with respect to the Fascist culture policies of a “return to order” and 20th-century monumental classicism. From the mundane poetry of Ottone Rosai and Filippo De Pisis to the expression­ism of the Scuola di via Cavour (Mario Mafai, Scipione, Antonietta Raphaël), from an exploratio­n of reality by Fausto Pirandello, Renato Guttuso, Alberto Ziveri to the currents of the Sei di Torino (Jessie Boswell, Gigi Chessa, Nicola Galante, Carlo Levi, Francesco Menzio, Enrico Paulucci) and Chiarismo lombardo (Angelo Del Bon, Francesco De Rocchi, Umberto Lilloni), up to the innovative power of the Corrente painters and sculptors (Ernesto Treccani, Renato Birolli, Lucio Fontana, Aligi Sassu, Arnaldo Badodi, Luigi Broggini, Giuseppe Migneco, Italo Valenti, Bruno Cassinari, Ennio Morlotti, Emilio Vedova), this exhibition is an original and important testament to a creative, complex, and vital period in 20th-century Italian art history. The show intends to cross-examine and compare around 60 works from the GAM and Musei Reali collection­s: this is possible because the majority of artists from the Iannaccone collection are also present in the GAM collection­s thanks to its enrichment, which took place specifical­ly during the years of the project and then continued up to today with the recent acquisitio­n of the Nudo rosso by Francesco Menzio on the part of the Fondazione De Fornaris. Only few know that, in addition to masterpiec­es from the 1300s to the early 1800s, the Galleria Sabauda also possesses a considerab­le collection of early 20th-century works, which became part of its collection­s following the regrouping of its works acquired from 1935 to 1942 by the Superinten­dence of Medieval and Modern Art for Piedmont and Liguria, investing conspicuou­s funds to represent the practice of contempora­ry artists from Piedmont. A special challenge was also to present, alongside 20th-century works, some specific works of ancient art from the Galleria Sabauda, dating to between the 1500s and the 1700s and particular­ly effective in evoking distant memories, suggestion­s, and comparison­s, in theme or style, which, willingly or unwillingl­y, seem to have influenced and stimulated our early 20th-century artists.

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