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This book examines the work of several modern artists, including Fortunato Depero, Scipione, and Mario Radice, who were working in Italy during the time of Benito Mussolini’s rise and fall. It provides a new history of the relationship between modern art and fascism. The study begins from the premise that Italian artists belonging to avant-garde art movements, such as futurism, expressionism, and abstraction, could produce works that were perfectly amenable to the ideologies of Mussolini’s regime. A particular focus of the book is the precise relationship between ideas of history and modernity encountered in the art and politics of the time and how compatible these truly were.
Between the years of 1932 and 1945, modern Italian muralism, otherwise known as l'arte murale, made its debut in the Italian art world, bringing with it disputes and problems related to the discourse surrounding the endeavor, the materials that would make up these works, and the iconography and subject matter of the images. The muralists of modern Italy primarily depended on funding from the Partito Nazionale Fascista (National Fascist Party or PNF) to make public murals for schools, post offices, train stations, fascist administrative buildings, and temporary exhibition spaces, complicating their works and raising the stakes of the modern practice of muralism. This dissertation considers the understudied history of modern Italian muralism in the ventennio, or twenty years of fascism and its relationship to the building of the Italian fascist empire under Benito Mussolini. Focusing on such artists as Mario Sironi, Massimo Campigli, Gino Severini, and Enrico Prampolini, each of the four chapters largely considers the language used to describe modern Italian muralism by practitioners, architects, critics, and fascist bureaucrats. As a secondary goal of each of the four chapters makes claims about the iconography related to imperialism and the experiments in modern and ancient materials. By focusing on these aspects, this dissertation demonstrates how modern muralism shifts throughout the 1930s and 1940s in Italy and how those alterations relate to political, social, imperialistic, and artistic issues and debates. While the existing scholarship has paid abundant attention to the art of Italian fascist culture, there is a major gap in the literature regarding Italian muralism during the ventennio and its effect on Italian artists, viewers, administrators, and future trajectories of Italian art. According to some of the primary literature and the secondary scholarship, modern Italian muralism was seen as a regression in art, returning to a more traditional or conservative position at a time when European modernism and the avant-garde laid a foundation for radical experimentation and a reshaping of human existence. However, the work of the Italian muralists, and the discourse surrounding it, demonstrate a serious desire and initiative to explore the social, political, and visual effects of modern materials within their murals. While some of the modern Italian murals may superficially appear conventional or predictable, this dissertation proves otherwise. Unlike mural practices occurring simultaneously in France, Germany, Mexico, the United States, and the Soviet Union, Italy's modern muralism carried the weight of mural traditions that extend back to antiquity. Italy's rich past is something that modern Italian muralists grappled with when creating their own murals under fascism. With experiments in fresco, mosaic, the plastica murale (plastic mural), and the fotomosaico (photomosaic), the modern Italian muralists transformed the tradition of Italian muralism into something unique and modern, and these examples are deserving of a rigorous analysis.
This book examines how the work of Mario Sironi shaped the political myths of Italian Fascism.
This book introduces a compelling new personality to the modernist canon, Marisa Mori (1900-1985), who became the only female contributor to The Futurist Cookbook (1932) with her recipe for “Italian Breasts in the Sun.” Providing something more complex than a traditional biographical account, Griffiths presents a feminist critique of Mori's art, converging on issues of gender, culture, and history to offer new critical perspectives on Italian modernism. If subsequently written out of modernist memory, Mori was once at the center of the Futurism movement in Italy; yet she worked outside the major European capitals and fluctuated between traditional figurative subjects and abstract experimentation. As a result, her in-between pictures can help to re-think the margins of modernism. By situating Mori's most significant artworks in the critical context of interwar Fascism, and highlighting her artistic contributions before, during, and after her Futurist decade, Griffiths contributes to a growing body of knowledge on the women who participated in the Italian Futurist movement. In doing so, she explores a woman artist's struggle for modernity among the Italian Futurists in an age of Fascism.
The exhibition recreates the complex relationship between the arts and the Fascist regime in the decade before World War II. This dramatic era was blighted by propaganda and persecution, but it was also a time when the freer spirits proved capable of sowing the seeds of modernity, particularly in the fields of architecture, town planning, design, photography and graphic art; while in the spheres of painting and sculpture, how can anyone forget the names of Funi, Savinio, de Chirico, Wildt, Donghi, Sironi, Fontana, Licini, Severini or Guttuso? This richly illustrated catalogue with its highly original format explores and analyses the many fascinating different aspects of the era.
This richly textured cultural history of Italian fascism traces the narrative path that accompanied the making of the regime and the construction of Mussolini's power. Simonetta Falasca-Zamponi reads fascist myths, rituals, images, and speeches as texts that tell the story of fascism. Linking Mussolini's elaboration of a new ruling style to the shaping of the regime's identity, she finds that in searching for symbolic means and forms that would represent its political novelty, fascism in fact brought itself into being, creating its own power and history. Falasca-Zamponi argues that an aesthetically founded notion of politics guided fascist power's historical unfolding and determined the fascist regime's violent understanding of social relations, its desensitized and dehumanized claims to creation, its privileging of form over ethical norms, and ultimately its truly totalitarian nature.
This volume explores how Italian institutions, dealers, critics, and artists constructed a modern national identity for Italy by exporting – literally and figuratively – contemporary art to the United States in key moments between 1929 and 1969. From artist Fortunato Depero opening his Futurist House in New York City to critic Germano Celant launching Arte Povera in the United States, Raffaele Bedarida examines the thick web of individuals and cultural environments beyond the two more canonical movements that shaped this project. By interrogating standard narratives of Italian Fascist propaganda on the one hand and American Cold War imperialism on the other, this book establishes a more nuanced transnational approach. The central thesis is that, beyond the immediate aims of political propaganda and conquering a new market for Italian art, these art exhibitions, publications, and the critical discourse aimed at American audiences all reflected back on their makers: they forced and helped Italians define their own modernity in relation to the world’s new dominant cultural and economic power. The book will be of interest to scholars working in art history, social history, exhibition history, and Italian studies.
This volume is an anthology of current groundbreaking research on social practice art. Contributing scholars provide a variety of assessments of recent projects as well as earlier precedents, define approaches to art production, and provide crucial political context. The topics and art projects covered, many of which the authors have experienced firsthand, represent the work of innovative artists whose creative practice is utilized to engage audience members as active participants in effecting social and political change. Chapters are divided into four parts that cover history, specific examples, global perspectives, and critical analysis.
Today the media arts not only address the great themes of our times, they inhabit the very media of which they speak. The contemporary is global, but only because of the media that enable globalisation. Those media are almost nowhere apparent in the mainstream practice of art that we see in biennials from Venice to Sao Paolo. The media arts reflect back to us our present condition, and in the archive present us with the ghosts of what we were, and what we failed to become. This book brings the reader into the centre of these strange encounters, introducing us to the rich legacies and futures of the most important arts of the last hundred years. It also looks ahead to the future and asks what happens to the condition of being human within the new constellation into which we are entering?