Has there ever been so much Italian modern and contemporary art on view in New York City? A look at what’s on in galleries and museums around town.
Continue reading >>CIMA Fellow Chiara Fabi reports from the Archives of American Art
The Archives of American Art has become a key repository for CIMA fellows. Although focused on American art, it turns out to be a tremendous resource for scholars investigating the entry and impact of Italian art in the US in the twentieth century. Here CIMA Fellow Chiara Fabi shares her experiences with the AAA.
Continue reading >>Farewell to CIMA’s Fall Fellows: Chiara Fabi and Francesco Guzzetti!!
This week is the last official week at CIMA for the Fall Fellows, Chiara Fabi and Francesco Guzzetti. They each shared some thoughts on one work in the Medardo Rosso exhibition: Take a look at these new videos from CIMA!
Continue reading >>A look back at Fortunato Depero
This weekend, as the Fortunato Depero exhibition at the Juan March Foundation closes in Madrid, we take a look back at our inaugural installation with a series of videos featuring CIMA’s 2013-14 fellows Fabio Belloni and Raffaele Bedarida.
Continue reading >>CIMA’s second season, on MEDARDO ROSSO, begins!
CIMA has just launched its second season, dedicated to the revolutionary Italian sculptor Medardo Rosso (1858-1928). I am very excited about the new research on Rosso that will happen over the course of this year. We have two wonderful new Fall Fellows, Chiara Fabi and Francesco Guzzetti, who are leading the guided visits on Fridays and Saturdays. During the course of their fellowships, they are each investigating various aspects of Rosso’s presence and impact in the United States.
Continue reading >>From advertising to painting: Depero’s Motociclista and the Bianchi company
In honor of the opening today at the Juan March Foundation in Madrid of the exhibition Depero Futurista, 1913-1950, we are pleased to present a guest post by Gianluca Poldi, a post-doctoral researcher in conservation science at the University of Bergamo, Italy.
Continue reading >>Flora e fauna magica and Città meccanizzata dalle ombre: Seeking Inspiration in the Past
As I mentioned in an earlier blogpost, Depero is a great example of an…
Continue reading >>Depero and the Metropolis
What better idea than that of exposing in our New York City blog of CIMA two paintings by Fortunato Depero that underscore the vivacity and the dynamism of the metropolis. One currently exhibited in the exhibition, Reconstructing the Universe: Italian Futurism 1909-1944 at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (Fig. 1: Grattacieli e tunnel [Skyscrapers and Tunnel]),…
Continue reading >>Inside the Magic Box: Io e mia moglie, 1919
In 1940 Depero wrote these lines about his painting, Io e Mia Moglie (I and My Wife), one of the only self-portraits he ever made: This painting is one of the first examples of a ‘psychological portrait.’ It was conceived in Viareggio in 1918 and finished in Rovereto in 1919. Made and inspired by the house that I lived in in the Tyrrhenian city.
Continue reading >>Nuts and Bolts of a Portable Museum
Earlier this month, during Frieze and the other art fairs, hundreds of artists from all over the world came to New York and distributed business cards featuring their website or flashed their iPads to show their portfolio.
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