copyright Osvaldo Licini
- SIAE 2018 – courtesy Peggy Guggeneheim
Collection
Peggy Guggenheim Collection
Osvaldo Licini - Let Sheer Folly Sweep Me
Away
“He
who seeks certainty rarely finds it.”
Osvaldo Licini
Osvaldo Licini
At the
twenty-ninth Venice Biennale in 1958, an artist from the Italian
region of the Marches, Osvaldo Licini (1894–1958) was awarded the Grand
Prize for painting, a homage to one of the most original and elusive
personalities of the Italian art scene of the first half of the twentieth
century. Sixty years after that important recognition and his death, the Peggy
Guggenheim Collection commemorates the great master with the long-awaited
retrospective Osvaldo Licini - Let Sheer Folly Sweep Me Away, until January
14, curated by Luca Massimo Barbero.
Osvaldo Licini
- A Character and the Moon - 1949
Olio su tela / Oil on canvas - 27,5 × 36 cm
Private collection - Rome
copyright Osvaldo Licini
- SIAE 2018 – courtesy Peggy Guggeneheim
Collection
Osvaldo
Licini - Self-portrait - 1913
Oil on cardboard - 37 x 29 cm
Collection
Lorenzo Licini
Nude – 1925 - Nude – 1926 - Portrait of Nanny
– 1925
Oil on canvas
copyright Osvaldo Licini
- SIAE 2018 – courtesy Peggy Guggeneheim
Collection
Osvaldo
Licini - Landscape of the Marches (The Trough)
1928 - reworked1942 -
oil on canvas - 64 x 80,5 cm
Collection
Silvia Poli Licini
The exhibition retraces the disruptive and
tormented artistic path of Licini, whose
career was characterized by moments of crisis and seemingly sudden stylistic
changes. It intends to convey the substantial coherence of this path. Apparent
breaks are actually the stages of a singular experience that stand out in the
history of twentieth-century art for their absolute lyricism and poetry.
Osvaldo Licini – Study for
Imaginary Landscape (Billy Goat) 1927 - pencil on paper
The exhibition begins with his first
figurative phase of the 1920s, inspired by the landscapes of the Marches, those hills to which Licini consistently returned in his
painting. These views with their curved horizon line are the background in the
subsequent transition from figuration to abstraction of the early 1930s, seen in Imaginary
Landscape (Billy Goat) from
1927.
Composition: Twilight – 1932 – Nocturne -1932-33 - Composition
No.1
oil on canvas
Lucio Fontana – Abstract
Sculpture – 1934
iron – black paint on bronze base
Osvaldo Licini – Bird 2 – ca.1936
Enamel on board
In the 1930s Licini turned to nonfigurative work and partook in the cultural
ferment of 1930s Milan, the driving
force of Italian Abstraction and Rationalism. It was inevitable that he would become involved in
the activities of the Galleria Il
Milione. Licini’s abstract language is atypical, attentive to geometry. It
is a geometry that is permeated with lyricism and turned into sentiment. Such a
particular stance could only attract equally sophisticated collectors and the
interest of many Italian intellectuals.
Archipainting – 1937
Oil on canvas
copyright Osvaldo Licini - SIAE
2018 – courtesy Peggy Guggeneheim Collection
Osvaldo Licini –
Tasting - 1934-36
Oil on canvas - 22,8 X 27,6 cm
Collection Augusto and Francesca Giovanardi
A Large Character – 1945 – A Character – 1946
Flying Dutchman – Blue - ca.1944
Licini’s career and masterpieces dedicated to the Flying Dutchmen, Amalasunthas,
and Rebel Angels hang in “unstable
balance” (the title and subject of various works of the 1930s) between
abstraction and representation. Licini’s most iconic works are those dedicated
to the subject of Amalasuntha,
presented as a group at the Venice
Biennale in 1950.
Photo Alvise Aspesi -
copyright Osvaldo Licini - SIAE 2018 – courtesy
Peggy Guggeneheim
Collection
Osvaldo
Licini – Amalasuntha No. 1 - 1949
Oil on canvas – 81 x
100 cm
Maramotti
Collection – Reggio Emilia
The numerous Amalasuntha paintings on exhibit
present the many facets of Licini’s
personality, from the lyrical and contemplative side to the more ironic and
irreverent one. In the works created since the late 1940s, themes, styles, and
unresolved thoughts on painting all converge and make Licini emerge as a great
protagonist of Italian and
international modernism, as confirmed by the award conferred a few months
before his death at the Venice Biennale
in 1958.
“Amalasuntha is our beautiful moon,
guaranteed silver for eternity, personified in few words,
friend to every weary heart”
Osvaldo Licini
Amalasuntha No.3 – 1950 – Great Friend No.2 – 1948-50
Amalasuntha on a Red Background – 1950
oil on canvas
copyright Osvaldo Licini - SIAE
2018 – courtesy Peggy Guggeneheim Collection
Osvaldo Licini - The Snowman - 1952
Oil on canvas - 25.5 x 32.5 cm – frame - 47
x 55 x 7,5 cm
Private collection
copyright Osvaldo Licini - SIAE
2018 – courtesy Peggy Guggeneheim Collection
Osvaldo Licini
- Rebel Angel with a Red Heart -1953
oil on canvas - 88 x 116 cm
Private collection
copyright Osvaldo Licini - SIAE
2018 – courtesy Peggy Guggeneheim Collection
photograph courtesy Peggy
Guggeneheim Collection
Osvaldo
Licini - Castle in the Air - 1933-1936
mixed media on canvas - 66,7 x 90,2 cm
Collection Augusto and Francesca
Giovanardi
Peggy
Guggenheim at the twenty-ninth Venice Biennale
- 1958 in front of a work by Osvaldo Licini
Curator Luca Massimo Barbero and Karole Vail director of the Peggy Guggenheim Collection
The Canal Grande and the Accademia Bridge
from the terrace of Palazzo Venier dei Leoni