- 61
Giorgio Morandi
Description
- Natura morta
- Signed Morandi (lower center)
- Oil on canvas
- 12 1/8 by 14 in.
- 30.7 by 35.5 cm
Provenance
Albert Skira, Geneva
Galerie Krugier & Cie, Geneva
K. Berger, New York
Odyssia Gallery, New York
N. Mobilio, Florence
Galerie Krugier & Cie, Geneva
J.L. and B. Plaza, Caracas
Galeria Theo, Madrid
Elvira Mignoni, Madrid
Galerie Villand et Galanis, Paris
Sale: Sotheby's, London, June 22, 1993, lot 83
Sale: Christie's, London, October 23, 2001, lot 117
Cotini Galleria d'Arte, Venice
Acquired from the above circa 2007
Exhibited
Milan, Galleria Annunciata, Morandi, 1971, n.n., illustrated in the catalogue
Madrid, Fundación Caja de Pensiones, Giorgio Morandi, 1890-1964, 1984-85, no. 53, illustrated in color in the catalogue
Marseille, Musée Cantini, Giorgio Morandi, 1890-1964, 1985, no. 49, illustrated in color in the catalogue
New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art & Bologna, Museo d'Arte Moderna di Bologna, Giorgio Morandi, 1890-1964, 2008-09, no. 94, illustrated in color in the catalogue
Literature
Lamberto Vitali, Morandi: Dipinti, catalogo generale, volume secondo 1948/1964, Milan, 1983, no. 1003, illustrated n.p.
Catalogue Note
From an early stage, Morandi was inspired by the great Quattrocento masters: Masaccio, Paolo Uccello and Piero della Francesca. The simple, coherent structure of their fresco paintings, together with the almost sculptural rendering of volume, exerted a significant influence on his painterly style. Morandi fused these influences with lessons learned from the father of modern 'Classicism', Cézanne, whose still-lifes exhibit the same compositional rigor and highly considered nature. Perhaps the most immediate characteristic of Morandi's work is his limited subject matter. The bottles, bowls and pitchers which populate his paintings hold little personal significance; rather, they are objects of meditation through which Morandi sought to resolve the composition, giving form to the artist's conception. These simple domestic items were to Morandi what peaches were to Cézanne.
Natura morta, painted in 1956, demonstrates Morandi's tirelessly inventive approach. The ceramics which comprise the still-life have been chosen and arranged with great precision to achieve spatial equilibrium, while the vertical and horizontal axes are balanced harmoniously. As in Cézanne's paintings, volume is created through the interplay of color and light, rather than the precise delineation of contours or tonal modelling. As a result, the objects are imbued with a dramatic material quality – their presence on the canvas is almost spectral, at once palpable and fugitive. Morandi has employed a warm yet muted palette of complementary tones which unify the canvas surface. Most remarkable, though, is the fragile tension created between tranquility and solitude on the one hand, and a pervasive sense of emotional disquiet and isolation on the other.
The present painting goes far beyond the objective recording of reality. Inanimate objects become enigmatic, like metaphysical portents of unexpected feelings or events. In an article written in 1922, the painter Giorgio de Chirico referred explicitly to this poetic aspect of Morandi's still-lifes: "These objects are dead for us because they are immobile. But he looks at them with belief. He finds comfort in their inner structure – their eternal aspect. In this way he has contributed to the lyricism of the last important movement in European art: the metaphysics of the common object. However much we may be aware that appearances deceive, we often look at familiar things with the eyes of one who sees and does not know" (G. de Chirico quoted in Giorgio Morandi (exhibition catalogue), Arts Council of Great Britain, 1970, p. 6).