ROBILANT+VOENA
are pleased to present an exhibition of paintings by Giorgio Morandi
(Bologna, 1890
-
1964) on view at their London gallery from 7 June to 28 Jul
y 2017. This will be the
second exhibition at the gallery dedicated to the celebrated Italian artist, following the successful
2011 show. The exhibition will include works the
artist realised between the 194
0s and 1960s,
bri
nging together a selection of fo
ur landscapes, seven
still lifes and one watercolour.
Giorgio Morandi
is known primarily for his subtle and contemplative paintings, which he produced
with determined consistency by remaining dedicated to a specific repertoire of subjects.
Over the
course
of an extensive and prolific career, Morandi worked almost exclusively in series
,
concentrating on
the production of still lifes and landscapes, constantly making use of the same
recognisable subject
-
objects: bottles, shells, jugs, boxes and flowers or th
e same landscape and
urban scenes: economical views of the countryside near Bologna or of the courtyard of his house
on Via Fondazza.
However, underneath the
simplicity of his silent, meditative and repetitive
compositions
and the obsessive exploration of
a single subject lay a great complexity and richness
of meaning.
Through
the expressiveness that he could extract from
subtle shifts in colour
, the
variety he could wrest from adjustments of scale and the poetry he could find in apparently minute
changes,
Morandi was able to
seize reality through the familiar
.
Included in this exhibition are four landscapes
realised between 1942
and 1963 which are indicative
of the process of increasing simplification and economy
of subject
-
matter, colour and line
that
Mor
andi achieved throughout his career. Also included in the exhibition are three flower paintings.
In common with the still lifes these small paintings demonstrate a reduction of the subject to a
minimum, in order to abstract the superfluous and to allow for
the emergence of
the
essence of
things.
One painting in the show
(
Natura morta
, 1943)
depicts two shells and is characterised by a
monochromatic muted tonality that creates an especially sombre and reflective mood. This
reflects the traumatic effects that
the Second World War had on Morandi. Further to these works
there will also be
three
more recognisable object
-
compositions.
In these paintings, Morandi
creates volume through the interaction of colour and light and as a result, the objects are imbued
with
a dramatic material quality
–
their presence on the canvas is almost spectral, pervaded by
peaceful and austere solemnity.
At first glance, Morandi’s objects appear to be the detritus of domesticity, a collection of things
once in daily use. However
,
the
everyday objects become subjects of contemplation, a vessel for
the viewer's own imagination.
The artist’s desire to transform the intimate into the monumental
and
through the continuous sublimation of everyday objects into pure volumes and colours Morand
i
found them a place outside of time in order to capture their very essence.