Mattia Jona, Master Drawings and Prints, Japanese Prints - Piazzetta Guastalla 5, 20122 Milan, Italy, tel (+39) 02 8053315


Mario Sironi, a catacomb

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MARIO SIRONI (Tempio Pausania, Sassari, 1885 - Milan 1961) CATACOMBA
Mixed technique, signed in black chalk 'SIRONI', 335 x 247 mm. Inscribed on the verso in pencil '23 x 32 / fotolito / a quanti / colori necessita'.
This is the original drawing by Sironi for one of the illustrations created by the artist for the book 'Canti del Beato Frate Jacopone da Todi - Le Laudi', published by Edizioni della Conchiglia, Milan, 1947. See Fabio Benzi and Andrea Sironi, 'Sironi Illustratore, catalogo ragionato', Milan 1988; no. 2292.

Mario Sironi, painter, caricaturist, designer and muralist, was one of the most influential and technically skilled artist of 20th century in Italy. As a student he first specialized in mathematics and engineering, but then abandoned them for painting. Studying art in Rome he was involved in Futurism and Boccioni described him as an artist “who has embarked in a profound an highly original way on research into plastic dynamism”. After World War I, when he was attracted by metaphysical themes and imagery of the industrial world, his style embraced monumental and solid forms rendered in dark tones. Sironi was deeply involved in Fascism and he fashioned the regime’s image in both high and low art forms, from propaganda in the press to monumental mural projects. This identification with Fascism clouded critics’ assessment of his artwork for a long period.

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