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Alfredo Volpi: Museu de ARTE Moderna de Sao Paulo.


"Volpi: A musica da cor" ("Volpi: The Music of Color not of the white race; - commonly meaning, esp. in the United States, of negro blood, pure or mixed.

See also: Color
"), a retrospective of the work of Alfredo Volpi Alfredo Volpi (1896 - 1988), was a famous painter of the artistic and cultural brazilian modernist movement. He was born in Lucca, Italy but, less than two years later, he was brought by his parents to São Paulo, Brazil, where he lived for most part of his life.  (1896-1988), brings together 135 paintings, twenty of which have never before been shown. This vast panorama reveals an artist who emigrated from Italy to Sao Paulo as a child and whose varied use of line, color, and space creates a poetic experience rather than a formal trap. From the surface of the paintings feelings and memories emerge through the evocation of popular, everyday forms. Facades, seascapes Seascapes is an RTÉ Radio 1 programme broadcast on Fridays at 8.30 pm. and presented by Tom MacSweeney. It is intended to cover all subjects of maritime interest, from leisure to commercial shipping, as well as fishing and the environment. , and saints, for instance, are present throughout the show, subjects that continually fascinated Volpi, even during the '60s and '70s, when his painting achieved its most reductive re·duc·tive  
adj.
1. Of or relating to reduction.

2. Relating to, being an instance of, or exhibiting reductionism.

3. Relating to or being an instance of reductivism.
 stage. Likewise the traditional feast flag of Sao Joao--a small, colorful, handmade paper flag--is a constant reference in the artist's work. He reinvents what's common, but without falling into populist cliches or resorting to provincial allusions--though posthumous titles, often supplied by collectors when Volpi didn't bother with them, explain the artist's poetry in a most obvious way.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Volpi's early figurative years, under the influence of the Neapolitan school of Posillipo or the Tuscan Macchiaioli, are well represented in the show. After his first solo exhibition, in 1944, he participated in the inaugural Bienal de Sao Paulo (1951), as well as the Venice Biennale of 1952. While abroad, he saw Italian Gothic art, which made a great impression on him. Gradually he moved from oil to tempera tempera (tĕm`pərə), painting method in which finely ground pigment is mixed with a solidifying base such as albumen, fig sap, or thin glue. , and in the same decade he also started a constructivist con·struc·tiv·ism  
n.
A movement in modern art originating in Moscow in 1920 and characterized by the use of industrial materials such as glass, sheet metal, and plastic to create nonrepresentational, often geometric objects.
 phase. The works titled Composicao Concreta (Concrete Composition), 1950, exemplify this very static and geometric period. Later, in the '60s, he produced a number of purely chromatic chromatic /chro·mat·ic/ (kro-mat´ik)
1. pertaining to color; stainable with dyes.

2. pertaining to chromatin.


chro·mat·ic
adj.
1. Relating to color or colors.
 optical schemes, like Portais e Bandeirinhas (Gates and Small Flags), 1960, or the previously unexhibited Elementos de fachada e bandeirinhas (Facade Elements and Small Flags), ca. 1960. These are the highlights of the exhibition, along with Mastros (Masts), 1970. Here the brushwork brush·work  
n.
1. Work done with a brush.

2. The manner in which a painter applies paint with a brush.


brushwork
Noun
 brings materiality to the surface. Rather than exploring color as an optical phenomenon, it stands out as a natural element. To this end, tempera becomes essential in his work, allowing the pigment to breathe. That ancient medium projects Volpi into the past, creating a continuity between the tradition of Giotto's skies and Paolo Uccello's Renaissance standards and the new spatiality of modernism.

Curator Olivio Tavares Araujo, who knew Volpi well and long championed his work, has seen to it that the exhibition functions as an homage to the artist. Yet the dominating presence of the show's largest painting, Bandeira brasileira (Brazilian Flag), 1960--officially titled Composicao com Sugestoes Maritimas, (Composition with Nautical suggestions--gives an unfortunate literalist lit·er·al·ism  
n.
1. Adherence to the explicit sense of a given text or doctrine.

2. Literal portrayal; realism.



lit
 turn to the artist's relation to the sources of his imagery. The nominal patriotic appeal of this vast painting comes from its blues and yellows, the colors of the Brazilian flag. This is the least desirable association for an artist who, in the early '60s, was experiencing a process of form and color transformation, which, by the way, had nothing to do with raising a flag. Volpi never sang hymns; he shunned manifestos and programs, a stance almost inconceivable in the politically heated Latin American art This article or section needs copy editing for grammar, style, cohesion, tone and/or spelling.
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 scene of that era. While the Concretists bemoaned the incompatibility of art and theory, Volpi gestured toward simplicity and the intimate in his paintings. In that sense, Volpi has been a unique and inspiring force within the Brazilian art scene. Especially in Sao Paulo, his influence can be seen in a new generation of artists, for instance Paulo Pasta, Rodrigo Andrade, and Tatiana Blass, whose paintings have a comparable inventiveness and sense of physicality through color.
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Author:Zappi, Lucrecia
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Oct 1, 2006
Words:595
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