Felice Palma. Massa 1583-1625. Collezione / Collection.
Texts by Andrei Cristina, Ciarlo Nicola, Federici Fabrizio, Claudio Casini and Sara Ragni.
Italian and English Text.
Pontedera, 2024; bound in a case, pp. 289, b/w and col. ill., b/w and col. plates, cm 24,5x34.
(L'Oro Bianco. Straordinari Dimenticati. The White Gold Forgotten Masters).
cover price: € 160.00
|
Books included in the offer:
Felice Palma. Massa 1583-1625. Collezione / Collection.
Texts by Andrei Cristina, Ciarlo Nicola, Federici Fabrizio, Claudio Casini and Sara Ragni.
Italian and English Text.
Pontedera, 2024; bound in a case, pp. 289, b/w and col. ill., b/w and col. plates, cm 24,5x34.
(L'Oro Bianco. Straordinari Dimenticati. The White Gold Forgotten Masters).
FREE (cover price: € 160.00)
Le botteghe del marmo
Italian and English Text.
Ospedaletto, 1992; bound, pp. 153, 10 b/w ill., 60 col. ill., cm 24x29.
(Immagine).
FREE (cover price: € 34.49)
Museo Stefano Bardini. I Bronzetti e gli Oggetti d'Uso in Bronzo
Edited by Nesi A.
Firenze, 2009; paperback, pp. 191, 102 b/w ill., 7 col. ill., cm 17x24,5.
(Museo Stefano Bardini).
FREE (cover price: € 30.00)
Bronzetti e Rilievi dal XV al XVIII Secolo
Bologna, 2015; 2 vols., bound in a case, pp. 729, ill., col. plates, cm 21,5x30,5.
FREE (cover price: € 90.00)
Archetypes and historicity painting and other radical forms 1995-2007
Diacono Mario
Silvana Editoriale
Reggio Emilia, Collezione Maramotti, 7 october 2012 - 3 february 2013.
English Text.
Cinisello Balsamo, 2012; paperback, pp. 416, 90 col. ill., cm 17x24.
ISBN: 88-366-2325-5 - EAN13: 9788836623259
Subject: Essays (Art or Architecture),Monographs (Painting and Drawing)
Period: 1960- Contemporary Period
Languages:
Weight: 1.26 kg
The circulation of the same lexicon among the three titles implies that they are almost interchangeable, reflecting a continuity between new works and old imaginary.
The thread linking contemporary images to past icons is visible despite a reinventing or even an inventing of the media that the artists are using to materialize their ideas.
If the novelty of the techniques is always deliberate, however, the return of an image's archetypal structure may be instead mostly subconscious. The intertexuality, or interfigurality, between old and contemporary images, in the last thirty or forty years, points to the other sphere of globalism, beside the spatial one that the cybermedia and the multi-national economy are generating. It's the temporal globality that the encyclopedic museums, the philosphy of consciousness, art books, jet travel, an ever-deepening knowledge of the past, the dissemination of information have constructed in the modern mind, and that renders all art diachronic in facture but synchronic in meaning.
The strength of an artist's intuition and formal devices is, of course, irreducible to the presence of an interfigurality;
but a painting often receives a higher validation from the depth it acquires from its (re)invention of an archetype