Established | 1921 |
---|---|
Location | Via Palestro 16 - 20121 Milan, Italy |
Coordinates | 45°28′21″N9°11′59″E / 45.47250°N 9.19972°E |
Director | Marina Pugliese |
Curator | Paola Zatti |
Website | www |
The Galleria d'Arte Moderna is a modern art museum in Milan, in Lombardy in northern Italy. It is housed in the Villa Reale, at Via Palestro 16, opposite the Giardini Pubblici Indro Montanelli. The collection consists largely of Italian and European works from the eighteenth to the twentieth centuries. [1] [2] [3]
The museum has works by Francesco Filippini, Giuseppe Ferrari, Giovanni Fattori, Silvestro Lega, Giovanni Boldini, Vincent van Gogh, Édouard Manet, Paul Gauguin, Paul Cézanne, Pablo Picasso, Giacomo Balla, Umberto Boccioni, Francesco Hayez, Giovanni Segantini, Giuseppe Pellizza da Volpedo and Antonio Canova, among others. [4] Works have been donated by Milanese families including the Treves, Ponti, Grassi and Vismara. [4]
After the Second World War the twentieth-century works in the collection were moved to the Padiglione d'Arte Contemporanea, built in 1955 on the site of the former stables of the palace, which had been destroyed by wartime bombing. [5]
In 2011, some works were moved to the Museo del Novecento.
The museum holds some temporary exhibitions; in 2008 works by Tino Sehgal were presented. [6]
The principal works in the collection include:
Mario Sironi was an Italian Modernist artist who was active as a painter, sculptor, illustrator, and designer. His typically somber paintings are characterized by massive, immobile forms.
The Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, also known as La Galleria Nazionale, is an art museum in Rome. It was founded in 1883 on the initiative of the then minister Guido Baccelli and is dedicated to modern and contemporary art.
Giuseppe Pellizza da Volpedo was an Italian Divisionist painter. Pellizza was a pupil of Pio Sanquirico. He used a Divisionist technique in which a painting is created by juxtaposing small dots of paint according to a specific colour theory. Although he exhibited often, his work achieved popularity in death through their reproduction in socialist magazines and the acclaim they received from 20th-century art critics.
Elena Clara Antonia Carrara Spinelli was an Italian woman of letters and backer of the Risorgimento, usually known by her married name of countess Clara Maffei or Chiarina Maffei.
Emilio Longoni was an Italian painter.
Pelagio Palagi was an Italian painter, sculptor and interior decorator.
Filippo Carcano was an Italian painter.
The art collections of Fondazione Cariplo are a gallery of artworks with a significant historical and artistic value owned by Fondazione Cariplo in Italy. It consists of 767 paintings, 116 sculptures, 51 objects and furnishings dating from the first century AD to the second half of the twentieth.
Cherubino Cornienti was an Italian painter, active in a Romantic style mainly in Northern Italy.
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The Galleria d'arte moderna Ricci Oddi is an art museum, located on via San Siro #13 in Piacenza, region of Emilia-Romagna, Italy. The museum displays a collection of Modern Art from the last two hundred years.
Self-Portrait Aged 71 is an 1862 oil-on-canvas painting by the Italian artist Francesco Hayez. The Uffizi had been requesting a self-portrait from him since 1858 via Andrea Appiani's daughter-in-law Giuseppina Appiani Strigelli and it finally arrived in 1863. It is still in the Uffizi's Vasari Corridor.
The Sicilian Vespers is the title of three works by the Italian artist Francesco Hayez, all showing the outbreak of the Sicilian Vespers.
Portrait of Countess Antonietta Negroni Prati Morosini as a Child is an 1858 oil-on-canvas portrait by the Italian artist Francesco Hayez, commissioned by the subject's father Alessandro Negroni Prati Morosini. It is now in the Galleria d'Arte Moderna, in Milan, to which it was given in 1935 by Anna Cristina del Mayno Casati.
Portrait of Matilde Juva Branca is an 1851 oil-on-canvas painting by the Italian artist Francesco Hayez, now in the Galleria d'Arte Moderna in Milan, to which it was given in 1893 by Carlo Weber.
Breton Women is an 1888 watercolour painting by Vincent van Gogh, copying a work by Émile Bernard, a friend of both van Gogh and Paul Gauguin who also produced Breton Women at a Wall on a similar subject. It is now in the collection of the Galleria d'arte moderna in Milan.
Love at the Fountain of Life or The Lovers at the Fountain of Life is an 1896 oil on canvas painting by Giovanni Segantini, commissioned by prince Yusupov of Saint Petersburg during the artist's mature period and one of the most famous works of his Symbolist period, which had begun in 1891 with The Bad Mothers. It is signed in red at bottom left "G. Segantini - Maloja 1896". It is now in the Galleria d'Arte Moderna, in Milan, to which it was bequeathed in 1955.
The Gardener, also known as Portrait of a Young Peasant or Provençal Peasant, is an oil-on-canvas painting by Vincent van Gogh, dated of September 1889 and held in the National Gallery of Modern Art, in Rome.