Return from the Wood (1890) >> Italian

Giovanni Segantini. Light and Symbol, 1884-1899
10 February 2001 - 29 April 2001

The Peggy Guggenheim Collection presents Giovanni Segantini: Light and Symbol 1884-1899, an exhibition dedicated to works of the late symbolist period of Giovanni Segantini (1858-1899), from February 10th - April 29th, 2001. The project is presented in the context of the program "ENEL Light for Art" and is organized in collaboration with FAI (Fondo per l'Ambiente Italiano).

To mark the centenary of Giovanni Segantini's death, the exhibition brings together 30 works of the artist's mature period from international museum and private collections. 10 masterpieces of the exhibition were on view through January 28, 2001 in the Scuderia Grande of the Villa Menafoglio Litta Panza in Varese, owned and managed by FAI.

In the more intimate spaces of the Peggy Guggenheim Collection, the exhibition will be enriched by the inclusion of three additional paintings and a nucleus of drawings which provide a comprehensive insight into the artist's evolution. Among the thirteen paintings to be shown in Venice is the famous Rose Petal (1891, private collection), a portrait of the artist's companion Bice Bugatti; the painting is indicative of Segantini's rich symbolist style and has not been on public view since 1926. In addition to this work, others which deserve special recognition include Springtime in the Alps (The Allegory of Spring) (1897), now in a private collection, celebrated last year in the international press for establishing a record for a work of 19th Century Italian art at a Christie's New York auction, and Return from the Wood (1890), for its rich tones and dense symbolism.

(...)

"The concept of this exhibition is novel in its scope and in its goals. Its purpose is to provide some intuition of the richness of Segantini's Symbolism and of the originality of his pictorial language, and a reanalysis of the painter and his work in the context of a European Symbolism" according to Annie-Paule Quinsac, curator of the exhibition and author of the catalogue raisonné published in 1982. "For this reason almost all of the works come from the artist's Swiss period, from 1884 onwards."


The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue (published in a bilingual version in Italian and English by Skira), written by Annie-Paule Quinsac, with an essay by the noted American critic and historian Robert Rosenblum (Stephen and Nan Swid Curator of Contemporary Art, Solomon R Guggenheim Museum, New York).

The exhibition is made possible by and under the auspices of the President of the Italian Republic and the auspices of the President of the Swiss Confederation.
The programs of the Peggy Guggenheim Collection are made possible by the support of the Peggy Guggenheim Collection Advisory Board, the Regione Veneto and:Alitalia.

 

>> Italian