Segantini and his contemporaries
Nineteenth-century themes and figures
Galleria Civica G. Segantini
15 July 2017 - 15 September 2019
EXHIBITION
Next to the rooms with the original works of Segantini, the exhibition spaces of Galleria Civica G. Segantini propose an extension of the permanent itinerary dedicated to his contemporary artists.
Through three thematic sections (landscape, childhood, womanhood), the exhibition Segantini and his contemporaries. Nineteenth-century subjects and figures effects a comparison between the works of Giovanni Segantini – made famous by the popularising and intense effects of photomechanical reproductions – and the works of the Trentino artists who were his contemporaries, such as Andrea Malfatti, Eugenio Prati and Bartolomeo Bezzi.
Landscape, children and the female figure are the themes that gained most attention in the artistic production of the late nineteenth century, to the point of becoming true genres in their own right.
The old division of painting by genres dominated the art system throughout the nineteenth century, from the classrooms of the academies to the exhibition halls.
The same holds true of Segantini’s painting: his youthful work concentrated mainly on still-lifes, which were much in demand from bourgeois patrons, and he then moved on to portraiture and from here to the setting of figures in nature, rendered in masterly details of landscape, in which the naturalism of the forms blends with the symbolism of the impulses and ferments typifying the forces of nature.
It is in Segantini’s depiction of the female figure, however, both in the form of “Dea cristiana” into L’angelo della vita (The Angel of Life) or as a nude immersed in nature as in the case of La vanità (Vanity), that we best see the transition to a new idealist conception of art, which would shape Italian art in the early twentieth century.