Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Art: Giacomo Balla's Speed of a Motorcycle.

Giacomo Balla "Speed of a Motorcycle", 1913 Oil on Canvas
Wiki:
"Born in Turin, in the Piedmont region of Italy, the son of an industrial chemist, as a child Giacomo Balla studied music.

By age twenty his interest in art was such that he decided to study painting at local academies and exhibited several of his early works. Following academic studies at the University of Turin, Balla moved to Rome in 1895 where he met and married Elisa Marcucci. For several years he worked in Rome as an illustrator and caricaturist as well as doing portraiture. In 1899 his work was shown at the Venice Biennale and in the ensuing years his art was on display at major Italian exhibitions in Rome and Venice, in Munich, Berlin and Düsseldorf in Germany as well as at the Salon d'Automne in Paris and at galleries in Rotterdam in the Netherlands.

Influenced by Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, Giacomo Balla adopted the Futurism style, creating a pictorial depiction of light, movement and speed. He was signatory to the Futurist Manifesto in 1910 and began designing and painting Futurist furniture and also created Futurist "antineutral" clothing. In painting, his new style is demonstrated in the 1912 work titled Dynamism of a Dog on a Leash. In 1914, he also began sculpting and the following year created perhaps his best known sculpture called Boccioni's Fist.

Giacomo Balla

The Futurists explored every medium of art, including painting, sculpture, poetry, theatre, music, architecture and even gastronomy, they also espoused a love of speed, technology, and violence. Futurists dubbed the love of the past passéisme. The car, the plane, the motorcycle the industrial town were all legendary for the Futurists, because they represented the technological triumph of people over nature. On the downside it also glorified war, apparently denigrated women, initially favoured Fascism and vilified artistic tradition wanting to '…destroy the museums, libraries, academies of every kind.

During World War I Balla's studio became the meeting place for young artists but by the end of the war the Futurist movement was showing signs of decline. In 1935 he was made a member of Rome's Accademia di San Luca.

Balla participated in the documenta 1 1955 in Kassel, Germany, his work was also shown postmortem during the documenta 8 in 1987.

Giacomo Balla died in Rome on March 1, 1958."

No comments: