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| 60

PostWar & Contemporary

3408 GIUSEPPE SANTOMASO

(1907 Venice 1990)

Untitled. 1962.

Oil and dry pigments on canvas.

Signed and dated lower left: Santomaso

62, as well as on the reverse:

Santomaso 62.

30 x 105 cm.

This work is registered in the Archivio

Giuseppe Santomaso, Galleria Blu, Milan,

under number: sot /1605. We thank Galle-

ria Blu for their support.

Provenance: By descent to the present

owner, privately owned Switzerland.

While at the beginning of the 20th century

the avant-garde artistic movements were

still associated with specific countries

(Expressionism - Germany; Cubism -

France; Futurism – Italy; etc), the Abstract

Art movement after 1945 was noted

for its international character. Although

emanating from Paris, with Hans Hartung,

Georges Mathieu and others, Abstract Art

spread at an incredible pace, independent

of national boundaries. As well as the

fact that from the 1950s the world had

become smaller, thanks to the media and

the growth in tourism, it was especially the

case that, “the vocabulary of abstraction

[…] was taken up by many artists of almost

every country as a message of salvation.”

(cit.: Walther, Ingo (Ed.): Kunst des 20.

Jahrhundert. Teil 1. Malerei, Cologne 2000,

p. 239). Italy too was caught up in this

wave and influenced the development of

abstraction through artists such as Piero

Dorazio, Afro, Renato Birolli, Emilio Vedova

and Giuseppe Santomaso, with two of his

works being offered here at auction.

Born in Venice in 1907, Santomaso spent

his entire life, with a few breaks, in his

home city. In 1932 he began his studies

at the Art Academy in Venice, and just 2

years later he exhibited at the Biennale,

where he would participate 13 times in to-

tal. He began to be interested in the avant-

garde. Initially inspired by the art journal

VERVE, from 1937 he travelled first to The

Netherlands and then to Paris, in order to

see the work of the Impressionists and

Expressionists in the original. In 1939 he

exhibited for the first time in Paris at the

Galerie Rive Gauche. After World War II

Santomaso was one of the founder mem-

bers of the artist group “Nuova Secessione

Artistica Italian”, in which he endeavoured

to find a synthesis between abstraction

and realism, which was unsuccessful in the

end, however. In the mid 1950s he turned

to Informel Art, which we can see most ef-

fectively in the two works presented here.

In the 1970s he incorporated increasingly

architectural or constructive elements in

his works. He taught at the Art Academy

in Venice until his death. Alongside his

numerous appearances at the Biennale, he

was invited three times to the documenta

in Kassel and had numerous exhibitions in

international museums.

Giuseppe Santomaso’s works of the 1960s

and 70s are abstract landscapes in which

the colour palette is influenced by the

light of Venice and the composition by the

architecture of his home city. He sought

a way into abstraction via an examination

of nature, without losing that relationship

to nature. Consequently, his work often

strikes us as less radical and rather reti-

cent, and yet it is always clear to the viewer

that Santomaso’s point of departure is

that of nature and lived experience, which

makes our access to his work both more

intense and at the same time simpler.

CHF 30 000 / 50 000

(€ 27 780 / 46 300)