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Marino MARINI
(1901-1980)
Born
in 1901 in Pistoia, Marini was trained as a painter in the
great Renaissance art center of Florence at the Academia di
Belle Arti. He drew small subjects from life, such as flowers,
birds and insects, and he also sculpted. Marini worked intensively,
experimenting with different materials, from terracotta to
wood and plaster combined with paint, which he also sometimes
used with bronze in order to accentuate forms and express
movement.
In 1928 he traveled to Paris where he made his début
as a sculptor, studied with Picasso and other leading modern
artists. He also was a close associate of Henry Moore. Marini
later returned to Italy, settling in Milan and teaching in
nearby Monza. During this period Marini exhibited at La Mostra
del Novecento Toscano at the Galleria Milano in Milan.
Marini was strongly influenced by the suffering he witnessed
in Italy during the war. In 1950, at about the time he was
gaining worldwide prominence, he described his work, as part
of a "new renaissance of sculpture in Italy, the new
humanist, the new reality."
Marini's work has an elemental simplicity and has almost
been limited, apart from his few portrait heads, to three
themes: the female figure, the rider and horse and dancers
and jugglers. All of these themes are symbolic, imbued with
meaning and significance drawn from his own mythology. His
typical female figure, the Pomona, Roman goddess of fruit
trees and hence a symbol of fertility, is archetypal of the
Mother Goddess. The rider and horse is a symbol equally universal
and is often interpreted as man riding and controlling his
instincts, the horse being the symbol of the animal component
in man, often specifically, the erotic instincts. The third
corner of Marini's personal mythical thematic triangle, the
dancers and jugglers, are an extension of the overall optimism
which breaks through in his sometimes cloudy vision. They
display a vibrancy, an attempt to escape from the restraints
and impositions of weight and space.
Marini gained international renown in the 1950s with three
major exhibitions of his work in Amsterdam, Brussels, and
New York where his "Great Horse" is displayed in
the Rockefeller Collection. His best-known work is the large
bronze horse and rider commissioned for the Guggenheim Museum
in Venice, Italy. Marini's working life covered more than
60 years of prodigious and prolific activity. He has had exhibitions
in almost every major city in the world and prizes, medals
and awards were constantly accorded him. Though Marini died
in 1980, his works - sculpture, painting and graphics - live
on, a continuing testament to a "Master" artist.
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