NEW - Ugo Mulas - photographer
Images of street life in Milan and of New York art scene won acclaim
The photographer Ugo Mulas, much admired for the way he captured the street atmosphere of postwar Milan and for his portrayals of Andy Warhol and others in the Bohemian New York art scene of the 1960s, was born on this day in 1928 in Pozzolengo, a small town near the southern tip of Lake Garda. At one time part of Milan’s fashion community, another of Mulas’s claims to fame is having been the photographer who discovered Veruschka, a German aristocrat who became part of the supermodel generation of Twiggy and Jean Shrimpton in the 60s. Known for his meticulous approach to composition and lighting, and for the candid, spontaneous style of his work, illness denied Mulas a long life but he is widely seen as a pioneering figure in photography who had a profound impact on the art form. Little is known about Mulas’s early life other than that he studied at a classical lyceum and moved to Milan initially to study law, but then switched his focus to art, enrolling at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera. He was drawn towards the company of the artists and intellectuals who frequented the nearby Bar Jamaica. Read more…
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Lamberto Maggiorani - unlikely movie star
Factory worker who shot to fame in Bicycle Thieves
Lamberto Maggiorani, who found overnight fame after starring in the neorealist classic Bicycle Thieves (1948), was born on this day in 1909 in Rome. Maggiorani was cast in the role of Antonio Ricci, a father desperate for work to support his family in post-War Rome, who is offered a job pasting posters to advertising hoardings but can take it only on condition that he has a bicycle – essential for moving around the city carrying his ladder and bucket. He has one, but it has been pawned. To retrieve it, his wife, Marie, strips the bed of her dowry sheets, which the pawn shop takes in exchange for the bicycle. They are happy, because Antonio has a job which will support her, their son Bruno and their new baby. However, on his first day in the job the bicycle is stolen, snatched by a thief who waits for Antonio to climb to the top of his ladder before seizing his moment. The remainder of the film follows Antonio and Bruno as they try to find the bicycle. As a portrait of life among the disadvantaged working class in Rome in the late 1940s, the film is hailed as a masterpiece, director Vittorio de Sica and his screenwriter Cesare Zavattini fĂȘted by the critics for turning a little-known novel by Luigi Bartolini into a piece of cinema genius. Read more…
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Elisabetta Sirani – artist
Sudden death of talented young woman shocked Bologna
The brilliant Baroque painter and printmaker Elisabetta Sirani died in unexplained circumstances at the age of 27 on this day in 1665 in Bologna. The body of the artist was carried to the Chapel of the Rosary in the Basilica of San Domenico in Bologna to be mourned, not just by her family, but by an entire community as she was loved and respected as an important female painter. Elisabetta has been described as beautiful, focused and selfless and she became a symbol of the progressive city of Bologna, where the creativity of women was encouraged and they were able to express themselves through art and music. Elisabetta’s father, Giovanni Andrea Sirani, was himself an artist and she was trained in his studio, although contemporary writers have recorded that he was reluctant to teach her to paint in the Bolognese style, as established by artists in the city in the 16th and 17th centuries as a way to distinguish themselves from the artists of Florence and Rome. But Elisabetta acquired the technique anyway and became one of the most renowned painters in Bologna, overshadowing her father. Read more…
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Giovanni Maria Benzoni - sculptor
Roman collectors called him the ‘new Canova’
The sculptor Giovanni Maria Benzoni, who earned such fame in Rome in the mid-19th century that collectors and arts patrons in the city dubbed him the “new Canova” after the great Neoclassical sculptor Antonio Canova, was born on this day in 1809 in Songavazzo, a small mountain village in northern Lombardy. Benzoni sculpted many allegorical and mythological scenes, but also busts and funerary monuments. Songavazzo being just outside Clusone in the province of Bergamo, Benzoni was regarded as a bergamasco - a native of the ancient city - even though he spent much of his life in Rome. As such he was held in similar regard to bergamaschi celebrities such as the composer Gaetano Donizetti, the philologist Cardinal Angelo Mai and the painter Francesco Coghetti, all of whom lived in Rome during Benzoni’s time there. He was later commissioned to sculpt a monumental tomb for Cardinal Mai in the Basilica of Sant’Anastasia al Palatino in the centre of Rome. Benzoni’s parents, Giuseppe and Margherita, were farmers of modest means. Giovanni Maria worked briefly as a shepherd, but his father died when he was around 11 years old, after which he was sent to work in his uncle’s small carpentry shop at Riva di Solto, on the western shore of Lago d’Iseo, about 25km (16 miles) away. Read more…
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Maurizio Costanzo - talk show host
Journalist whose show was the longest running on Italian TV
Talk show host and writer Maurizio Costanzo was born on this day in 1938 in Rome. Costanzo spent more than 40 years in television. His eponymous programme, the Maurizio Costanzo Show, broke all records for longevity in Italian television. Launched on September 18, 1982, the current affairs programme continued for 27 years, alternating between Rete 4 and Canale 5, two of Italy's commercial television networks, part of the Mediaset group owned by former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi. Its run came to an end in 2009 but was relaunched on the satellite channel Mediaset Extra in 2014 and returned to terrestrial television in 2015, again on Rete 4. Costanzo began his media career in print journalism with the Rome newspaper Paese Sera at just 18 years old and by the time he was 22 he was in charge of the Rome office of the mass circulation magazine Grazia. After branching into radio, he switched to television in 1976, hosting the RAI programme BontĂ loro, which is considered to be Italy's first TV talk show. Others followed before the launch of the Maurizio Costanzo Show, which involved prominent politicians and others in the public eye, discussing major issues of the day. Read more…
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Book of the Day: Ugo Mulas: Creative Intersections, by Ugo Mulas
Ugo Mulas was one of the most important postwar international photographers. Self-taught, his career unfolded in close contact with the artistic and cultural scene in Milan. Having discovered Pop Art at the Venice Biennale in 1964, Mulas decided to go to the United States (1964–67), where he created a book titled New York: The New Art Scene (1967). His meetings with Robert Rauschenberg and Andy Warhol, and the discovery of the photographic works of Robert Frank and Lee Friedlander, helped bring about a change in his work in the 1960s, when he moved away from traditional reportage. Mulas brought about a profound reshaping of the historical function of photography: his aesthetic and phenomenological reflections led to a portfolio on Marcel Duchamp (1972) and to the Archivio per Milano project (1969–72). His last work, Verifiche (1968–72), sums up his experience and interaction with the art world. Creative Intersections is a collection of photographs exhibited in London in 2019, which presented artworks by Lucio Fontana, Pietro Consagra, Fausto Melotti, and Michelangelo Pistoletto from Mulas’ private collection, together with his own photographic works. Mulas sought to relate his eye to each of the artists in a specific way, sometimes in a cinematic key, giving birth to dynamic creative intersections between visual art and photography.(To the best of our knowledge, all material was factually accurate at the time of writing. In the case of individuals still living at the time of publication, some of the information may need updating.)
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