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내 계정 위시리스트 장바구니

1896 - 1956

주요 정보

  • Topics explored:
    • still life
    • italian art
    • impressionism
  • Born: 1896
  • Top 3 works:
    • Still life with Mushrooms
    • Untitled (976)
    • Strawberries. Still Life
  • Died: 1956
  • Copyright status: Public domain
  • Creative periods: mature period
  • Also known as: Luigi Filippo Tibertelli
  • Works on APS: 59
  • 더 보기…
  • Art period: Modern
  • Top-ranked work: Still life with Mushrooms
  • Color intensity: vivid
  • Lifespan: 60 years
  • Typical colors: warm
  • Museums on APS: Galleria d'Arte Moderna Achille Forti
  • Movements:
    • impressionism
    • post-impressionism

예술 상식 퀴즈

각 질문의 정답은 하나뿐입니다.

질문 1:
What artistic movement is Filippo De Pisis primarily associated with?
질문 2:
De Pisis’s paintings often explore a concept known as “pathetic pleasure-pain”. What does this term refer to?
질문 3:
Which city is frequently depicted in De Pisis’s cityscape paintings?
질문 4:
What technique is commonly employed by De Pisis to create textured surfaces in his still lifes?
질문 5:
De Pisis’s artistic style can be described as:

The Poet of the Fleeting Moment

Born Luigi Filippo Tibertelli in the historic Italian city of Ferrara, Filippo De Pisis was an artist who refused to be confined by a single medium. To understand his canvas, one must first understand his soul as a poet; he viewed the world through a lens of literary sensitivity, where every shadow and light flicker held a narrative weight. His early years in Italy were marked by a profound intellectual curiosity, studying literature and philosophy in Bologna. It was here that he encountered the haunting, dreamlike visions of Giorgio De Chirico, an encounter that would plant the seeds of Metaphysical influence within his burgeoning style. This duality—the precision of a scholar and the wandering eye of a flâneur—defined his approach to art, allowing him to capture not just the physical reality of a subject, but its emotional resonance.

His journey was one of constant movement across the great cultural capitals of Europe. Moving to Rome in 1919 and later settling in Paris in 1925, De Pisis immersed himself in the vibrant, avant-garde pulse of the interwar period. In Paris, his brushwork began to shed its more rigid, metaphysical origins, absorbing the light and movement of French Impressionism. He moved within the same circles as Georges Braque and André Derain, and his style evolved into something uniquely his own: a technique often described as pittura a zancapi mosca—a "fly-wing" style of painting characterized by rapid, fragmented, and nervous brushstrokes. This method allowed him to achieve an airy, almost mirage-like quality, where objects seemed to vibrate with life before dissolving back into the atmosphere.

A Symphony of Light and Melancholy

The heart of De Pisis’s oeuvre lies in his ability to find the eternal within the ephemeral. He possessed a singular talent for elevating the mundane—a simple arrangement of mushrooms, a bowl of strawberries, or a vase of foxgloves—into profound meditations on existence. His still lifes are never merely static arrangements; they are imbued with what he called "pathetic pleasure-pain," a bittersweet recognition of beauty's fleeting nature. Through muted pastel hues and a masterful command of Venetian light, he created compositions where the boundaries between objects and their surroundings blur, suggesting a deep, spiritual interconnectedness between all things.

His fascination with Venice provided much of his most luminous subject matter. The city’s architectural grandeur and its misty, maritime atmosphere served as the perfect stage for his expressive explorations. Whether depicting the rhythmic movement of a seascape or the quiet intimacy of a street scene, De Pisis utilized a broken brushstroke technique that captured the very essence of light hitting water or stone. This period of his work represents a pinnacle of Italian Post-Impressionism, where the artist’s technical skill met an almost obsessive devotion to capturing the "secret spirit" of the moment.

Legacy of the Cosmopolitan Visionary

Despite the disruptions of World War II and his eventual return to Italy, De Pisis never lost the cosmopolitan spirit that had defined his youth. His life was famously eccentric, marked by a dandyish lifestyle and an insatiable appetite for the beauty found in the smallest details—even claiming that a discarded feather on a street could spark a masterpiece. This radical openness to the world ensured that his work remained perpetually fresh, avoiding the stagnation that often plagues established masters.

Today, the significance of Filippo De Pisis rests in his unique position as a bridge between the structured metaphysical movements of the early 20th century and the more spontaneous, emotive expressions of later decades. His legacy is found in:

  • The fusion of poetry and painting: Proving that visual art can be as lyrical and metaphorically rich as the written word.
  • Mastery of atmosphere: Redefining how light and texture can convey complex psychological states like nostalgia and longing.
  • The elevation of the everyday: Transforming simple still lifes into profound explorations of beauty, decay, and the passage of time.

He remains a celebrated figure in the annals of Italian art, remembered not just as a painter of scenes, but as a chronicler of the ephemeral soul.