Massimo Campigli (1895-1971), Le Sorelle (The Sisters), 1952
Massimo Campigli (1895-1971), Le Sorelle (The Sisters), 1952
Color lithograph
16 × 20 in
40.6 × 50.8 cm
Signed and numbered
Edition of 125
Lithograph has been removed from frame. The work is in very good condition, with a couple spots of foxing.
About: Beginning his career as a journalist, Massimo Campigli wrote for Futurist and Avant-garde magazines in Italy in the 1910s. After being taken as a prisoner of war during World War I, Campigli served as a foreign correspondent in Paris in 1919 before joining the “Paris Italians” artist group, which also included the Futurist Gino Severini and the Pittura Metafisica painter Giorgio de Chirico. Campigli began depicting almond-eyed, frozen figures in 1928 when a trip to Rome’s Villa Giulia left the artist fascinated with Etruscan art—the art produced in Italy between the 9th and 2nd centuries BCE. His most iconic works—pale, fresco-like paintings of women—mirrored a broader European revival of ancient art as a response to the horrors of World War I.