
Natura
Morta (still life)
(oil on canvas, 1956)
Museo
di arte moderna e contemporanea di Trento e Rovereto
Giorgio
Morandi is one of those painters who, at first glance, seem
to defy categorisation. He was nicknamed ‘il monaco’
(the monk) due to his reclusive lifestyle. Morandi
spent most of his life in his native town of Bologna, both
living and painting in his flat, and seldom venturing far
afield. This gave rise to his initial reputation as a provincial
artist, but the obvious quality of his paintings gradually
forced a reappraisal of his work and established him as one
of the best modern Italian painters and its greatest master
of Natura Morta (still life) in the 20th century.
Although
Morandi does not fit comfortably into to the canon of movements
in modern art, his paintings are stylistically embedded in
the Italian tradition. Initially influenced by the metaphysical
painting of his countrymen, Giorgio de Chirico and Carlo Carrà,
his work was also deeply rooted in the art of the Early
Italian Renaissance, particularly Giotto, Uccello and
Piero della Francesca.

Morandi
Still Life (1955) and
San Gimignano - an Italian Medieval Town
Even
Morandi's compositions and choice of still lifes objects allude
to his Italian heritage. When assembled together in a still
life group, his dusty bottles and boxes take on an monumental
quality that evokes the architecture of medieval Italy - a
style with which he seems at ease. Morandi's own city of Bologna
has many examples of medieval architecture and is home to
the oldest functioning university in the world: the "Alma
Mater Studiorum", founded in 1088.
Morandi's
Still Life Objects
Morandi
deliberately limited his choice of still life objects to the
unremarkable bottles, boxes, jars, jugs and vases that were
commonly found in his everyday domestic environment. He would
then 'depersonalise' these objects by removing their labels
and painting them with a flat matt colour to eliminate any
lettering or reflections. In this condition they provided
him with an anonymous cast of ready-made forms that he could
arrange and rearrange to explore their abstract qualities
and relationships.

Francisco
de Zurbarán (1598-1664)
Still Life with Pottery Jars (oil on canvas, 1630s)
Museo
del Prado, Madrid
Still
life as the theatre of visual relationships had its roots
in some of the earliest examples of the genre. Francisco de
Zurbarán's 17th century masterpiece, 'Still Life
with Pottery Jars' parades four prima donnas, each competing
with the other for the attention of their audience. Morandi's
characters, however, are the opposite of these: a humble but
disciplined chorus singing in perfect harmony.
Morandi's
Intensity of Observation

Natura
Morta (still life)
(oil on canvas, 1929)
Museo
di arte moderna e contemporanea di Trento e Rovereto
In
the hands of a lesser artist, Morandi's restricted choice
of subject matter could give rise to a series of boring repetitive
images. What elevates his work to a higher plane is the remarkable
intensity of his observation.
Today,
we were bombarded with images from print and multimedia and
are accustomed to absorbing them at breakneck speed. To slow
down and focus on one image for a length of time is against
our conditioning, but this is precisely what Morandi does
in his painting and what he expects from his audience.
Like
Chardin,
the greatest still life painter of the 18th century, Morandi
always looked at his still life objects as if he was seeing
them for the first time. He slowly contemplated each object,
profoundly searching for its visual dynamic within the still
life group. When satisfied with an arrangement, he would draw
around the bases of the objects to finalise their positions.
"It takes me weeks to make up my mind which group of
bottles will go well with a particular coloured tablecloth......Then
it takes me weeks of thinking about the bottles themselves,
and yet often I still go wrong with the spaces. Perhaps I
work too fast?" It is this intensity of contemplation
and observation that gives a freshness and individuality to
each of Morandi's paintings, even if the same objects are
used repeatedly in different works.
Morandi's
Light

Still
Life with Cups and Boxes
(oil on canvas, 1951)
Kunstsammlung
Nordrhein-Westfalen, Dusseldorf
'I
am essentially a painter of the kind of still life composition
that communicates a sense of tranquility and privacy, moods
which I have always valued above all else'. Morandi's
carefully balanced colours and tones always convey a peaceful
mood. Some paintings are bright and sunlit, whereas others
are subdued with a less obvious light source. However, each
of his pictures has a certain quality of light that suggests
it was painted at a particular time of day or under specific
lighting conditions. This distinctive use of light and his
continuous exploration of similar images insinuates the influence
of Monet's serial paintings of 'Haystacks'
and 'Rouen
Cathedral'.

Natura
Morta (still life)
(oil on canvas, 1960)
Private Collection
If,
as Marcel Proust puts it, Chardin's still lifes were summoned
“out of the everlasting darkness in which they have
been interred”, then Morandi's still lifes slowly emerge
from the light that sculpts their form.
Given
Morandi's slow contemplation of the elements of his art and
the fact that he had to cope with the transient effects of
light, it is clear that his pictures were developed over a
long period of time. This helps to explain the uncertainty
of the outlines of his forms, as he grafts the subtleties
of one day's observations on top of the next. These wavering
images also recall the work of Paul
Cézanne who had a similarly patient approach to
painting.
The
unique style of Giorgio Morandi's work may be difficult to
place within the movements of modern art, but it is so steeped
in influences from Giotto in the 13th century to metaphysical
art in the 20th, that it acquires an ageless quality - a characteristic
that identifies most great art.
Giorgio
Morandi Notes
