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Giacomo Manzù
Giacomo Manzù
Born in Bergamo, the son of a convent sacristan, Giacomo Manzùwas apprenticed to a carver and gilder at the age of 11. In 1928 he enrolled at the Institute of Art in Verona. The first period of Manzù's work (1928-1938) was one of research and experimentation, and he drew on a variety of sources: Donatello, the Romanesque high-relief doors of S. Zeno Maggiore in Verona, the archaic and Etruscan traditions, Auguste Rodin (whose work he discovered on a trip to Paris in 1936), and Medardo Rosso. The range of materials employed also reflected the experimental nature of Manzù's early period. He used wrought iron, copper, silver, polychromed stucco, granite, and wax. The end of this early period also shows, in addition to the choice of wax, his great interest in the modeling properties of this material handled in Rosso's manner. Red Mask (1936) and Susanna (1937) are particularly representative of this trend. Manzù's mature work dates from 1938, the year in which he turned to relief sculpture and first stated two recurring themes: the Crucifixion and the cardinal. His eight reliefs entitled Cristo nella nostra umanità (1938/1939) were controversial images, criticized by both the Church and the Fascists because they depicted the crucified Christ in contemporary terms. The image of the cardinal addressed itself to a different set of sculptural problems: Manzùwas concerned with modeling in the round, with large simple masses that emphasize the majesty of the churchman in his robes. The Crucifixion relief Manzùexecuted in 1942 was restated in the 1950 commission of Four Stations of the Cross for the church of S. Eugenio in Rome. In 1951 he did the high reliefs for Antwerp's Middelheimpark (Crucifixion and Entombment). The most extensive elaboration of the Crucifixion motif appears in two series that are smaller in scale and shallower in relief: Variations on the Theme of Cristo nella nostra umanità (1947-1957) and Variations on a Theme (1955-1965). The cardinal image also varied in scale and treatment, moving to life-size figures beginning in 1949. The degree of abstraction ranged from a 1948 Cardinal with greater attention to naturalistic details to a 1954 Cardinal with an angular orientation in space and obliteration of specific features. Manzùbecame a professor at the Brera Academy of Fine Arts in Milan in 1940. Two years later he won the Grand Prix of the Quadriennale in Rome for Francesca (1941). Essentially a full-length portrait, Francesca represents the third set of themes Manzùhandled: secular portraits and the female form. Included in this category are Portrait of a Lady (1946), numerous studies of dancers, and the theme of the artist and his model. Manzùfirst portrayed the artist and model theme in 1942 in relief. Later he depicted the subject fully modeled in the round; the Self-portrait with Model (1946) is a representative example. Manzù's work of the 1950s and 1960s included important public commissions, the majority being relief panels for European churches. Best known is the Portal of Death, the bronze doors for St. Peter's in Rome, completed in 1963. He won the international competition for the Portal in 1950. It portrays the deaths of saints and martyrs. Depicted on the inner side is the processional frieze Inauguration of the Second Vatican Council. Other doors executed by Manzùare the Door of Love for the Salzburg Cathedral, completed in 1958, and the portal reliefs for St. Laurents Church in Rotterdam, commissioned in 1966, the same year he was awarded the International Lenin Peace Prize. Further ReadingThe most complete book in English on Manzù's work is John Rewald, Giacomo Manzù (1967). The numerous plates, together with important biographical and bibliographic information, make this monograph extremely useful. Curtis Pepper, An Artist and the Pope (1968), is an informative appraisal of the St. Peter's commission based on personal recollections of the sculptor. See also Carlo Ludovico Ragghianti, Giacomo Manzù, Sculptor (1957). □ |
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Cite this article
"Giacomo Manzù." Encyclopedia of World Biography. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. 31 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>. "Giacomo Manzù." Encyclopedia of World Biography. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. (May 31, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404704186.html "Giacomo Manzù." Encyclopedia of World Biography. 2004. Retrieved May 31, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3404704186.html |
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Manzù, Giacomo
Manzù, Giacomo (b Bergamo, 22 Dec. 1908; d Rome, 17 Jan. 1991). Italian sculptor. From the age of 11, he worked successively for a woodcarver, a gilder, and a stuccoworker, but he was virtually self-taught as an artist. His early work was influenced by Egyptian and Etruscan art, but he then turned to a more Impressionistic style owing much to the example of Rodin and Medardo Rosso. In the 1940s he simplified his style, so that although the surface of his work is often animated, the feeling it produces is one of classic calm. His sculpture included nudes, portraits, and scenes from everyday life, but he was best known for religious subjects. In 1938 he produced his first figure of a cardinal, a type of work that became particularly associated with him. These figures have been variously interpreted as expressions of an anticlerical attitude or as glorifications of ecclesiastical dignity, but Manzù himself always said that he regarded them as still-lifes with no deeper significance than a plate of apples, representing ‘not the majesty of the church but the majesty of form’. His most famous work is the set of bronze doors he made for St Peter's in Rome after winning an international competition in 1950 (they were not completed until 1964). In 1958 he also completed a set of doors for Salzburg Cathedral and in 1968 one for the church of St Lawrence in Rotterdam. These works have been much- praised and show the possibility of producing sculpture that fits within a traditional religious context and yet is in a modern and personal idiom. Manzù also worked as an etcher, lithographer, and painter.
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Cite this article
IAN CHILVERS. "Manzù, Giacomo." The Oxford Dictionary of Art. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. 31 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>. IAN CHILVERS. "Manzù, Giacomo." The Oxford Dictionary of Art. 2004. Encyclopedia.com. (May 31, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O2-ManzGiacomo.html IAN CHILVERS. "Manzù, Giacomo." The Oxford Dictionary of Art. 2004. Retrieved May 31, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O2-ManzGiacomo.html |
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Manzù, Giacomo
Manzù, Giacomo (1908–91). Italian sculptor. From the age of 11, he worked successively for a woodcarver, a gilder, and a stucco-worker, but he was virtually self-taught as an artist. His early work was influenced by Egyptian and Etruscan art, but he then turned to a more Impressionistic style owing much to the example of Rodin and Medardo Rosso. In the 1940s he simplified his style, so that although the surface of his work is often animated, the feeling it produces is one of classic calm. His sculpture included nudes, portraits, and scenes from everyday life, but he was best known for religious subjects. In 1938 he produced his first figure of a cardinal, a type of work that became particularly associated with him. These figures have been variously interpreted as expressions of an anticlerical attitude or as glorifications of ecclesiastical dignity, but Manzù himself always said that he regarded them as still lifes with no deeper significance than a plate of apples, representing ‘not the majesty of the church but the majesty of form’. His most famous work is the set of bronze doors he made for St Peter's in Rome after winning an international competition in 1950 (they were not completed until 1964). In 1958 he also completed a set of doors for Salzburg Cathedral and in 1968 one for the church of St Lawrence in Rotterdam. These works have been much praised and show the possibility of producing sculpture that fits within a traditional religious context and yet is in a modern and personal idiom. Manzù also worked as an etcher, lithographer, and painter.
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Cite this article
IAN CHILVERS. "Manzù, Giacomo." The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists. 2003. Encyclopedia.com. 31 May. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>. IAN CHILVERS. "Manzù, Giacomo." The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists. 2003. Encyclopedia.com. (May 31, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O3-ManzGiacomo.html IAN CHILVERS. "Manzù, Giacomo." The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists. 2003. Retrieved May 31, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O3-ManzGiacomo.html |
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