Amadeo
Modigliani
(1884-1920)
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Amedeo
Modigliani was born in Livorno on 12 July
1884 into a rich merchant family. Versed
in literature and art at an early age,
Modigliani took his first lessons in
drawing and painting between 1898 and
1900 at Guglielmo Micheli’s studio.
Modigliani was mainly fond of the Italian
Early Renaissance. In 1902 Modigliani
shared a studio in Florence with Oscar
Ghilia and became a pupil at the free
school for drawing from the
nude.
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A year later
Modigliani transferred to the Venice Academy, where he
spent a great deal of time studying the works of the Old
Masters and became familiar with international movements
in
art.
Modigliani
went to Paris in 1906
to study at the private Colarossi Academy. In 1907 he met
a young physician, Paul Alexandre, who was the first
person to promote his art reproductions. Alexandre not
only bought paintings and drawings of Modigliani’s; he
also helped to arrange the artist’s first commissions.
That same year Modigliani showed work at the Salon
d’Automne and a year later at the Salon des Indépendents.
The few pictures by Modigliani to have survived from that
period reveal the influence of the Fauves,
Toulouse-Lautrec, Matisse, Picasso and Cézanne. Paul
Alexandre introduced Modigliani to the sculptor Constantin
Brancusi and Modigliani began to sculpt under his
influence but he gave up sculpture in 1914 to devote
himself to painting. The same salient features are common
to both Modigliani’s sculpture and his painting: despite
mask-like stylization, a poignant grace and spirituality
inform Modigliani’s heads. His lasting fame rests on the
portraits of artists he did after
1914.
On the outbreak of the World
War I, Modigliani
volunteered for service but was exempted for health
reasons: two harsh attacks of tuberculosis had left him
weakened for the rest of his life. Modigliani began to
work with the art dealer Paul Guillaume and was also
supported by the Polish poet Léopold Zborovski and his
wife, doing many portraits of both. Modigliani’s first
one-man show was opened by the Galerie Berthe Weill on 3
December 1917 but was closed after only a few hours
because his nudes caused a public scandal. Modigliani left
Paris while it was under German siege in 1918 and went to
Nice with his mistress, Jeanne Hébuterne. There he did
some of his best known Hand painted fine art and some
landscapes. A daughter was born to him in Nice. In May
1919 Modigliani returned to Paris and went to England
several times, thus ensuring the successful sale of his
work there. Early in 1920, however, Modigliani again fell
sick of tuberculosis and died in Paris on 24
January.
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