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                                                                         italian poster history

 

The Italian Poster
                     From Fashion to Futurism

The Scarcity of Italian Posters
Opera & The Rise of the Italian Poster
The Young Masters at Ricordi
Italian Modernism after WWI
The Triumph of Italian Design Between the Wars
World War II
The Post-War Economic Miracle



Long undervalued and neglected, vintage Italian poster art is today enjoying a renaissance as collectors and scholars rediscover its remarkable style. Up until the last few years, rarity, Italian disinterest, and negative political associations prevented the Italian poster from being properly appreciated. After years of collecting, in 1995 our Gallery presented The Italian Poster Rediscovered, the first major gallery exhibit of Italian poster masterpieces in the United States, which revealed the genius of the Italian poster.

The Scarcity of Italian Posters

Even though there was large scale Italian production of posters, relatively little has been preserved. In Italy there was less of a poster mania than in France, where poster collecting was a phenomenon starting in the 1890s. There were fewer clubs, expositions, publications and galleries which promoted posters and poster collecting.

Equally important, a high percentage of poster overruns were destroyed. It is believed that thousands of posters were thrown away when the Fascist regime took power. Printing warehouses were swept clean of anything reflecting "bourgeois values." Then, when the Allies liberated Italy at the end of WWII, many Italian citizens destroyed any Fascist posters in their possession and the printing warehouses were once again emptied.

Tragically, the largest remaining cache of classic Italian posters was destroyed in the late ‘60s when the great turn-of-the-century printer Ricordi threw out its archives to free up warehouse space. In most instances it retained only one copy of each poster for its collection.

All of these factors contribute to the scarcity of Italian posters on the market today, strongly affecting market prices.

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Opera & The Rise of the Italian Poster

The rise of the Italian poster is intimately tied to the opera, the only national cultural institution in Italy at the turn of the century. Ricordi, the music publisher of Verdi and Puccini, decided in 1874 to create an in-house printing operation to promote its music. It began by installing the most advanced German lithographic presses and hiring a brilliant German Art Nouveau master, Adolfo Hohenstein, to train a staff of Italian artists.

Though born in Russia of German parents, Hohenstein (1854-1928) understood the Italian spirit so thoroughly that he is often called the "Father of the Italian Poster." Hohenstein’s charming La Boheme of 1895 was his first great Italian opera poster. It revealed the artist’s absorption of French poster art, particularly Cheret, in its playful and carefree depiction of Bohemian life in Paris. Yet in its classically rich color harmonies and use of strong diagonals to build dramatic impact, the poster showed traits which would increasingly distinguish Italian poster art from other national traditions.

Indeed, La Boheme was the first in a string of increasingly large, dramatic and masterful opera posters Hohenstein would create at Ricordi before returning to Germany in 1906. His towering, 10-feet- tall 1896 poster for Puccini's Tosca perfectly echoed the melodrama, passion and spectacle of the Italian opera. This was followed in 1898 by his exquisite poster for Mascagni’s Iris and then the explosive Madama Butterfly in 1904. These posters, in their scale and magnificence, became the foundation for an Italian poster tradition which would rival that of France.

By 1895, Ricordi began to create posters for other clients such as Campari, the Milan newspaper Corriere della Sera, and the Mele Department store of Naples. Comprising more than 180 large- format posters over a 20 year period, Mele became Ricordi’s biggest account and one of the most important poster series of all time.

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The Young Masters at Ricordi

By the turn of the century, a brilliant stable of talents had emerged under the tutelage of Hohenstein at Ricordi. Artists such as Aleardo Villa, Marcello Dudovich, Leopoldo Metlicovitz, Aleardo Terzi, Achille Mauzan and Giovanni Mataloni brought Art Nouveau, known as Stile Liberty in Italy, to a world class level. Even Leonetto Cappiello, the young master who emigrated to Paris from Livorno, accepted commissions for Ricordi clients.

Leopoldo Metlicovitz (1868-1944) was Hohenstein’s greatest pupil. An Italian of Serbian descent, Metlicovitz came to Ricordi as a lithographer’s assistant in 1891, and within a year became its technical director. He went on to become Ricordi’s most prolific artist and its artistic director after Hohenstein left the firm.

Many of Metlicovitz’s greatest posters were allegorical. His prize-winning design for the 1906 International Exposition, which marked the opening of a locomotive tunnel through the Alps, is a dramatic portrayal of Mercury riding the engine on its maiden voyage. His spectacular image of Mercury racing alongside a speeding automobile for his Mostra del Ciclo e dell Automobile (1907) is likewise a masterpiece of poster art.

Metlicovitz’s greatest pupil was Marcello Dudovich (1878-1962), who joined Ricordi in 1897, left to work for the printer Edmondo Chappius in Bologna from 1899 to 1905, and returned to Ricordi in 1906. Dudovich rapidly developed the reputation as the leading poster artist in Italy, and did no less than 14 masterpieces for Mele. After his return to Ricordi, his style eliminated many Art Nouveau excesses for a more modern style. Between 1907 and 1914 he achieved a richness and monumentality scarcely achieved before or since in poster art.

A decisive influence in this transition from Art Nouveau to a simpler graphic style had been the arrival of Franz Laskoff at Ricordi in 1901. Laskoff (1869-1918) was born in Poland and had worked briefly in Paris before coming to Milan. His style was strongly influenced by England’s Beggarstaff Brothers, who reduced Art Nouveau to its graphic essentials. The Beggarstaff’s influence, along with that of the Japanese wood block print, is clear in his five masterpieces for Mele and his many works for Ricordi musical performances. Although Laskoff only stayed in Italy until 1904, his style had a decisive impact at Ricordi.

Leonetto Cappiello (1875-1942) first became famous as a caricaturist while visiting Paris in 1898, and went on to produce more than 1000 posters over a forty year career. Known as the father of modern advertising, Cappiello was the first to realize that a simple metaphor for a product could make a poster more memorable than all the floral complexity then in vogue. Cappiello became the dominant poster artist in Paris until Cassandre’s arrival two decades later, and had a decisive, international impact on the future of commercial poster art. His posters produced for Italian clients are among his rarest and best.

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Italian Modernism after WWI

World War I destroyed the happy world of "bourgeois realism" which reached its pinnacle in the Ricordi Mele posters. In fact, Italy had been undergoing major social and political change even before the war. It was revealed full force in the arts in 1909, with F.T. Marinetti’s ode to the modern world, Futurism. This avant-garde movement reveled in the power of the machine and the cacophony of the city. Its aggressively modernistic attitude represented a new generation bent on Italian nationalism, and social and artistic revolution.

Adopting Cubism as their starting point, the Italian Futurists invented devices such as "lines of force" to indicate the dynamism of high speed motion and the industrial age. Marinetti himself printed his manifestos on pages filled with wild combinations of typefaces arranged haphazardly, to destroy any sense of tradition. Equally novel solutions were developed in the graphic arts by leading Futurists Fortunato Depero, Nicolay Diulgheroff, and Lucio Venna.

Futurism proved too aggressive for most of Italian society and its consumer advertising. Indeed, it ultimately proved too radical for Mussolini and the Fascists, who shared its ardent nationalism and disdain for the stagnation of Italian society. The Futurists’ repeated attacks on Italian tradition contradicted Mussolini’s desire for a populist image which recalled the glory of ancient Rome.

A more conservative course was taken by a group of artists called Novecento (the Italian Twentieth Century Movement). Formed in 1922, this group was a reaction to the Futurists, and looked back to the simplicity of pre-war values and Italian tradition. Most famous among Novecento artists were the prestigious painter Mario Sironi and Marcello Nizzoli. The leading poster artists Dudovich, Boccasile, and Riccobaldi all were sympathetic to the ideals of the Novecento.

By the mid ‘20s a third alternative arose – Art Deco. This was an international style which combined Machine Age symbolism, Cubism, and exotic design from ancient Egypt, Crete and Greece. What resulted was a simplified, geometric style which romanticized and transformed everyday reality. In Italy, this style was uniquely influenced by Futurism and Fascism. The Futurist preoccupation with speed, power and dynamism was readily expressed in the new style. Equally well served was the Fascist desire to develop an image of monumental perfection that was both classic and modern.

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The Triumph of Italian Design between the Wars

In this atmosphere there was a remarkable outpouring of highly original and diverse graphic design. Cappiello and Dudovich were both at the height of their powers, the latter making an easy transition to a powerful Art Deco style. He created more than 100 designs for Italy’s leading department store Rinascente from the ‘20s through the ‘40s.

In many ways the work of Federico Seneca (1891-1976) was the perfect synthesis of these diverse tendencies. As the advertising director for Perugina-Buitoni from 1919 to 1929, he created stylized, tubular figures which revealed the influence of Leger and Depero and the whimsical memorability of Cappiello. Equally strong was the work of Severo Pozzati, or Sepo (1895-1983), who worked primarily in Paris and created masterpieces for Noveltex shirts and Motta bakery.

The two towering corporate clients of the inter-war years were Fiat and Campari. By the ‘20s, Fiat was the largest car company in Europe, and it became the first to open an advertising department. Its artists -- Riccobaldi, Codognato, Metlicovitz, Dudovich, Sironi, and De Chirico-- were the best Italy had to offer.

Campari continued its remarkable tradition of advertising posters through the ‘50s. Its roster of poster artists was staggering: Hohenstein, Cappiello, Metlicovitz, Dudovich, Mauzan, Sacchetti, Laskoff, Nizzoli, Sinopico, Depero and Munari all produced important images for the leading consumer franchise.

The other major client, of course, was the state, which commissioned posters for exhibitions, conferences, parades and other propaganda. Outstanding were the streamlined aviation posters of Umberto di Lazzaro and Luigi Martinati to celebrate Italo Balbo’s 1933 crossing of the Atlantic.

In 1933, new directions in Italian avant-garde design were marked by the opening of the Studio Boggeri in Milan. It’s most famous artist was Xanti Schawinsky, who brought his Bauhaus training to use in strong posters for Princeps and Illy Coffee. A sophisticated graphic language was also cultivated at Olivetti, with Marcello Nizzoli joining in 1938. With these developments, Italy was poised to be a leader in the international design movement after the war.

As the ‘30s progressed, Mussolini began to clamp down on the artistic diversity in Italy, much the same way as Hitler and Stalin had in Germany and the Soviet Union. As the war approached, he demanded more discipline and control over the population. By 1940, the grand, playful, kinetic and diverse world of Italian Art Deco was over.

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World War II

Italian war posters of WWII are amongst the most powerful, vitriolic and racist ever created. Perhaps due to the nation’s ambivalence about its alliance with Germany, artists were called on to stir the population with rabid images. One of the most notable was Gino Boccasile’s image of a Black American GI, resembling a gorilla, clutching the Venus de Milo which he has marked with a sale price of $2.

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The Post-War Economic Miracle

After a period of intense hardship after WWII, Italy made a stunning recovery in the late ‘50s and early ‘60s. The Italian genius for style in every field from automobiles to fashion design became recognized worldwide. In poster art, spectacular images were now created for the vibrant Italian film industry. Masters of the Italian film poster included Anselmo Ballester, Alfredo Capitani, Luigi Martinati and Ercole Brini. Many of the posters they created were for American films of the ‘30s and early ‘40s which had been banned during the Mussolini years.

The leading advertising poster artist of these years was Armando Testa, who created classic campaigns for Punt e Mes, Carpano, Pirelli, and the 1960 Olympic Games in Rome.

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Villa, Aleardo
E & A. Mele, 1899

 

 


Riccobaldi, Giuseppe
Fiat Rampa, 1928

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Hohenstein, Adolfo
La Boheme, 1895

 


Hohenstein, Adolfo
Iris, 1898

 


Metlicovitz, Leopoldo
Mele & C., c. 1907

 


Cappiello, Leonetto
Mele & C. Magazzini Italiani, 1904

 

 

 

 


Metlicovitz, Leopoldo
Esposizione Internazionale, 1906


Dudovich, Marcello
Stufa Weinhagen, 1906


Laskoff, Franz
Mele & C. Cappelli Paglie, 1902


Cappiello, Leonetto
Contratto, 1922



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Diulgheroff, Nicolay
Gran Paradiso Torino, 1930

 


Martinati, Luigi
Viii Gara Generale, 1935




Lenhart, Franz
Modiano, 1935

 


Seneca, Federico
Cioccolatini Perugina, 1928

 


Lazzaro, Umberto di
Roma-Chicago-New York, 1933

 


Boccasile, Gino
Cappello Bantam, 1938



Schawinsky, Xanti
Princeps, 1934

 

 

 

 

 





Boccasile, Gino
Venus, c1944

 

 

 


Anonymous
La Dolce Vita, 1959


 

 

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