This work is accompanied by a Certificate of Authenticity from the Fondazione Marino Marini dated 22/02/2017 and is included in the archive under no. 759.
While most widely recognised as a sculptor, Marino Marini was also a prolific printmaker, engraver and painter whose subject matter ranged from imposing equestrian groups to semi abstracted figurative works. His idiosyncratic style is captured in Cavallo e Cavaliere, a portrait of horse and soldier, a motif that became a frequent subject. For Marini, this idiom encapsulated the true essence of human existence, as he once commented, “the entire history of humanity and nature can be found in the figure of the horse and rider, whatever the era. It is my way of narrating history. I need this personage to give life to the passions of man". Marini’s inherent belief in the transcendent nature of the horse and rider bestows upon his modernist work the same power of the monumental statues he was exposed to while studying in Florence. This however does not detract from his playful characterisation and application of materials that echo certain cubist and futurist influences whilst simultaneously hinting at the coming advent of abstraction.
Born in 1901, Marino Marini spent his formative years in the town of Pistoia in Tuscany, Italy. At the age of sixteen, he enrolled at the Accademia di Belle Arte in Florence before taking teaching posts in Monza. Throughout the 1920s Marini continued to explore different media becoming increasingly preoccupied by Etruscan art and counted the sculptor Arturo Martini among one of his greatest influences. Marini travelled widely throughout Europe in the subsequent years becoming close acquaintances with fellow contemporaries including Alberto Giacometti, Fritz Wotruba and Germaine Richier among others. In 1940 he received a professorship in sculpture at the prestigious Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera, Milan, where he permanently settled in 1946. Throughout his career, Marini exhibited frequently in major exhibitions such as MoMA’s Twentieth Century Italian Art show in 1949 which brought him into contact with the likes of Max Beckmann, Alexander Calder and Jean Arp.
In the early 1950s his work was toured around Europe and his craftsmanship rewarded when he earned the Grand Jury Prize for Sculpture at the 1952 Venice Biennale. In the period between 1960 and his death in 1980, Marini’s work was exhibited internationally at major institutions from the Galleria d’Arte Moderna in his native Milan to MoMa, as well as the National Museum of Modern Art in Tokyo, a testament to the far reaching and profound influence of his oeuvre. Most recently, the Peggy Guggenheim Museum in Venice had the first major retrospective of his work in recent decades. Marini's works on paper can be found in a large number of public collections, including the Tate.
While, perhaps, most
widely recognised as a sculptor, Marino Marini was also a prolific printmaker,
engraver and painter whose subject matter ranged from imposing equestrian
groups to semi abstracted figurative works. His idiosyncratic style is captured
in Cavallo e Cavaliere, a portrait of horse and soldier, a motif that
became a frequent subject. For Marini, this idiom encapsulated the true essence
of human existence, as he once commented, “the entire history of humanity and
nature can be found in the figure of the horse and rider, whatever the era. It
is my way of narrating history. I need this personage to give life to the
passions of man". Marini’s inherent belief in the transcendent nature of
the horse and rider bestows upon his modernist work the same power of the
monumental statues he was exposed to while studying in Florence. This however
does not detract from his playful characterisation and application of materials
that echo certain cubist and futurist influences whilst simultaneously hinting
at the coming advent of abstraction.
Born in 1901, Marino
Marini spent his formative years in the town of Pistoia in Tuscany, Italy. At
the age of sixteen, he enrolled at the Accademia di Belle Arte in Florence
before taking teaching posts in Monza. Throughout the 1920s Marini continued to
explore different media becoming increasingly preoccupied by Etruscan art and
counted the sculptor Arturo Martini among one of his greatest influences.
Marini travelled widely throughout Europe in the subsequent years becoming
close acquaintances with fellow contemporaries including Alberto Giacometti,
Fritz Wotruba and Germaine Richier among others. In 1940 he received a
professorship in sculpture at the prestigious Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera,
Milan, where he permanently settled in 1946. Throughout his career, Marini
exhibited frequently in major exhibitions such as MoMA’s Twentieth Century
Italian Art show in 1949 which brought him into contact with the likes of Max
Beckmann, Alexander Calder and Jean Arp.
In the early 1950s his
work was toured around Europe and his craftsmanship rewarded when he earnt the
Grand Jury Prize for Sculpture at the 1952 Venice Biennale. In the period
between 1960 and his death in 1980, Marini’s work was exhibited internationally
at major institutions from the Galleria d’Arte Moderna in his native Milan to
MoMa, as well as the National Museum of Modern Art in Tokyo, a testament to the
far reaching and profound influence of his oeuvre. Most recently, the Peggy
Guggenheim Museum in Venice had the first major retrospective of his work in
recent decades. Marini's works on paper can be found in a large number of
public collections, including the Tate.