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Who's Afraid of Drawing

Works on Paper from the Ramo Collection


  • Silvana
  • by Irina Zucca Alessandrelli
This book is the outcome of a project of acquisitions conducted over a period of many years which has led to the creation of Pino Rabolini's Collezione Ramo, comprising some 600 drawings by Italian artists spanning a period stretching from the early years of the twentieth century to the 1990s, before art became contemporary. On this occasion approximately one hundred works are presented, illustrating the quality and importance of this artistic medium, and placing Italian production at the cutting edge on th

ISBN 9788836641888 | E | PB
€30,00
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Publisher Silvana
ISBN 9788836641888
Author(s) Irina Zucca Alessandrelli
Publication date April 2019
Edition Paperback
Dimensions 215 x 211 mm
Pages 104
Language(s) Eng. ed.
Description

This book is the outcome of a project of acquisitions conducted over a period of many years which has led to the creation of Pino Rabolini's Collezione Ramo, comprising some 600 drawings by Italian artists spanning a period stretching from the early years of the twentieth century to the 1990s, before art became contemporary. On this occasion approximately one hundred works are presented, illustrating the quality and importance of this artistic medium, and placing Italian production at the cutting edge on the international stage.

One hundred works on paper from the Ramo Collection illustrate the quality and importance of drawing in twentieth-century Italian art
Published to accompany an exhibition at the Estorick Collection, London, from April 17th - June 23rd, 2019

Drawing - as paper-based work, in whatever technique - is the load-bearing skeleton for much experimentation, a preferred artistic medium for painters and sculptors and, often, the first visualisation of an idea. Drawing acquires its vital force from daily artistic practice; it is not cancelled or corrected because it captures the first formalisation of a creative thought that may not be intended to be shared with the public: its first (and sometimes only spectator is the artist himself.