Valori plastici

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Valori plastici
EditorMario Broglio
CategoriesCultural magazine
Founder
Founded1918
Final issue1922
CountryItaly
Based inRome
Language

Valori plastici (Italian: Plastic Values) was an Italian magazine published in Rome in Italian and French. The magazines existed between 1918 and 1922.

History and profile

Valori plastici was established in Rome by the painter and art collector Mario Broglio and his wife

metaphysical artwork. The magazine was modeled on the Bologna-based magazine La Raccolta.[4] It supported the art movement Return to order so as to create a change of direction from the extreme avant-garde art of the years up to 1918, taking its inspiration from traditional art instead.[5]

The term "return to order" to describe this renewed interest in tradition is said to derive from Le rappel a l'ordre, a book of essays by the poet and artist

revival of classicism
and realistic painting.

The magazine theorised the retrieval of national and

dialectics with a return to a classic figurative
source.

Bolshevik restoration. In his first article of April–May 1919, entitled Anadioménon, Savinio expounds the intellective and enigmatically atemporal intuition which animates the world of this new "metaphysical classicism".[7] Ardengo Soffici's book Primi principi di una estetica futurista (Italian: First principles of a futurist aesthetic) was serialized in the November-December 1919 issue of the magazine before its publication by the publishing house Vallecchi in 1920.[4][8]

Valori plastici ceased publication in 1922.[9]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Valori Plastici". Ketterer Kunst. Retrieved 22 January 2015.
  2. .
  3. ^ Morris, Roderick Conway (26 December 1998). "Italy's Radical Return to Order". The New York Times.
  4. ^
    ProQuest 1778448531
    .
  5. Einaudi
    (1981)
  6. metaphysical' painter Giorgio de Chirico. His work often dealt with philosophical and psychological
    themes, and he also was heavily concerned with the philosophy of art. Cf. Dictionary of Literary Biography s.v., p. 264. Detroit: Thomson Gale, 2002.
  7. ^ L. Parkinson Zamora, Magical Realism: Theory, History, Community, Duke University (1995)
  8. ^ Ardengo Soffici (1920). Primi principi di una estetica futurista (in Italian). Vallecchi.
  9. ^ Simona Storchi (July 2020). "Metaphysical Writing and the "Return to Order"". Italian Modern Art (4): 11.

Bibliography

External links