Art collection of Fondazione Cariplo
The art collections of Fondazione Cariplo are a gallery of artworks with a significant historical and artistic value owned by Fondazione Cariplo in Italy. It consists of 767 paintings, 116 sculptures, 51 objects and furnishings dating from the 1st century to the second half of the 20th century.
The collection ranges from Late Antiquity stone sculpture, to wooden sculpture of Middle Ages, to Renaissance Italian painting and Baroque era, but achieves excellence with some of the masterpieces of 19th-century Italian painting and in particular Lombard painting.
History of the collections[]
The Cariplo bank (Savings Bank of the Lombardy Provinces) began to form the collection in 1923, originally through the acquisition of paintings and sculptures by contemporary artists exhibited in Milan with the aim to promote and encourage the arts in Lombardy. This policy continued after the Second World War, and increased with annual purchases of the and exhibitions of religious art at the Angelicum. Since the late 1960s, it began to make purchases at sales held by auction houses. The works of were added to its collection. It includes a portrait gallery of former Cariplo presidents. After the passage of the donations increased, including the (Manara Grolle, Marcenaro legacy). Completing the collection of presidential portraits at the Cariplo, are paintings and sculptures of the nineteenth and twentieth century depicting many of the protagonists of the modern Italian economy. The collection was inherited the aftermath of the Amato Law, the Cariplo Foundation increased as a result of subsequent donations (legacy Manara, Grolla, Marcenaro). In 2011 within the project, Share Your Knowledge, the foundation was made available under CC BY-SA boards of authors and works of art, including low-resolution images of the works in their collections.[1]
Gallerie di Piazza Scala[]
On November 3, 2011 it opened Gallerie di Piazza Scala in Milan, a museum dedicated to the 19th Century art, thanks to the collaboration of Fondazione Cariplo and Intesa Sanpaolo. It hosts 197 artworks (135 from the Fondazione Cariplo collections and 62 from Intesa San Paolo), along a path that begins with the Antonio Canova bas-reliefs and ends with works by Umberto Boccioni.[2]
List of artists in the collections[]
- A
- Vincenzo Abbati
- Mario Acerbi
- Francesco Albotto
- Luca Alinari
- Aldo Andreani
- Fausto Antonioli
- Andrea Appiani
- Silvestro Ariscola
- B
- Alessandro Barbieri
- Contardo Barbieri
- Donato Barcaglia
- Jacopo Bassano (bottega di)
- Francesco Battaglioli
- Ernesto Bazzaro
- Leonardo Bazzaro
- Alberto Bazzoni
- Giorgio Belloni
- Nicolas Berchem
- Mario Bettinelli
- Bartolomeo Bezzi
- Mosè Bianchi
- Giuseppe Biasi
- Mario Biazzi
- Osvaldo Bignami
- Adriana Bisi Fabbri
- Fulvia Bisi
- Luigi Bisi
- Giovanni Boldini
- Arturo Bonfanti
- Leonardo Borgese
- Pompeo Borra
- Odoardo Borrani
- Timo Bortolotti
- Giovanni Brancaccio
- Remo Brindisi
- Anselmo Bucci
- C
- Ercole Calvi
- Pompeo Calvi
- Carlo Canella
- Giuseppe Canella
- Pietro Canonica
- Antonio Canova
- Innocente Cantinotti
- Giovanni Bernardo Carbone
- Filippo Carcano
- Luca Carlevarijs
- Giovanni Carnovali
- Aldo Carpi
- Rosalba Carriera
- Michele Cascella
- Daphne Casorati Maugham
- Giannino Castiglioni
- Vincenzo Catena (bottega di)
- Achille Cattaneo
- Ludovico Cavaleri
- Carlo Ceresa
- Gaetano Chierici
- Beppe Ciardi
- Emma Ciardi
- Guglielmo Ciardi
- Antonio Cifrondi
- Pier Francesco Cittadini
- Viviano Codazzi
- Enrico Coleman
- Augusto Colombo
- Luigi Conconi
- Aldo Conti
- Giovanni Costa
- Jacques Courtois
- Giuseppe Maria Crespi
- Carlo Cressini
- D
- Edoardo Dalbono
- Angelo Dall'Oca Bianca
- Giovanni Stefano Danedi
- Arturo Dazzi
- Sebastiano De Albertis
- Cristoforo De Amicis
- Nicolas De Corsi
- Raffaele De Grada
- Filippo De Pisis
- Francesco De Rocchi
- Jules Jean-Baptiste Dehaussy
- Lorenzo Delleani
- Michele Desubleo
- Beppe Devalle
- Filippo Teodoro di Liagno
- Antonio Discovolo
- Gaspare Diziani
- Carlo Donelli
- Antonio Donghi
- Leonardo Dudreville
- Gaspard Dughet
- E
- F
- Fabio Fabbi
- Guido Farina
- Gennaro Favai
- Giacomo Favretto
- Adolfo Feragutti Visconti
- Gregorio Fernandez
- Arturo Ferrari
- Carlo Ferrari
- Francesco Filippini
- Alessandro Focosi
- Pietro Foglia
- Enrico Fonda
- Achille Formis
- Piero Fornasetti
- Innocenzo Fraccaroli
- Pietro Fragiacomo
- Felicita Frai
- Émile Friant
- Donato Frisia
- Achille Funi
- G
- Giacomo Gandi
- Vincenzo Gemito
- Franco Gentilini
- Melchiorre Gherardini
- Eugenio Gignous
- Lorenzo Gignous
- Luigi Gioli
- Luca Giordano
- Bartolomeo Giuliano
- Piero Giunni
- Francesco Gnecchi
- Emilio Gola
- Marco Gozzi
- Nicola Grassi
- Giacomo Grosso
- Orazio Costante Grossoni
- Giuseppe Guerreschi
- Virgilio Guidi
- Bartolomeo Guidobono
- Renato Guttuso
- H
- Francesco Hayez
- I
- Domenico Induno
- Gerolamo Induno
- Angelo Inganni
- Vincenzo Irolli
- J
- Pio Joris
- K
- L
- Dino Lanaro
- Andrea Lanzani
- Cesare Laurenti
- Giovanni Battista Lelli
- Umberto Lilloni
- Francesco Lojacono
- Emilio Longoni
- Alessandro Lupo
- M
- Cesare Maggi
- Giuseppe Maggiolini
- Emilio Magistretti
- Giovanni Maimeri
- Carlo Mancini
- Francesco Mancini (1830–1905)
- Luigi Mantovani
- Giacomo Manzù
- Pompeo Mariani
- Arturo Martini
- Carlo Martini
- Guido Marussig
- Arrigo Renato Marzola
- Giuseppe Mascarini
- Aldo Mazza
- Francesco Messina
- Francesco Paolo Michetti
- Giovanni Migliara
- Vincenzo Migliaro
- Alessandro Milesi
- Arrigo Minerbi
- Federico Moja
- Giuseppe Molteni
- Giuseppe Montanari
- Cesare Monti
- Angelo Morbelli
- Gabriele Mucchi
- N
- Renato Natali
- Mario Nigro
- Plinio Nomellini
- Luigi Nono
- Pietro Novelli
- Giuseppe Novello
- O
- Pasquale Ottino
- P
- Eleuterio Pagliano
- Giuseppe Palanti
- Filippo Palizzi
- Giuseppe Palizzi
- Antonio Pasinetti
- Lazzaro Pasini
- Riccardo Pellegrini
- Ugo Piatti
- Antonio Piccinni
- Carlo Pizzi
- Lodovico Pogliaghi
- Silvio Poma
- Giacomo Antonio Ponsonelli
- Attilio Pratella
- Luigi Premazzi
- Gaetano Previati
- Giulio Cesare Procaccini
- Scipione Pulzone
- Q
- R
- Aldo Raimondi
- Camillo Rapetti
- Alonzo Rodriguez
- Pietro Ronzoni
- Johann Heinrich Roos
- Ottone Rosai
- Giulio Rossi
- Luigi Rossi
- Francesco Rustici
- S
- Paolo Sala
- Francesco Sartorelli
- Giulio Aristide Sartorio
- Aligi Sassu
- Gregorio Sciltian
- Giovanni Segantini
- Telemaco Signorini
- Giuseppe Simonelli
- Francesco Simonini
- Mario Sironi
- Ardengo Soffici
- Giuseppe Solenghi
- Emilio Sommariva
- Giovanni Sottocornola
- Armando Spadini
- Ilario Spolverini
- T
- Cesare Tallone
- Guido Tallone
- Orfeo Tamburi
- Giovanni Battista Tiepolo
- Fiorenzo Tomea
- Adolfo Tommasi
- Ludovico Tommasi
- Arturo Tosi
- Ernesto Treccani
- Angelo Trezzini
- Giulio Turcato
- U
- Stefano Ussi
- V
- Francesco Valaperta
- Simon Johannes van Douw
- Gaspar Van Wittel
- Francesco Vanni
- Alessandro Varotari
- Vincenzo Vela
- Mario Vellani Marchi
- Gaspare Venturini
- Renato Vernizzi
- Volterrano Volterrani
- W
- Richard Wilson
- Teodoro Wolf Ferrari
- X
- Ettore Ximenes
- Z
- Giuseppe Zais
- Adelina Zandrino
- Vittore Zanetti Zilla
- Bartholomaeus Zeitblom
- Luigi Zuccoli
See also[]
- Fondazione Cariplo
- Gallerie di Piazza Scala
References[]
- ^ Moleskine. "WikiAfrica - Share Your Knowledge". lettera27. Creative Commons Attribuzione. Retrieved 23 November 2015.
- ^ Apre il Museo della Collezione d'arte Cariplo, News about the opening of the 19th century museum in Milan, Fondazione Cariplo website, 2011-06-01
- Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio delle Province Lombarde, Le collezioni d'arte - Dal Classico al Neoclassico, ed. Maria Luisa Gatti Perer, 1998
- Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio delle Province Lombarde, Le collezioni d'arte - L'Ottocento, ed. Sergio Rebora, 1999
- Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio delle Province Lombarde, Le collezioni d'arte - Il Novecento, ed. Sergio Rebora, 2000
External links[]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Artgate Fondazione Cariplo. |
- Official opening of Gallerie d'Italia - Piazza Scala (on Wikinews - Italian)
- Artgate Fondazione Cariplo
- Art museums and galleries in Milan
- Gallerie di Piazza Scala
- Private art collections
- Tourist attractions in Milan