Ermenegildo Luppi
Ermenegildo Luppi (1877–1937) was an Italian sculptor.
Born in Modena, Luppi studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in his hometown under sculptor Giuseppe Gibellini. He moved to Rome in 1901, studying under Ettore Ferrari, and began exhibiting around 1903. After continuing his education in Florence in 1906 and 1907, Luppi returned to Rome permanently in 1907.[1]
Winning increasingly important government commissions, Luppi graduated from producing freestanding statues for exhibition into architectural sculpture and war memorials. A tendency towards Fascist imagery and style is clear in his mid-1920s memorials for Modena and Avezzano, both with powerful central figures of Victory. Political content becomes explicit in 1934 at the Palazzo del Podestà, now the City Hall of Foggia, where Luppi contributed two sculpted exterior panels which both feature a muscular Mussolini in heroic poses.[2]
Among other honors, Luppi was made a commander of the Order of the Crown of Italy and was elected to the Accademia di San Luca. He died in 1937.
Work[]
Luppi's work includes:
- exterior frieze Corteo della Bellezza e della Forza, for the Galleria Nazionale d'Arte Moderna building, Rome, architect Cesare Bazzani (1911)
- Pieta, Cimitero di Brescia, Brescia (1922) [3]
- Monument to the Fallen of Modena in the First World War, along Viale Martiri della Libertà, Modena (1923–1926; unveiled 1929)
- a similar Monumento ai Caduti in Avezzano (1925–1928)
- seven of the historical busts in the gardens of the Janiculum, Rome (Gabriele Martucci della Spada, Luigi Miceli, Paolo Narducci, Domenico Piva, Ricciotti Garibaldi, Bernardino Serafini, and Augusto Valenzani, completed between 1925 and 1937)[4]
- Dublin Lamentation, Dublin, Ireland, with sculptor A. Gardini (1930) [5]
- two Mussolini panels, Palazzo del Podestà, Foggia, for architect Armando Brasini (1932)
- a ten-foot-tall white marble Angel of Memory by Luppi stands in the "Great Mausoleum" of Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Los Angeles, California, close to the grave of Elizabeth Taylor[6]
Gallery[]
Modena war memorial
Avezzano war memorial
Pietà in the monumental cemetery in Brescia
References[]
- ^ http://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/ricerca/luppi/ (Italian-language)
- ^ "INDEX | FASCISMO - ARCHITETTU". artefascista.it. Retrieved 2016-01-22.
- ^ http://www.enciclopediabresciana.it/enciclopedia/index.php?title=LUPPI_Ermenegildo (Italian language)
- ^ http://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/ermenegildo-luppi_(Dizionario_Biografico)/ (Italian language)
- ^ "Home / Accueil/-Mat-27,45_Entombment,freedom_Tombeau, liberation/17_21th_siecle/20 LUPPI DUBLIN LAMENTATION". artbible.net. Retrieved 2016-01-22.
- ^ "Elizabeth Taylor buried next to Angel at Forest Lawn". archive.azcentral.com. Retrieved 2016-01-22.
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- 1877 births
- 1937 deaths
- 20th-century Italian sculptors
- 20th-century male artists
- Italian male sculptors
- Members of the Rome Guild of Saint Luke
- Artists from Modena