Home Artists Giuseppe Capogrossi

Kooness

Giuseppe Capogrossi

1900 - 1972
Rome, Italy

0 Works exhibited on Kooness

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Works by Giuseppe Capogrossi

Giuseppe Capogrossi was born in 1900 in Rome. After earning a law degree in 1922, he decided to become an artist and began to study under the fresco painter Giambattista Conti, and later at the studio of Felice Carena. Around the same time he formed a close relationship with the painter Emanuele Cavalli, an association that would last some twenty years. In 1925 he attended the Casa d’Arte Bragaglia, and between 1927 and 1933 he traveled several times to Paris, where he became particularly interested in the work of Pablo Picasso, Amedeo Modigliani, and Pierre-Auguste Renoir.
In 1928 Capogrossi was invited to show at the Venice Biennale, and in 1932 he participated in the III Mostra del Sindacato Regionale Fascista Belle Arti del Lazio in Rome, showing paintings that revealed the influence of his time in Paris. In early 1933 he exhibited with Corrado Cagli and Cavalli (as part of the loosely associated group known as the Scuola Romana) at the Galleria del Milione in Milan, the epicenter of Italian abstract art. The reserved, pale color palette and subtle geometric cadences of his works from this period suggest his tutelage under fresco painters. Capogrossi was featured in several major exhibitions of Italian artists in the 1930s, including Exposition des peintres romains in Paris in 1933 and the Quadriennale of Rome in 1935; following the latter, critics recognized him as one of the major figures in the renewal of Roman painting.
In 1939 he was given his own room at the Quadriennale of Rome. The postwar years saw Capogrossi paint his first abstract works, and by the end of 1949 he had developed a distinct post-Cubist vocabulary of his own, formalizing a language of signs that involved the arrangement of comblike matrices in compositions that were at once logical and free, aligning him closely with the Art Informel movement. In 1951 he co-founded the Gruppo Origine with Mario Ballocco, Alberto Burri, and Ettore Colla, through which they hoped to promote the ideals of abstract art, including a reductive simplicity of expression. Capogrossi also worked as a teacher for a large part of his career. He participated in Documenta in Kassel in 1955 and 1959, and in 1974 the Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Moderna in Rome organized a major retrospective of his oeuvre. Capogrossi died in 1972 in Rome.