Serafino De Tivoli

(Redirected from Serafino de Tivoli)

Serafino De Tivoli (March 1826 – 1892) was an Italian painter of the Macchiaioli group, often referred to as "the father of the macchia" in recognition of his crucial influence on the group's innovative technique.

Serafino De Tivoli in 1875

Biography

edit
 
Una pastura (1859)

Serafino De Tivoli was born in Livorno, Grand Duchy of Tuscany in 1826. He was the first son of Abramo Samuel and Fortunata Moro. In 1836 he moved with his family to Florence. After initial study of literature at a religious private school he attended with his younger brother Felice, he began his artistic training under Carlo Markò the Elder.

In 1848, he fought as a Tuscan volunteer for Garibaldi in the Risorgimento, fighting in Curtatone and contributing in 1849 to the defense of the Roman Republic. Returned to Florence after completion of his military duties, he was one of the first who started frequenting the Caffè Michelangiolo, where he quickly became a regular and spent hours discussing political and art topics with other artists, especially those who would later become known as the Macchiaioli. He bonded in particular with Telemaco Signorini, Vito D'Ancona, and the caricaturist Angiolo Tricca. In these years, he focused on the painting of landscapes en plein air, mostly in the Tuscan countryside. To this purpose, in 1853 along with few other artists, he founded the "Scuola di Staggia", where the artists were meeting for outside painting sessions, often painting the same subject and pursuing experimental techniques and usage of colors to depict the reality.

In 1855 he exhibited at the Florentine Promotrice exhibition, and in that same year he traveled to Paris for the Exposition Universelle, where he was greatly impressed by the paintings of the Barbizon school. He saw in their realism and powerful chiaroscuro a means of renewing art in the modern age. Upon his return to Florence he conveyed this new enthusiasm to his friends at the Caffè Michelangiolo, who quickly adopted and elaborated his ideas, and with whom he essentially started the Macchiaioli's movement. In recognition of the influence he had on his fellow Florentine artists, Telemaco Signorini called him "the father of the macchia".[1] These years between 1856 and 1862 yielded his best works.

In the following years, he made additional visits to Paris, and in 1863 he exhibited in the Salon des Refusés. After few years living in London with his brother Felice, in 1873 he moved to Paris, where he started frequenting the Café Guerbois and the Café de la Nouvelle-Athènes, thus associating with those artists that will soon found the Impressionism movement. He met such artists as Tissot and Pissarro, and became a friend of Degas. He also associated with Giovanni Boldini, Giuseppe De Nittis, Federico Zandomeneghi, Cristiano Banti, and his friend Vito D'Ancona, who had already moved to Paris in 1867. In 1879 and 1881, he exhibited at the Salon.

He returned to Florence in 1890, where he lived in relative isolation until his death in 1892.

Selected paintings

edit
 
Il ponte di legno (1857-1859)


Notes

edit
  1. ^ Steingräber, E., & Matteucci, G. 1984, p. 112.

References

edit
  • Broude, Norma (1987). The Macchiaioli: Italian Painters of the Nineteenth Century. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-03547-0
  • Steingräber, E., & Matteucci, G. (1984). The Macchiaioli: Tuscan Painters of the Sunlight : March 14-April 20, 1984. New York: Stair Sainty Matthiesen in association with Matthiesen, London. OCLC 70337478