Umberto Bassignani (29 August 1878 – 21 January 1944) was an Italian sculptor. He designed public sculptures in Italy, France, Switzerland, Russia and Monaco, where he had an atelier.
Umberto Bassignani | |
---|---|
Born | 29 August 1878 |
Died | 21 January 1944 | (aged 65)
Occupation | Sculptor |
Early life
editUmberto Bassignani was born on 29 August 1878 in Fivizzano, Tuscany, Italy.[1][2]
Career
editBassignani opened an atelier at 13 boulevard Charles III in Monaco in 1907.[2] He designed many sculptures in the Monaco Cemetery.[1][2] He exhibited his work at the Exposition Universelle et Internationale in Brussels in 1910, where he represented Monaco and he won a silver medal for a bust.[2]
Bassignani designed public sculptures in Italy, France, Switzerland, Russia and Monaco. For example, he designed the World War I monuments in his hometown of Fivizzano as well as in Vazzola.[1][2] In France, he designed sculptures in Paris, Nice, Aurillac and Peille.[2] His public sculptures can also be seen in Rostov, Russia, and in Geneva, Switzerland.[2] He also designed the fountain on the Place Saint Nicolas in Monaco-Ville in 1930.[1][2]
Bassignani left Monaco in 1939.[1]
Death and legacy
editBassignani died on 21 January 1944 in Lerici, Liguria, Italy.[1][2] On 2 May 2017, the mayor of Monaco, Georges Marsan, dedicated a commemorative plaque at the bottom of the fountain on the Place Saint Nicolas, with his name and dates.[2]
Further reading
edit- Benedetti, Amedeo (2015). Vita e opere di Umberto Bassignani, scultore. Pisa: il Campano. ISBN 9788865283028. OCLC 943780907.
References
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