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6 Paintings to Visit at the Pinacoteca di Brera

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The Pinacoteca di Brera was founded in Milan in 1809, and it grew to become one of the largest art galleries in Italy. Its collection includes artworks that reach from 4000 BCE through the 20th century. This list includes just six of its notable paintings.

Earlier versions of the descriptions of these paintings first appeared in 1001 Paintings You Must See Before You Die, edited by Stephen Farthing (2018). Writers’ names appear in parentheses.

  • A Fight in the Arcade (1910)

    Written the same year that he executed this painting, Umberto Boccioni’s Manifesto of Futurist Painters is full of active and aggressive words such as “fight,” “vicious,” and “contempt.” This violence is also present in A Fight in the Arcade (or Riot in the Gallery), which shows a large group of upper-class people breaking out in hysteria in Milan’s most famous shopping arcade. Most of the formally dressed figures are running with their arms above them, all converging on the work’s focal point as if it is a vortex sucking them in. In this area are two women, most likely prostitutes, engaged in a fight. Yet Boccioni does not draw us into the scene—in fact, he scares the viewer off through the blinding lights of the café and the man facing toward us in the foreground who gestures for us to leave. By emphasizing the speed and movement of the modern city, the painting can be likened to other Futurist works. Futurism was largely an early 20th-century Italian and Russian movement. Led by the Italian Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, Futurists rejected traditional notions of art and the past in general. In spite of such claims, one cannot refute that A Fight in the Arcade exhibits a debt to art of the recent past. It is known that Boccioni studied Impressionist and Post-Impressionist styles in Paris in 1902, and his use of color here reflects this knowledge. Furthermore, the way in which he often applies the paint in small rather than continuous lines is similar to pointillism (or “dot”) technique that was pioneered by the late-19th-century artist Georges Seurat. (William Davies)

  • The Kiss (1859)

    Francesco Hayez was one of the leading artists of Italian Romanticism, although much of his career is difficult to assess since he often neither signed nor dated his works. Born in Venice into a relatively poor family of French and Italian parentage, he was apprenticed to an art restorer and later the artists Antonio Canova, Teodoro Matteini, and Francisco Magiotto. He received a Neoclassical training that he applied to a variety of historical paintings, political allegories, and finely rendered portraits realized throughout the course of his career. He was also the key figure in the transition from Neoclassicism to Romanticism in Italy, although his form of Romanticism is more apparent in his subject matter than in his technique. Remarkable in its intense clarity of light, The Kiss depicts a genteel young couple engaged in a charged, passionate encounter. The man and woman embrace as if they are stealing a forbidden kiss in a forbidden place; the woman’s hand is electrified with passion, the man’s hand soft on her face. The lyrical shadow to their right draws our eyes to the length of her sensuous, draping skirt. Eroticism and emotion are carried in the dimension and interplay of highlights within this intricately rendered silk. A famous symbol of Italian Romanticism, The Kiss is shadowed with an air of hazy nostalgia and tender melancholy. It demonstrates Hayez’s ordered, Neoclassical composition and refined, narrative style, but it is his luscious use of light that makes it a truly intimate pleasure. (Sara White Wilson)

  • Le Nord-Sud (1912)

    Italian Gino Severini moved to Paris from Rome to be at the epicenter of avant-garde activity, where, by 1912, his early Divisionist work exploring the constituents of light was integrated with the fragmented and overlapping forms of Cubism. In contact with his compatriot Marinetti, leader of the Italian Futurists, Severini signed on to the movement in the first Manifesto, embracing the speed and energy of the modern age and setting his subjects in motion. Extended northbound in 1912, the Nord-Sud Line A ran from Notre-Dame-de-Lorette to Jules Joffrin, passing through Pigalle, Severini’s local station. The Metro offered the kind of dynamic subject beloved of the Futurist painters, although unusual for Severini, who tended to focus on the modern movements of dancers in popular nightclubs. His Le Nord-Sud hops about with complementary colors mauve and yellow partnering one another, applied densely in a mosaic of patches. Suggesting the glazed tiles under electric light, these dappled surfaces are pierced by chevrons and semicircles in gray, brown, and black, tunnel openings, staircases and reflections on glass. Truncated advertising and platform announcements add to the impression of noise as well as movement. The effect is analogous to the accumulation of sensations in the mind of a traveling passenger. Exhibited in London in 1913, Le Nord-Sud particularly impressed the British painter Christopher Nevinson, who became involved in the Futurist movement. (Zoë Telford)

  • The Metaphysical Muse (1917)

    A mannequin-style female tennis player stands, ball and racket ready, stage left of a visually arresting juxtaposition of geometric objects and images set in a claustrophobic interior. This painting is a prime example of Carlo Carrà’s pittura metafisica (metaphysical painting), a movement influenced by his friend and fellow Italian painter Giorgio de Chirico. The pair set out to convey in their paintings the extraordinary in ordinary, everyday objects. It is surreal in its effect, but there is something mathematical as much as metaphysical about the tableaux with the two canvases on which are painted factories and a map of Greece. Carrà dabbled in Futurism, an art movement that espoused dynamism and new technology, which he rejected to pursue his pittura metafisica. He eventually abandoned the latter to paint more melancholy works. (James Harrison)

  • Brera Madonna (Madonna and Child with Saints, Angels and Federico da Montefeltro; 1472–74)

    Along with his fascination with the effects of light, Piero della Francesca was deeply interested in architecture and geometry. Nowhere are these fascinations more keenly realized than in Piero’s Brera Madonna altarpiece, also known as the Montefeltro Altarpiece. Piero sets the devotional scene below a cassetted, vaultlike space at the back of which is an inlaid scallop-shell design. Suspended from the tip of the scallop is an ostrich egg—most likely a symbol of resurrection. Overall, the composition of the painting hinges on the contorted figure of the infant Christ, portrayed in the midst of sleep, which prefigures the Passion. The Brera Madonna is believed to have been commissioned by the then duke of Urbino, Federico da Montefeltro, for his recently deceased wife, Battista Sforza, who had died after giving birth to their son Guidobaldo. The features of the Virgin Mary are purportedly Battista’s, while the infant Christ resembles the newborn baby. Although there has been some debate as to the credibility of this interpretation, the presence of the kneeling, pious figure of Federico would appear to suggest that this is a votive work, functioning as a means by which he can be presented to his intercessors. As one of the last paintings executed by the artist, the meditative nature of the onlookers, the cool, entirely rational treatment of light and space, and the overall sense of harmony, proportion, and compositional balance are representative of Piero’s singular contribution to Quattrocento painting. (Craig Staff)

  • The Marriage of the Virgin (1504)

    The panel known as the Sposalizio (The Marriage of the Virgin) was commissioned by the Albizzini family for a church in the Città del Castello. Early 16th-century viewers would immediately have recognized the politics of the image. Directly in the center of the foreground is the elegant ring, which the Virgin at left nonchalantly receives from Joseph. This is no ordinary gentleman down on bended knee. He carries the flowering staff, which marks him as the chosen one and differentiates him from those of his rival suitors, one of whom breaks his staff in consternation. The Virgin Mary’s ring was the city of Perugia’s sacred relic. It had been stolen and then retrieved in the years prior to the painting of this work. The picture celebrates the controversial stance of the Virgin’s centrality in the church, a position that was defended by the Franciscans of the day, and for whom Raphael painted the picture. Perugino, Raphael’s elder master, painted an earlier picture of the same theme, and his influence is visible; nevertheless, the formal structure of Raphael’s composition here is deserving of its fame. Who could replicate such a remarkably clear perspectival landscape with architecture so artfully conceived? The vanishing point penetrates the front door of the temple, and by doing so it cleverly draws the eye of the viewer through the picture from the primary action of the foreground to the social context of the middle and on to the azure sky of the horizon. (Steven Pulimood)