Artigo Acesso aberto

“Un’idea del Brasile”

2020; Volume: 4; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.24978/mod.v4i1.4537

ISSN

2526-2963

Autores

Paolo Rusconi,

Tópico(s)

Italian Literature and Culture

Resumo

The biography of Pietro Maria Bardi (1900-1999), journalist, art dealer, and founder of MASP (Museu de Arte de São Paulo), presents itself as an exemplary story of Italian intellectual migration to South America during the second half of the 20th Century. This paper privileges a perspective that, taking into consideration the latest results of historiographical research, aims at explaining his vision of Brazil through the relationships previously formed into Fascist Italy and through the dense overlap initiatives related to the experimentation of modern artistic languages. Bardi’s first journey to South America has been in 1933, when he organised and staged an exhibition of new modern Italian architecture. The aim of the trip was to create a consensus around fascism abroad, although the rhetoric of the approach was soon embraced by modernist experiences, particularly by Le Corbusier. The following travel, in 1946 to Brazil, corresponded, for him, to a second life. Around the MASP project, he established a creative colony of artists and architects who took to Brazil the experiences of modernity matured in Europe. The experiences achieved in the urban environment of tropical expanding metropolis, such as the travels to the coasts and the inland areas of Brazil, discovering the nature, the folklore and the native cultures, were crucial sources of inspiration for intellectuals and artists, like the young Italians Roberto Sambonet and Gastone Novelli, who kept a gaze close to the Avant-Garde expressive syntaxes.

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