Futurism began its transformation of Italian culture on February 20th, 1909, with the publication of the Futurist Manifesto, authored by writer Filippo Tommaso Marinetti.
It appeared on the front page of Le Figaro,
which was then the largest circulation newspaper in France, and the
stunt signaled the movement's desire to employ modern, popular means of
communication to spread its ideas. The group would issue more manifestos
as the years passed, but this summed up their spirit, celebrating the
"machine age", the triumph of technology over nature, and opposing
earlier artistic traditions. Marinetti's ideas drew the support of
artists Umberto Boccioni, Giacomo Balla, Gino Severini, and Carlo Carrà,
who believed that they could be translated into a modern, figurative
art which explored properties of space and movement. The movement
initially centered in Milan, but it spread quickly to Turin and Naples,
and over subsequent years Marinetti vigorously promoted it abroad.
Concepts and Styles
The Italian group was slow to develop a distinct
style. In the years prior to the emergence of the movement, its members
had worked in an eclectic range of styles inspired by Post-Impressionism, and they continued to do so. Severini was typical in his interest in Divisionism,
which involved breaking down light and color into a series of stippled
dots and stripes, and fracturing the picture plane into segments to
achieve an ambiguous sense of depth. Divisionism was rooted in the color theory of the 19th century, and the Pointillist works of painters such as Georges Seurat.
In
1911, Futurist paintings were exhibited in Milan at the Mostra d'arte
libera, and invitations were extended to "all those who want to assert something new,
that is to say far from imitations, derivations and falsifications."
The paintings featured threadlike brushstrokes and highly keyed color
that depicted space as fragmented and fractured. Subjects and themes
focused on technology, speed, and violence, rather than portraits or
simple landscapes. Among the paintings was Boccioni's The City Rises
(1910), a picture which can claim to be the first Futurist painting by
virtue of its advanced, Cubist-influenced style. Public reaction was
mixed. French critics from literary and artistic circles expressed
hostility, while many praised the innovative content.
Boccioni's
encounter with Cubist painting in Paris had an important influence on
him, and he carried this back to his peers in Italy. Nevertheless, the
Futurists claimed to reject the style, since they believed it was too
preoccupied by static objects, and not enough by the movement of the
modern world. It was their fascination with movement that led to their
interest in chrono-photography. Balla
was particularly enthusiastic about the technology, and his pictures
sometimes evoke fast-paced animation, with objects blurred by movement.
As stated by the Technical Manifesto of Futurist Painting, "On
account of the persistency of an image upon the retina, moving objects
constantly multiply themselves; their form changes like rapid vibrations
in their mad career. Thus a running horse has not four legs, but
twenty, and their movements are triangular." Rather than perceiving an
action as a performance of a single limb, Futurists viewed action as the
convergence in time and space of multiple extremities.
Later Developments
In 1913, Boccioni used sculpture to further articulate Futurist dynamism. Unique Forms of Continuity in Space
(1913) exemplifies vigorous action as well as the relationship between
object and environment. The piece was a breakthrough for the Futurist
movement, but after 1913 the movement began to break apart as its
members developed their own personal positions. In 1915, Italy entered
World War I; by its end, Boccioni and the Futurist architect Antonio Sant'Elia perished. Following the war, the movement's center shifted from Milan to Rome; Severini
continued to paint in the distinctive Futurist style, and the movement
remained active in the 1920s, but the energy had passed from it.
Nevertheless,
Futurism sparked important developments outside Italy. A synthesis of
Parisian Cubism and Italian Futurism was particularly influential in
Russia from around 1912 until 1920, inspiring artists including Kazimir Malevich, Liubov Popova, Natalia Goncharova and David Burliuk.
The developments in Russia made the movement very distinct from the
Italian strain, and different aspects of it are often described as Rayonist, or Cubo-Futurist. Cubo-Futurism was also an influence on English art, where it gave rise to the Vorticist movement, which embraced philosopher T.E. Hulme, poet Ezra Pound, and artists Christopher Nevinson, Wyndham Lewis, David Bomberg and Jacob Epstein. Although the impact of Italian Futurism was concentrated in the visual arts, it did inspire artists in other media: Vladimir Mayakovsky
was important in developing a Futurist literature in Russia; the
Italian architect Antonio Sant'Elia developed a Futurist architecture,
and is said to have penned a manifesto on the subject (his designs may
have influenced the sets of Ridley Scott's film Bladerunner
(1982)); and Luigi Russolo shifted from painting to creating musical
instruments, and later wrote the manifesto "The Art of Noises" (1913),
which has been a significant reference point for avant-garde music ever
since. Although much of the energy had left the movement by the 1920s,
the Futurist aesthetic also became part of the mix of modernist styles
that inspired Art Deco.
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