Benedetta and Marinetti, March 18, 1937

Benedetta Cappa (14 August 1897 – 15 May 1977) was an Italian futurist artist who has had retrospectives at the Walker Art Center and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum.[1] Her work fits within the second phase of Italian Futurism.[2]

WikiArt Page for Benedetta

Biography edit

Benedetta was born at exactly midnight on August 14, 1897 in Rome, Italy.

Benedetta died on 15 May 1977 in Venice, Italy, at age 80.

Benedetta's family was originally from Piedmont. She was the second of five children. Her mother, Amalia Cappa, was a numerologist and understood the properties of alphabetic letters and gave her 4 sons names that begin in the letter A and her only daughter, Benedetta, a name that begins in the letter B. Her mother was a cultured woman and a Protestant. Her parents were rigid, but affectionate in her upbringing. Benedetta’s father, Innocenzo Cappa, was an official of the Ministry of Railways and later an officer in the Italian army. He died after returning from World War I, a tragic event that impacted her so deeply that she described her emotional and psychological state as a “broken core”.[3] Her brothers Alberto and Arturo, a historian and a journalist, respectively, also had ties to the military and Italian politics, bringing the family in close contact with the Socialist Party and eventually many Futurist thinkers.[4]

The Cappas were a middle-class family. Benedetta had access to an education that allowed her to nurture her strong vocation to painting and literature.[3] As a child, Benedetta wrote poetry and took painting and piano lessons. She attended Vittoria Columna high school in Rome and graduated in 1914. During WWI she worked at an after-school program for underprivileged children. Her interest in educational science led her to explore the pedagogy of Maria Montessori, whose ideas and concepts treat learning as a primarily sensory experience. Benedetta’s interest in tactile exploration continued and would later be reconfigured in her version of Futurist ideology.[5] She received a degree in elementary education from the "Universita degli Studi di Roma" in 1917.

Around 1917, Benedetta’s brothers’ activities with the Futurists and friendship with Futurist artist Rougena Zakkova[5] inspired her to leave the teaching world. She began her training as a painter in the studio of Giacomo Balla, an abstract artist who created pieces that captured movement and light. Benedetta initially modeled her choices of theme and style after her mentor, depicting dynamic objects and the impact they have on their surroundings. Balla became an important mentor and a lifelong friend.

Benedetta began to interact with the avant-garde artists, poets and writers who gathered in the studio. In 1918, she met Filippo Tommaso Marinetti at Casa Balla. Their friendship was first based on intellectual pursuits. They began exchanging letters in 1918. Initially, these are written with a certain formality on both parts. They deal with Futurist ideas and a discussion of their literary works. By 1920 Marinetti is addressing his correspondence to B. Cappa Marinetti. Benedetta and Marinetti married three years later.[5]

Artwork and Influence edit

Though she was an artist active in Futurist circles, Benedetta felt labels were restrictive and initially rejected the designation of membership. In a 1918 correspondence with F.T. Marinetti she writes, “I am too free and rebellious – I do not want to be restricted. I want only to be me.”[5] Despite entering her marriage with such determined independence, the considerable contributions made by Benedetta are often overshadowed by the figure of Marinetti and the vociferous manner with which he directed the movement.[4] Benedetta's body of work spanned a range of media that included pen, paper, paint, metal, and textiles. She wrote poetry and prose, signed, and spoke as an individual, but only recently has she garnered independent recognition.[6]

In 1919, Benedetta published Spicologia di 1 Uomo, a collection of poetry which incorporates “unusual word placement, typographic experimentation, and visual and auditory correspondences”[6](p. 10). Subsequently published in 1924, Le Forze Umane: Romanzo Astratto con Sintesi Grafiche (Human Forces: Abstract Novel with Graphic Synthesis), has a similar structure presented in an extrapolated form. Two images from this novel provide an interesting conceptual contrast.[5] The first, Forze Feminile: Spirale di Dolcezza + Serpe di Fascino (Feminine Forces: Spiral of Sweetness + Serpent of Charm) consists simply of three curved lines, one which provides a central axis for the other two. The linear composition of the second drawing, Forze Maschili: Armi e Piume (Masculine Forces: Weapons and Feathers), has numerous straight and arc segments arranged in an impenetrable tangle.

The action and aesthetic of the machine age is a trope within Futurism that also appears frequently in Benedetta’s artwork.[2] One early abstract painting, Velocità di Motoscafo (Velocity of a Motorboat)(1923-24), contains many of the elements that would come to mark Benedetta’s painting style.[5] Well defined, curvilinear shapes, painted in gradient tones are compositionally arranged to imply objects in motion: “… the interplay of ‘force lines,’ become the subject”[7](p. 6). The artist’s exploration of the machine continued with Luci + Rumori di un Treno Notturno (Lights + Sounds of a Night Train)(ca. 1924) and with Aeropittura (1925). A trip to Latin America in 1926 was followed by a series of abstract paintings done in gouache on paper.[6]

As Benedetta developed her artistic practice, her influence within the Futurist Movement expanded.[5] In the time between the end of WWI and the early 1930’s, there was an ideological transformation which led to the period commonly known as Second Wave Futurism.[2] The notably misogynistic tone of the foundation texts was largely muted as the number of female Futurists continued to increase. Several other themes, such as Technology, Speed, and Mechanization[8] carried over into this new incarnation of Futurism. For this reason, Benedetta’s oil painting Il Grande X (1931) is considered the culmination of one era and the prelude to another.[4] In the two decades since F.T. Marinetti’s manifesto, the brash avant-garde movement had largely become the establishment.

It is the Futurists’ affiliation with the state establishment that would lead to one of Benedetta’s most recognizable paintings, her mural series for the Conference Room at the Palazzo delle Poste in Palermo, Sicily.[1] The building is an amalgam of works by several Futurist artists. Designed by Rationalist architect, Angiolo Mazzoni, the Poste Italiane houses tile wall mosaics by Luigi Colombo Filìa and Enrico Prampolini in addition to the murals by Benendetta. The shared themes of synthesis and communication are critical to the aesthetic program of the Futurist structure. Completed between 1933 and 1934, each painting depicts a form of information transfer, including terrestrial, maritime, aerial, radio, telegraphic and telephonic communication.[1] The pale blue and green color palette, along with the use of tempera and encaustic media, were designed to invoke resonances with Pompeian frescos.[1] The collection represents the idealized speed and efficiency of message delivery in the modern world.

Exhibition History and Legacy edit

Benedetta’s literary and visual artistic works were exhibited widely, along with the rest of the Italian Futurists, both during her lifetime and thereafter, with major exhibitions as early as 1926 and up until the outbreak of World War II.[9] She was a regular participant in the Venice Biennale, and was the first woman to have a painting reproduced in a Biennale catalog.[9] A long pause ensued after the war, which lasted until the 1980s, when the works of the Futurists were, once again, starting to be appreciated. Selected exhibitions of her works include the following:

  • 1926 Venice Biennale; 4th Calabrian National Biennale; “34 Pittori Futuristi,” Galleria Pesaro, Milan
  • 1927 “Mostra di Pittura Futurista,” Casa del Fascio di Bologna; “Mostra d’Arte Futurista Nazionale,” Gruppo Futurista Siciliano, Convegno Palermo
  • 1928 Futurists’ Exhibition, Imola
  • 1929 “Terza Mostra d’Arte Marinara,” Palazzo delle Esposizioni, Rome
  • 1930 Venice Biennale
  • 1931 2nd National Quadriennale of Art, Palazzo delle Esposizioni, Rome; “Prima Mostra degli Futuristi,” Galleria La Camerata degli Artisti, Rome; “Prima Mostra Triestina di Pittura e Aeropittura Futurista,” Circolo Artistico di Trieste; “Mostra di Aeropittura e di Scenografia,” Galleria Pesaro, Milan
  • 1932 Venice Biennale; “Enrico Prampolini et les Aeropeintures Futuristes Italiens,” Galerie de la Renaissance, Paris
  • 1934 Venice Biennale; “La Plastica Murale,” Genoa
  • 1935 3rd National Quadriennale of Art, Palazzo delle Esposizioni, Rome
  • 1936 Venice Biennale
  • 1939 4th National Quadriennale of Art, Palazzo delle Esposizioni, Rome
  • 1982 “Svolgimento del Futurismo,” Palazzo Reale, Milan
  • 1985 “Aeropittura Futurista,” Galleria Fonte d’Abisso, Modena
  • 1986 “La Macchina Mito Futurista,” Galleria Editalia, Rome; “Futurismo & Futurismi,” Palazzo Grassi, Venice
  • 1989 “Casa Balla e il Futurismo a Roma,” Villa Medici, Rome; “Aero e Pittura. Mostra del Volo e della Sua Conquista,” Castel Sant’Elmo, Naples
  • 1990 “Futurists in Flight,” Italian Academy of Applied Arts, London
  • 1991 “Atmosfere Futuriste,” Scuderie di Palazzo Ruspoli, Rome
  • 1996 “Futuristi e aeropitturi a Cantania,”Galleria d’Arte Moderna, Catania
  • 1998 “La Futurista, Benedetta Cappa Marinetti,” Walker Art Center, Minneapolis
  • 2014 “Italian Futurism 1909-1944: Reconstructing the Universe,” Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York

The 1998 exhibition in Minneapolis was the first major international solo retrospective of Benedetta’s works, but it is perhaps the comprehensive Futurists’ exhibition at the Guggenheim in New York of 2014 that saw the most exposure for her, as she was the best represented of the nine female artists included in the one of the most expansive exhibitions of Italian Futurism ever mounted, covering more than 360 works by some 80 artists. Indeed, it was Benedetta’s five monumental mural paintings, Sintesi delle Comunicazioni (Synthesis of Communication)(1933-1934), which closed the show, on loan for the first time ever, and placed as they were, at the apex of the exhibition.[10]

These murals are the best known of her works, stemming from the muralism movement of the second wave of Futurism, which began in the early 1930s. This new emphasis on murals by the Futurists was brought to prominence in 1934, when they published three articles on muralism in their new magazine, Stile Futurista. The effort was motivated by the younger Futurists, who thought the medium would allow them to utilize the panoptic and panoramic vision of the earlier, Aeropittura pictorial genre of the Futurists to best effect in creating the “total environment” in which they had long sought to immerse viewers with their works.[1](p. 317)

Futurist murals were unique in that they would contain only imagery inspired by modern technology. The Futurists were also keen to have public commissions for their murals, and cited numerous venues they wished to embellish with them in pamphlets published to accompany their two mural exhibitions of 1934 (See Selected Exhibitions above). Their wish list included numerous political and public venues, such as train stations, posts offices, schools, and even a seaplane base.[1]

Despite their efforts, the Futurists received few public mural commissions in the 1930s, with the exception of three mural-sized works for the new Palazzi delle Poste e Telegraphi (Post and Telegraph offices) in La Spezia, Palermo. La Spezia was an important port and also home to several military bases at the time. Almost all of Benedetta’s paintings which have survived were painted within a fifteen-year period. The earliest of these can be traced to 1924, when she created her well known Treno nella Note in Velocità (Speeding Train by Night), as well as Velocità di Motoscafo (Speed of a Motorboat), considered her finest masterpiece of abstract painting.[4]

In addition to her rich artistic legacy, covering multiple mediums of painting, drawing, poetry and novels, Benedetta constantly reaffirmed in her works a desire that contributions by women would help to reduce aggression, although she does so in accordance with the Futurist’s revolutionary ideals. But even within the context of the male-dominated Futurist movement, and the marriage to its founder, Benedetta insisted on direct action and participation for women: In her own words: “I believe that the feminine soul is at the dawn of her artistic expression...without copying the experiences of men.”[4](p. 69)

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (2014). Greene, Vivian (ed.). Italian Futurism 1909 - 1944: Reconstructing the Universe. New York, NY: Guggenheim Museum Publications. {{cite book}}: |format= requires |url= (help)
  2. ^ a b c Poggi, Christine (2009). Inventing Futurism: The Art and Politics of Artificial Optimism. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  3. ^ a b Maritato, Mariangela. "Benedetta Cappa Marinetti". ArtsLife. We Web Company. Retrieved March 23, 2018.
  4. ^ a b c d e Zoccoli, Franca (2003). Benedetta Cappa Marinetti: Queen of Futurism. New York, NY: Midmarch Arts Press.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Conaty, Siobhan M. (2009). "Benedetta Cappa Marinetti and the Second Phase of Futurism". Woman's Art Journal. 30 (no. 1). Old City Publishing: 19-28. {{cite journal}}: |issue= has extra text (help)
  6. ^ a b c The Galleries at Moore (1998). Longhauser, Elsa (ed.). La Futurista: Benedetta Cappa Marinettti. Philadelphia, PA: Moore College of Art and Design. {{cite book}}: |format= requires |url= (help)
  7. ^ Katz, Barry M. (1987). "The Women of Futurism". Woman's Art Journal. 7 (no. 2). Old City Publishing: 3-13. {{cite journal}}: |issue= has extra text (help)
  8. ^ Sardar, Ziauddin (2009). "An Italian Vision of a Scientific Eutopia". Nature. 459 (May).
  9. ^ a b Re, Lucia (1989). "Futurism and Feminism". Annali d'Italianista. 7: 253-272.
  10. ^ McKeever, Rosalind (2014). "Futurism Revived in New York". Art History. 37 (5): 993-997.