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Elisa Maria Boglino
Elisa Maria Boglino in Palermo approx. 1930 with her mother to the left and husband to the right
The artist, photographed in Palermo approx. 1930, with her mother to the left and husband to the right
Born
Elisa Johanne Rosa Maria Maioli

Copenhagen, Denmark
Died2002(2002-00-00) (aged 96–97)
Rome, Italy
Resting placeCimetero di Santa'Orsola, Palermo
NationalityDanish-Italian
Alma materRoyal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, Copenhagen
Known forPainting, drawing
Notable workDonna e bimbo[1]
Le alienate[2]
StyleAvant-garde, Expressionism
SpouseGiovanni Boglino
Self-portrait. Oil on wood, 1932

Elisa Johanne Rosa Maria Boglino (7 May 1905 – 2002) was a Danish-Italian painter, active in Denmark, Sicily, and Rome. She painted frescos, human depictions, and scenes from the Bible.

Biography[edit]

Naked women in motion. India ink,1927

Elisa grew up with her divorced mother. They made each spring a cultural journey, and she developed an interest in Byzantine and Arabic art which brought mother and daugther to Sicily, where she met Giovanni Boglino (born 1898 in Palermo), married and settled in 1927. The mother died in 1933.[3] [4]

From 1930 to 1935, she actively participated in the enviroment around Pippo Rizzo[5] (post nr.7)[6] and joined exhibitions, with large oil paintings and ink drawings. Several of them arranged by the fascist Syndicate, 4 personal exhibitions in Berlin, Milan, Rome and Copenhagen, as well as at the Venice Biennale. [7]From the mid-1930s, her name was not to be found in the catalogs of new exhibitions, writes the website Enciclopedia delle Donne.[8] "Her dramatic and colorful painting inspired other artists who, according to personal declensions, developed the descriptive line of Nordic expressionism she proposed".[8][9]

In the late 1930s, the family acquired a large vineyard in the mountains south of Cefalu, an ancient 12th-centuryBenedictine monastery called Sant'Anastasia.[10] [11] Here the family lived during the war. Elisa and the youngest child contracted typhus. They lived in isolation. She began to work with complex techniques, with ink, guache and watercolor.The work during that period was done after old rhythms and ancestors' customs, reflected in the work of Elisa Maria Boglino.</ref[12] "Life of the farm is richly represented in her [...] drawings, from the 1940's and the 1950's".[3]

In 1948 the family moved to Rome, where Elisa got a studio in Piazza di Santa Maria in Trastevere and resumed painting. She died in Rome in 2002 and is buried in Palermo on the Cimetero di Santa'Orsola.[13][14][15]

Career[edit]

The good Samaritan. Oil on canvas,1928

Boglino studied 1923-26 at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts (Det Kongelige Danske Kunstakademi) by Sigurd Wandel, the fresco line [4][8] Her Italian descent[16] and interest in Byzantine and Arabo-Norman art brought her early to Italy, especially to Sicily, as well as to Algiers and Morocco. This can be read directly by her human depictions, her favorite motive in drawing and painting. Her 2 large frescoes (Creation and The Good Deeds) in the family's (former) residence in Palermo, were lost during the bombing of Palermo, as well as Several large oil paintings.[17]

Exhibitions[edit]

  • 1926-27, 1929: Charlottenborg in Copenhagen
  • 1930: Venice Biennale (sale 34 e 37, cat. p. 127 e 136)
  • 1930: Exhibitions by the Syndicate of fine art .( Mostre del Sindacato di Belle Arti )in Palermo, Catania and Florence
  • 1932: Third Exhibition of The Sicilian Fascist Syndicate
  • 1933-34: Venice Biennale (sala 48, cat. p. 190)

Personal exhibitions in Rome, Milan and Berlin, as documented in ithe Weilbach artist lexicon, 1947[18]

  • 1933: Fourth Regional Exhibition of the Art Syndicate in Catania
  • 1933: Gallery Christian Larsen in Copenhagen
  • 1949: Bach’s Kunsthandel in Copehagen and at Jugels Kunst in Århus (Personal)
  • 1954: Gallery "Vetrina of Chiurazzi " in Rome
  • 1954: IV Exhibition of Painting in May in Bari
  • 1956: VIII Exhibition og Painting C.I.M (wins prize of Roberto Merli)
  • 1956: Venice Biennnale (sala 28, cat. p. 118)
  • 1958: Gallery del Vantaggio, Rome (Personal)
  • 1958: Premio di Pittura Valle Roveto (wins prize of Zahrtmann)
  • 1958: Biennale of holy art, Grosseto
  • 1959: Maggio Pittura Romana (Painting in May Rome)(wins prize of Rome)
  • 1960: Exhibition Augustinian of holy art , Rome
  • 1963: Gallery del Vantaggio, Roma (personal)

Grønningen, in Copenhagen (invitated)

  • 1976: Exhibition of holy art , Viterbo
  • 1979: Gallery Hågen Muller, Copenhagen (personal)
  • 1996: Art of Sicily in the Thirties ,Trenta and Marsala
  • 2001: The Church S. Maria in Montesanto, The Artists' Fair, Rome

In the Roman period also participating at exhibitions in Taranto and Naples.[18][19][15]

Posthumous exhibitions[edit]

  • Elisa with her son Camillo.1939.Photo by Giovanni Boglino
    2002: "In the Shadow"-Female art from the eighteenth and nineteenth century".Nell'Ombra – L’arte al femminile tra Ottocento e Novecento.[20] (Gallery of modern art in Palermo – GAM)
  • 2003-2004 (Minsk, Mosca, Barcellona, Palermo): Novecento Siciliano.[21][22]"Sicilian nineteenth"
  • 2006:"The Wounds of being" . Solitude and meditation among Sicilian women in the thirties. Le ferite dell’essere: Solitudine e meditazione nelle siciliane degli anni ‘30, a cura di Anna Maria Ruta, Spazi Espositivi Chiaramontani, Agrigento.
  • 2007: "Female avant-gardes in Italy and Russia", Avantguardie femminili in Italia e Russia, a cura di Renato Miracco, Galleria Regionale Pallazzo Bellomo, Palermo.[23]
  • 2012: "Womenart". 100 years of female art in Sicily 1850-1950", Artedonna Cento anni d’arte femminile in Sicilia 1850-1950,[24][25] a cura di Anna Maria Ruta, presso il Reale Albergo delle Povere, Palermo.
  • 2014:"Sicilian Artists, from Pirandello to Judice", Artisti di Sicilia, da Pirandello a Judice, a cura di Vittorio Sgarbi, presso l’ex Stabilimento Florio, Favignana,Catania.[26]
  • 2016-2017: "Topazia Alliata. A life in the sign of art"",Topazia Alliata. Una vita nel segno dell’Arte, a cura di Anna Maria Ruta, presso Palazzo S. Elia, Palermo.[27]
  • 2020-2021:"Sicilian Artists", Artisti di Sicilia, a cura di Vittorio Sgarbi, presso Convitto delle Arti, Noto.[28]

Works[edit]

  • "Donna e bimbo" / "Madre e Figlia"](Woman and Child) [29] Galleria d'arte moderna Sant'Anna, 'GAM Palermo', Gampalermo.it
  • "Le Alienate"( The Obsessed)[30] At The Museo Mart, Rovereto
  • "Donna Seduta"(Sitting Woman") Collezione Antonio Pusateri , Agrigent
  • "Emmaus" Basilica Santa Maria in Leuca

Galleri[edit]



References[edit]

  1. ^ Donna e bimbo : Galleria d'arte moderna Sant'Anna, Gampalermo.it in Palermo, Sicily
  2. ^ Le alienate : https://artsandculture.google.com/asset/le-alienate-elisa-maria-boglino/-QE-Eh_183LMvA
  3. ^ a b Fiume, Marinella (2006): Siciliane: Dizionario Biografico, E. Romeo, s.693.
  4. ^ a b Elisa Maria Boglino at Kulturarv.dk ('Art Index Denmark')
  5. ^ http://www.archiviopipporizzo.it/scritti/
  6. ^ https://artsandculture.google.com/asset/the-nomad-pippo-rizzo/PQH7TGxQSTcI2g
  7. ^ Ruta 2012, p. 168-180 harvnb error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFRuta2012 (help).
  8. ^ a b c Enciclopedia delle donne'
  9. ^ Ruta 2012, p. 172 harvnb error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFRuta2012 (help).
  10. ^ 'History' of Santa Anastasia at Abbaziasantanastasia.com
  11. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZzE787KlLzE
  12. ^ Ruta, Anna Maria (ed.): Artedonna: Cento anni di arte femminile in Sicilia 1850-1950. Palermo 2012. ISBN 9788897298045, pp. 179-180. (details)
  13. ^ Cite error: The named reference Fiume694 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  14. ^ Cite error: The named reference Ruta179-180 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  15. ^ a b Note Biografiche dell Artista, udarbejdet af kunstnerens søn Camillo Boglino
  16. ^ 'Elisa Maria Boglino' at Rosekamp.dk : Her parents were Alberto Maioli and Marie Møller
  17. ^ Ruta 2012, p. 166-167. sfn error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFRuta2012 (help)
  18. ^ a b Weilbachs Kunstnerleksikon: B#Boglino, Elisa.
  19. ^ Cite error: The named reference Weilbach was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  20. ^ Un secolo di arte declinato al femminile.
  21. ^ Maria Antonietta Spadaro(a cura di), Novecento Siciliano, Catalogo delle mostra, Minsk,22 ottobre-30 novembre,Mosca, 10 dicembre-30gennaio; Barcellona, 20febbraio-10 aprile2004; Palermo,25maggio-10luglio.Cigno Edizioni,Roma.
  22. ^ https://www.academia.edu/12275986/Quel_vento_del_900_che_attravers%C3%B2_larte_in_Italia_e_in_Russia_titolo_redazionale_
  23. ^ Ruta 2007, pp. 100–113.
  24. ^ ARTEDONNA. Cento anni d'arte femminile in Sicilia 1850-1950. guidasicilia.it.
  25. ^ "Artedonna" in mostra all’Albergo delle Povere. balarm.it.
  26. ^ https://www.lecodelsud.it/la-mostra-del-secolo-artisti-di-sicila-ancora-a-catania-prima-di-bruxelles-londra-e-new-york
  27. ^ http://www.arte.it/calendario-arte/palermo/mostra-topazia-alliata-una-vita-per-l-arte-32677
  28. ^ https://traveltherapists.it/novecento-da-pirandello-a-guccione-noto-racconta-un-secolo-di-sicilia/
  29. ^ https://artsandculture.google.com/culturalinstitute/beta/asset/woman-and-child-elisa-maria-boglino/_QGRCw3R1YvdXg
  30. ^ https://artsandculture.google.com/asset/le-alienate-elisa-maria-boglino/-QE-Eh_183LMvA

Further reading[edit]

  • Ruta, Anna Maria (2012). Artedonna: Cento anni di arte femminile in Sicilia 1850-1950. Palermo. ISBN 9788897298045.
  • Fiume, Marinella; Romeo, E. (2006). Siciliane: Dizionario Biografico.
  • Boglino 62 reproductions e note de P. M. Bardi (1932). Firenze.
  • Rizzo, Pippo; Boglino, Elisa Maria (1932). in Catalogo delle Mostra del Sindacato Siciliano Fascista di Belle Arti di Sicilia. Palermo.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Sergio Troisi(a cura di), Arte in Sicilia negli anni Trenta, cit. pp.67-68. (1996)
  • Rosa Mastrandrea(a cura di), Nell|ombra. L´|arte al femmminile tra Ottocento e Novecento, cit. p.73.(2002)
  • Maria Antonietta Spadaro(a cura di), Novecento Siciliano, Catalogo delle mostra, Minsk, 22 ottobre-30 novembre, Mosca, 10 dicembre-30gennaio; Barcellona, 20febbraio-10 aprile2004; Palermo,25maggio-10luglio.Cigno Edizioni, Roma. (2003/2004)
  • Anna Maria Ruta(a cura di), Le ferite dell´essere. Solitudine e meditazione nell´arte Siciliana negli anni Trenta, cit. p.59.(2005)
  • Anna Maria Ruta, voce, in Renato Miracco(a cura di) Avanguarde femminili in Italia e in Russia 1910-1940, Edizioni Gabriele Mazzotta, Milano,pp.100-113.(2007)

External links[edit]

  • Media related to Elisa Maria Boglino at Wikimedia Commons
  • Elisa Maria Boglino at Enciclopediadelledonne.it (in Italian)
  • "Donna e bimbo" / "Madre e Figlia" at Galleria d'arte moderna Sant'Anna, 'GAM Palermo', Gampalermo.it ("Arte al femminile": uno speciale percorso sensoriale nel mese della prevenzione del tumore al seno --- "Female art": a special sensorial journey in the month of breast cancer prevention) (in Italian)
  • Elisa Maria Boglino: at Donna e bimbo at Gampalermo.it (Mediateca, Collezioni secondo piano)
TJEK Boglino site
.gampalermo.it
TJEK igen


{ {DEFAULTSORT:Boglino, Elisa Maria}} Category:Danish women painters

Category:Italian women painters

Category:People from Copenhagen

Category:1905 births

Category:2002 deaths


{ {Biography-stub}}












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Opvækst og karriere[edit]

Elisa Maria Maioli blev født i København i 1905. Hun kom på på Akademiet som 17-årig i 1923, og gik det sidste år hos Sigurd WandelFreskolinjen.[1][2]Hun voksede op alene med sin mor og de to gjorde hvert forår år en kulturel rejse. [1] Hendes interesse for byzantinsk og arabisk kunst førte dem blandt andet til Sicilien, hvor hun giftede sig med Giovanni Boglino og bosatte sig i 1927.[1][2] Time in Rome In 1948 the family moved to Rome, where Elisa got a studio in Piazza di Santa Maria in Trastevere and resumed painting. In the period 1949-79 she had exhibitions in Denmark and Italy (including Rome, Taranto, Grosseto and Naples). And one last time at the 1956 Biennale with three drawings (ink and watercolor)[12][13][14] She died in Rome in 2002 and is buried in Palermo on the Cimetero di Santa'Orsola.

Biography

Wo==Time in Rome== Iibitions in Denmark and Italy (including Rome, Taranto, Grosseto and Naples). And one last time at the 1956 Biennale with three drawings (ink and watercolor)[3][4][5] She died in Rome in 2002 and is buried in Palermo on the Cimetero di Santa'Orsola.

Biography[edit]

Woman with a little girl.Oil on canvas.1934

Elisa grew up with her divorced mother. They made each spring a cultural journey, and she developed an interest in Byzantine and Arabic art which brought mother and daugther to Sicily, where she met Giovanni Boglino (born 1898 in Palermo), married and settled in 1927. The mother died in 1933.[6] [7]

From 1930 to 1935, she actively participated in exhibitions, with large oil paintings and ink drawings. Several of them arranged by the fascist Syndicate, 4 personal exhibitions in Berlin, Milan, Rome and Copenhagen, as well as at the Venice Biennale.[8] [9]Thereafter, there is an absence of exhibition activity until the end of World War II.[8][10][11] In the late 1930s, her husband Giovanni Boglino acquired a large vineyard in the mountains south of Cefalu on the northern cost of Sicily, an ancient Benedictine monastery dating back to the 12th century, called Santa Anastasia.[9] This was the family home during World War II. The work during that period was done after old rhythms and ancestors' customs, reflected in the work of Elisa Maria Boglino.</ref[10] "Life of the farm is richly represented in her [...] drawings, from the 1940's and the 1950's".[6]

▲ In the late 1930s, theher familyhusband Giovanni Boglino acquired a large vineyard in the mountains south of Cefalu on the northern cost of Sicily, an ancient 12th-centuryBenedictine Benedictinemonastery monasterydating back to the 12th century, called SantSanta Anastasia.[11] [12] Herewas the family livedhome during the war. Elisa and the youngest child contracted typhus.World TheyWar lived in isolation. She began to work with complex techniques, with ink, guache and watercolorII.On theThe farmwork andduring inthat theperiod mountains many people were employed, mules, horses, oxen and sheep, and the work wasis done according toafter old rhythms and ancestralancestors' customs. Wine, cheese, bread were made . Almost all transport took place with oxen and mules. All this was included as motifsreflected in athe large numberwork of drawingsElisa /Maria pictures, as a recording of a moment, as a composition, or perhaps as a biblical narrativeBoglino.</ref[10] "Life of the farm is richly represented in her [...] drawings, from the 1940's and the 1950's".[6]

▲man with a little girl.Oil on canvas.1934 Elisa grew up with her divorced mother. They made each spring a cultural journey, and she developed an interest in Byzantine and Arabic art which brought mother and daugther to Sicily, where she met Giovanni Boglino (born 1898 in Palermo), married and settled in 1927. The mother died in 1933.[3] [4]

From 1930 to 1935, she actively participated in exhibitions, with large oil paintings and ink drawings. Several of them arranged by the fascist Syndicate, 4 personal exhibitions in Berlin, Milan, Rome and Copenhagen, as well as at the Venice Biennale.[8] [9]Thereafter, there is an absence of exhibition activity until the end of World War II.[17][10][11] In the late 1930s, her husband Giovanni Boglino acquired a large vineyard in the mountains south of Cefalu on the northern cost of Sicily, an ancient Benedictine monastery dating back to the 12th century, called Santa Anastasia.[18] This was the family home during World War II. The work during that period was done after old rhythms and ancestors' customs, reflected in the work of Elisa Maria Boglino.</ref[11] "Life of the farm is richly represented in her [...] drawings, from the 1940's and the 1950's".[3]

▲ In the late 1930s, theher familyhusband Giovanni Boglino acquired a large vineyard in the mountains south of Cefalu on the northern cost of Sicily, an ancient 12th-centuryBenedictine Benedictinemonastery monasterydating back to the 12th century, called SantSanta Anastasia.[19] [20] Herewas the family livedhome during the war. Elisa and the youngest child contracted typhus.World TheyWar lived in isolation. She began to work with complex techniques, with ink, guache and watercolorII.On theThe farmwork andduring inthat theperiod mountains many people were employed, mules, horses, oxen and sheep, and the work wasis done according toafter old rhythms and ancestralancestors' customs. Wine, cheese, bread were made . Almost all transport took place with oxen and mules. All this was included as motifsreflected in athe large numberwork of drawingsElisa /Maria pictures, as a recording of a moment, as a composition, or perhaps as a biblical narrativeBoglino.</ref[11] "Life of the farm is richly represented in her [...] drawings, from the 1940's and the 1950's".[3]

According to a collegue from the years in Sicily Pasqualina Noto (it:Lia Pasqualino Noto



Tiden på Sicilien[edit]

Hun var inspireret af renæssancemalere som Masaccio og Piero della Francesca, men også af Edward Munch og den "Nordiske Ekspressionisme".[13][14] Hun blev en del af miljøet omkring Pippo Rizzo og de unge malere Manlio Giarizzo, Renato Guttuso og Lia Pasqualino Noto.[15][14] Fra 1930 til 1935 deltog hun med, store oliemalerier og tuschtegninger, aktivt i udtillinger. Flere af dem arrangeret af det facistiske Syndikat, 4 særudstillinger i Berlin, Milano , Rom og København , samt på Biennnalen i Venedig.[16] [17] Derefter er der et fravær af udstillingsaktivitet indtil slutningen af anden verdenskrig.[3][18] Fra midten af 1930-tallet var hendes navn ikke at finde i katalogerne til nye udstillinger, skriver netstedet Enciclopedia delle Donne.[14] "Hendes dramatiske og farverige maleri inspirerede andre kunstnere, der ifølge personlige deklinationer udviklede den beskrivende linje i den nordiske ekspressionisme, hun foreslog".[14][15]

I slutningen af 1930'erne erhvervede familien en stor vingård i bjergene syd for Cefalu, et gammelt Benedektinerkloster fra 1100-tallet, kaldet Sant'Anastasia.[19][20] Her boede familien under krigen. Elisa og det yngste barn fik tyfus. De levede isoleret. Hun begyndte at arbejde med sammensatte teknikker, med tusch, guache og akvarel.På gården og i bjergene var mange mennesker beskæftiget, muldyr, heste, okser og får, og arbejdet foregik efter gamle rytmer og forfædres skikke. Der blev lavet vin, ost, brød og slagtes. Næsten al transport foregik med okser og muldyr. Alt dette indgik som motiver i et stort antal tegninger /billeder, som registrering af et øjeblik, som en komposition, eller måske som en bibelsk fortælling.[4]

Hendes 2 store fresker (Skabelsen og De gode gerninger) i familiens (tidligere) bolig i Palermo, gik tabt under bombningen af Palermo. Det samme gjorde flere store oliemalerier.[21]

Tiden i Rom[edit]

I 1948 flyttede familien til Rom, hvor Elisa fik atelier på Piazza di Santa Maria in Trastevere og genoptog maleriet. I perioden 1949-79 havde hun udstillinger i Danmark og Italien (bl.a. Rom, Taranto, Grosseto og Napoli). Og en sidste gang på Biennalen i 1956 med tre tegninger (tusch og akvarel): Lavoratrici, Uomo e Cavallo, og Figura seduta.[3][4][5] Hun døde i Rom i 2002 og ligger begravet i Palermo på Cimetero di Santa'Orsola.HNBS (talk) 17:22, 30 January 2021 (UTC)


Early life and career[editsource] Elisa Maria Maioli was born in Copenhagen in 1905. She joined the Academy at age 17 in 1923, and took lessons the last year by Sigurd Wandel in Freskolinjen.[1][2]She grew up alone with her mother they made a cultural journey every spring . [1] Her interest in Byzantine and Arabic art led them among others to Sicily,, where she fall in love, married Giovanni Boglino and settled in 1927.[1][2]

The Time in Sicily[edit source] She was inspired by Renaissance painters such as Masaccio. and Piero della Francesca, but also by Edward Munch and "Nordic Expressionism".[3][4] She became part of the environment around Pippo Rizzo and the young painters Manlio Giarizzo, Renato Guttuso and Lia Pasqualino Noto.[5][4] From 1930 to 1935, she actively participated in exhibitions, with large oil paintings and ink drawings. Several of them arranged by the fascist Syndicate, 4 personal exhibitions in Berlin, Milan, Rome and Copenhagen, as well as at the Venice Biennale.[6] [7] Thereafter, there is an absence of exhibition activity until the end of World War II.[8][9] From the mid-1930s, her name was not to be found in the catalogs of new exhibitions, writes the website Enciclopedia delle Donne.[4] "Her dramatic and colorful painting inspired other artists who, according to personal declensions, developed the descriptive line of Nordic expressionism she proposed".[4][5]

In the late 1930s, the family acquired a large vineyard in the mountains south of Cefalu, an ancient 12th-century Benedictine monastery called Sant'Anastasia.[10][11] Here the family lived during the war. Elisa and the youngest child contracted typhus. They lived in isolation. She began to work with complex techniques, with ink, guache and watercolor.On the farm and in the mountains many people were employed, mules, horses, oxen and sheep, and the work was done according to old rhythms and ancestral customs. Wine, cheese, bread were made . Almost all transport took place with oxen and mules. All this was included as motifs in a large number of drawings / pictures, as a recording of a moment, as a composition, or perhaps as a biblical narrative.[12]

Her 2 large frescoes (Creation and The Good Deeds) in the family's (former) residence in Palermo, were lost during the bombing of Palermo, as well as Several large oil paintings.[13]

Time in Rome[edit]

Iibitions in Denmark and Italy (including Rome, Taranto, Grosseto and Naples). And one last time at the 1956 Biennale with three drawings (ink and watercolor)[3][4][5] She died in Rome in 2002 and is buried in Palermo on the Cimetero di Santa'Orsola.

Biography[edit]

Woman with a little girl.Oil on canvas.1934

Elisa grew up with her divorced mother. They made each spring a cultural journey, and she developed an interest in Byzantine and Arabic art which brought mother and daugther to Sicily, where she met Giovanni Boglino (born 1898 in Palermo), married and settled in 1927. The mother died in 1933.[6] [7]

From 1930 to 1935, she actively participated in exhibitions, with large oil paintings and ink drawings. Several of them arranged by the fascist Syndicate, 4 personal exhibitions in Berlin, Milan, Rome and Copenhagen, as well as at the Venice Biennale.[8] [9]Thereafter, there is an absence of exhibition activity until the end of World War II.[22][10][11] In the late 1930s, her husband Giovanni Boglino acquired a large vineyard in the mountains south of Cefalu on the northern cost of Sicily, an ancient Benedictine monastery dating back to the 12th century, called Santa Anastasia.[23] This was the family home during World War II. The work during that period was done after old rhythms and ancestors' customs, reflected in the work of Elisa Maria Boglino.</ref[10] "Life of the farm is richly represented in her [...] drawings, from the 1940's and the 1950's".[6]

▲ In the late 1930s, theher familyhusband Giovanni Boglino acquired a large vineyard in the mountains south of Cefalu on the northern cost of Sicily, an ancient 12th-centuryBenedictine Benedictinemonastery monasterydating back to the 12th century, called SantSanta Anastasia.[24] [25] Herewas the family livedhome during the war. Elisa and the youngest child contracted typhus.World TheyWar lived in isolation. She began to work with complex techniques, with ink, guache and watercolorII.On theThe farmwork andduring inthat theperiod mountains many people were employed, mules, horses, oxen and sheep, and the work wasis done according toafter old rhythms and ancestralancestors' customs. Wine, cheese, bread were made . Almost all transport took place with oxen and mules. All this was included as motifsreflected in athe large numberwork of drawingsElisa /Maria pictures, as a recording of a moment, as a composition, or perhaps as a biblical narrativeBoglino.</ref[10] "Life of the farm is richly represented in her [...] drawings, from the 1940's and the 1950's".[6]

Time in Rome[editsource] In 1948 the family moved to Rome, where Elisa got a studio in Piazza di Santa Maria in Trastevere and resumed painting. In the period 1949-79 she had exhibitions in Denmark and Italy (including Rome, Taranto, Grosseto and Naples). And one last time at the 1956 Biennale with three drawings (ink and watercolor): Lavoratrici, Uomo e Cavallo, and Figura seduta.[8][12][14] She died in Rome in 2002 and is buried in Palermo on the Cimetero di Santa'Orsola. [8] [9]Thereafter, there is an absence of exhibition activity until the end of World War II.[26][10][11]

In the late 1930s, her husband Giovanni Boglino acquired a large vineyard in the mountains south of Cefalu on the northern cost of Sicily, an ancient Benedictine monastery dating back to the 12th century, called Santa Anastasia.[27] This was the family home during World War II. The work during that period is done after old rhythms and ancestors' customs, reflected in the work of Elisa Maria Boglino.[10] "Life of the farm is richly represented in her [...] drawings, from the 1940's and the 1950's".[6]

According to a collegue from the years in Sicily Pasqualina Noto (it:Lia Pasqualino Noto during the thirties it seems that Boglino had moved to Rome until her death. [28]

Career[edit]

Boglino studied 1923-26 at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts (Det Kongelige Danske Kunstakademi) by Sigurd Wandel, the fresco line [7][29] Her Italian descent[30] and interest in Byzantine and Arabo-Norman art brought her early to Italy, especially to Sicily, as well as to Algiers and Morocco. This can be read directly by her human depictions, her favorite motive in drawing and painting.

Exhibitions[edit]

Mostre[edit]

  • 1926-27, 1929: Charlottenborg
  • 1930: Biennale di Venezia (sale 34 e 37, cat. p. 127 e 136)
  • 1930: Mostre del Sindacato di Belle Arti a Palermo, Catania e Firenze
  • 1932: Terza Mostra del Sindacato Siciliano Fascista di Belle Arti
  • 1933-34: Biennale di Venezia (sala 48, cat. p. 190)

Mostre personali a Roma, Milano e Berlin, come attesta Weilbachs Kunstnerleksikon ediz. 1947[31]

  • 1933: Quarta Mostra Regionale Sindacale d’Arte a Catania
  • 1933: Galleria Christian Larsen a Copenaghen
  • 1949: personale presso Bach’s Kunsthandel a Copenaghen e Jugels Kunst a Århus
  • 1954: Galleria Vetrina di Chiurazzi a Roma
  • 1954: IV Mostra di Pittura del Maggio di Bari
  • 1956: VIII Mostra di Pittura C.I.M (vincitrice del premio Roberto Merli)
  • 1956: Biennale di Venezia (sala 28, cat. p. 118)
  • 1958: Galleria del Vantaggio, Roma (personale)
  • 1958: Premio di Pittura Valle Roveto (vincitrice del premio Zahrtmann)
  • 1958: Biennale di arte sacra, Grosseto
  • 1959: Maggio Pittura Romana (vincitrice del premio Roma)
  • 1960: Mostra agostiniana di arte sacra, Roma
  • 1963: Galleria del Vantaggio, Roma (personale)

Grønningen, Copenaghen (invito)

  • 1976: Mostra di arte sacra, Viterbo
  • 1979: Galleri Hågen Muller, Copenaghen
  • 1996: L’arte in Sicilia negli anni Trenta, Marsala
  • 2001: Chiesa S. Maria in Montesanto, Messa degli Artisti, Roma

Nel periodo “romano” partecipò anche a mostre a Taranto e Napoli.[31][2][5]

Esposizioni postume[edit]

  • 2002 (Galleria d’arte moderna di Palermo – GAM): Nell’ombra – L’arte al femminile tra Ottocento e Novecento.[32]
  • 2003-2004 (Minsk, Mosca, Barcellona, Palermo): Novecento Siciliano.[33][34]
  • 2006: Le ferite dell’essere: Solitudine e meditazione nelle siciliane degli anni ‘30, a cura di Anna Maria Ruta, Spazi Espositivi Chiaramontani, Agrigento
  • 2007: Avanguardie femminili in Italia e Russia, a cura di Renato Miracco, Galleria Regionale Pallazzo Bellomo, Palermo.[35]
  • 2012: Artedonna. Cento anni d’arte femminile in Sicilia 1850-1950,[36][37] a cura di Anna Maria Ruta, presso il Reale Albergo delle Povere, Palermo
  • 2014: Artisti di Sicilia, da Pirandello a Judice, a cura di Vittorio Sgarbi, presso l’ex Stabilimento Florio, Favignana,Catania.[38]
  • 2016-2017: Topazia Alliata. Una vita nel segno dell’Arte, a cura di Anna Maria Ruta, presso Palazzo S. Elia, Palermo.[39]
  • 2020-2021: Artisti di Sicilia, a cura di Vittorio Sgarbi, presso Convitto delle Arti, Noto.[40]

Works[edit]

  • "Donna e bimbo" / "Madre e Figlia"] at Galleria d'arte moderna Sant'Anna, 'GAM Palermo', Gampalermo.it

Galleri[edit]

File:Santa Anastasia. Elisa Maria Boglino. Tusch.ca 1960.jpg|Cows at Santa Anastasia. India ink,ca.1960 File:Ryttere Santa Anastasia. Elisa Maria Boglino.Olie på lærred.1958.jpg|Riders at Santa Anastasia. Oil on canvas.ca.1958 File:Cavalli. Elisa Maria Boglino. Tryk fra photo af Oliemaleri. ca 1960.jpg|Horses. Print from photo of oilpainting. ca 1960 File:Den Barmhjerige Samaritan.Elisa Maria Boglino.Blandet teknik.ca 1970.jpg|The good Samaritan.Mixed technique,ca 1970 File:Uddrivelsen fra Templet.Elisa Maria Boglino. Blandet Teknik. ca 1965.jpg|The expulsion from the temple. Mixed technique,ca.1965 File:Bibelsk motiv. Elisa Maria Boglino. Blandet teknik.ca 1960.jpg|Biblical motif. Mixed technique,ca.1960 File:Jesus ved den syge Pige. Elisa Maria Boglino. Tusch og Akvarel. Ca.1970.jpg|Jesus heals sick girl. Mixed technique, ca.1970 File:Den Barmhjertige Samaritan. Elisa Maria Boglino. Tusch med turkis Akvarel. ca 1980.jpg|The good Samaritan.Tusch with turquis watercolour,ca.1980

</gallery>

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Fiume & Romeo 2006, p. 693 harvnb error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFFiumeRomeo2006 (help).
  2. ^ a b c ExpandTemplatesKunstindeks Danmark/Weilbachs Kunstnerleksikon
  3. ^ a b c d Fiume & Romeo 2006, p. 694 harvnb error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFFiumeRomeo2006 (help).
  4. ^ a b c d Cite error: The named reference Ruta179-180 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  5. ^ a b c d Note Biografiche dell Artista, udarbejdet af kunstnerens søn Camillo Boglino
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Fiume, Marinella (2006): Siciliane: Dizionario Biografico, E. Romeo, s.693.
  7. ^ a b c Elisa Maria Boglino at Kulturarv.dk ('Art Index Denmark')
  8. ^ http://www.enciclopediadelledonne.it/biografie/elisa-maria-boglino/
  9. ^ 'History' of Santa Anastasia at Abbaziasantanastasia.com
  10. ^ a b c d e Ruta, Anna Maria (ed.): Artedonna: Cento anni di arte femminile in Sicilia 1850-1950. Palermo 2012. ISBN 9788897298045, pp. 179-180. (details)
  11. ^ 'History' of Santa Anastasia at Abbaziasantanastasia.com
  12. ^ Abbazia Santa Anastasia. Promo Abbazia Santa Anastasia. Archived from the original (YouTube) on 7. april 2019. Retrieved 27. september 2018. {{cite AV media}}: Check date values in: |access-date= and |archive-date= (help); Invalid |url-status=ok (help)
  13. ^ Ruta 2012, p. 167 harvnb error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFRuta2012 (help).
  14. ^ a b c d "Elisa Maria Boglino". Enciclopedia Delle Donne. Archived from the original on 26. September 2018. Retrieved 24. september 2018. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |access-date= and |archive-date= (help); Invalid |url-status=ok (help)
  15. ^ a b Ruta 2012, p. 171 harvnb error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFRuta2012 (help).
  16. ^ Ruta 2012, p. 179-180 harvnb error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFRuta2012 (help).
  17. ^ Rizzo, Pippo. "Scritti". Archivio Pippo Rizzo. Archived from the original on 25. September 2018. Retrieved 22. september 2018. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |access-date= and |archive-date= (help); Invalid |url-status=ok (help)
  18. ^ Ruta 2012, p. 179 harvnb error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFRuta2012 (help).
  19. ^ "Velkommen til Relais Sant Anastasia". hideaways.dk. Archived from the original on 24. September 2018. Retrieved 23. september 2018. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |access-date= and |archive-date= (help); Invalid |url-status=ok (help)
  20. ^ Abbazia Santa Anastasia. Promo Abbazia Santa Anastasia. Archived from the original (YouTube) on 7. april 2019. Retrieved 27. september 2018. {{cite AV media}}: Check date values in: |access-date= and |archive-date= (help); Invalid |url-status=ok (help)
  21. ^ Ruta 2012, p. 166-167. sfn error: multiple targets (2×): CITEREFRuta2012 (help)
  22. ^ http://www.enciclopediadelledonne.it/biografie/elisa-maria-boglino/
  23. ^ 'History' of Santa Anastasia at Abbaziasantanastasia.com
  24. ^ 'History' of Santa Anastasia at Abbaziasantanastasia.com
  25. ^ Abbazia Santa Anastasia. Promo Abbazia Santa Anastasia. Archived from the original (YouTube) on 7. april 2019. Retrieved 27. september 2018. {{cite AV media}}: Check date values in: |access-date= and |archive-date= (help); Invalid |url-status=ok (help)
  26. ^ http://www.enciclopediadelledonne.it/biografie/elisa-maria-boglino/
  27. ^ 'History' of Santa Anastasia at Abbaziasantanastasia.com
  28. ^ Note 5 at 'Elisa Maria Boglino' (Enciclopediadelledonne.it/ – Pasqualina Noto is the painter Lia Pasqualino Noto (1909-1998) (in Italian))
  29. ^ Enciclopedia delle donne'
  30. ^ 'Elisa Maria Boglino' at Rosekamp.dk : Her parents were Alberto Maioli and Marie Møller
  31. ^ a b Weilbachs Kunstnerleksikon: B#Boglino, Elisa.
  32. ^ Un secolo di arte declinato al femminile.
  33. ^ Maria Antonietta Spadaro(a cura di), Novecento Siciliano, Catalogo delle mostra, Minsk,22 ottobre-30 novembre,Mosca, 10 dicembre-30gennaio; Barcellona, 20febbraio-10 aprile2004; Palermo,25maggio-10luglio.Cigno Edizioni,Roma.
  34. ^ https://www.academia.edu/12275986/Quel_vento_del_900_che_attravers%C3%B2_larte_in_Italia_e_in_Russia_titolo_redazionale_
  35. ^ Ruta 2007, pp. 100–113.
  36. ^ ARTEDONNA. Cento anni d'arte femminile in Sicilia 1850-1950. guidasicilia.it.
  37. ^ "Artedonna" in mostra all’Albergo delle Povere. balarm.it.
  38. ^ https://www.lecodelsud.it/la-mostra-del-secolo-artisti-di-sicila-ancora-a-catania-prima-di-bruxelles-londra-e-new-york
  39. ^ http://www.arte.it/calendario-arte/palermo/mostra-topazia-alliata-una-vita-per-l-arte-32677
  40. ^ https://traveltherapists.it/novecento-da-pirandello-a-guccione-noto-racconta-un-secolo-di-sicilia/

Further reading[edit]

  • Ruta, Anna Maria (2012). Artedonna: Cento anni di arte femminile in Sicilia 1850-1950. Palermo. ISBN 9788897298045.
  • Fiume, Marinella; Romeo, E. (2006). Siciliane: Dizionario Biografico.
  • Boglino 62 reproductions e note de P. M. Bardi (1932). Firenze.
  • Rizzo, Pippo; Boglino, Elisa Maria (1932). in Catalogo delle Mostra del Sindacato Siciliano Fascista di Belle Arti di Sicilia. Palermo.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Sergio Troisi(a cura di), Arte in Sicilia negli anni Trenta, cit. pp.67-68. (1996)
  • Rosa Mastrandrea(a cura di), Nell|ombra. L´|arte al femmminile tra Ottocento e Novecento, cit. p.73.(2002)
  • Maria Antonietta Spadaro(a cura di), Novecento Siciliano, Catalogo delle mostra, Minsk, 22 ottobre-30 novembre, Mosca, 10 dicembre-30gennaio; Barcellona, 20febbraio-10 aprile2004; Palermo,25maggio-10luglio.Cigno Edizioni, Roma. (2003/2004)
  • Anna Maria Ruta(a cura di), Le ferite dell´essere. Solitudine e meditazione nell´arte Siciliana negli anni Trenta, cit. p.59.(2005)
  • Anna Maria Ruta, voce, in Renato Miracco(a cura di) Avanguarde femminili in Italia e in Russia 1910-1940, Edizioni Gabriele Mazzotta, Milano,pp.100-113.(2007)

External links[edit]

  • Media related to Elisa Maria Boglino at Wikimedia Commons
  • Elisa Maria Boglino at Enciclopediadelledonne.it (in Italian)
  • "Donna e bimbo" / "Madre e Figlia" at Galleria d'arte moderna Sant'Anna, 'GAM Palermo', Gampalermo.it ("Arte al femminile": uno speciale percorso sensoriale nel mese della prevenzione del tumore al seno --- "Female art": a special sensorial journey in the month of breast cancer prevention) (in Italian)
  • Elisa Maria Boglino: at Donna e bimbo at Gampalermo.it (Mediateca, Collezioni secondo piano)
TJEK Boglino site
.gampalermo.it
TJEK igen


{ {DEFAULTSORT:Boglino, Elisa Maria}} Category:Danish women painters

Category:Italian women painters

Category:People from Copenhagen

Category:1905 births

Category:2002 deaths


{ {Biography-stub}}


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