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Donna Floreale Celeste Print

Ruggero Falanga

Italy

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6 x 12 in ($52)

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12 x 24 in ($84)

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ABOUT THE ARTWORK

"Donna Floreale Celeste" by Ruggero Falanga, created during his Turin period in 1950, is an enchanting piece from the series "Dame, Figure Femminili, Donne Floreali." This oil painting on canvas, utilizing mixed techniques, measures 50x100 cm and features a harmonious blend of celestial and floral elements, emphasizing the ethereal beauty of the feminine form. Falanga was inspired by the mystical and divine aspects of femininity, as well as the delicate beauty of flowers. His work reflects a fascination with the ethereal and transcendent qualities of both women and nature. I hope viewers will experience a sense of wonder and tranquility, contemplating the serene and otherworldly qualities of the subject. The painting is intended to evoke a connection to the sublime and the delicate harmony between the feminine and the natural world. The use of oil and mixed techniques allowed Falanga to create a rich, layered texture that captures the softness and luminosity of the subject. The combination of celestial and floral motifs in the subject matter, along with his distinctive style, was chosen to emphasize the divine beauty and grace inherent in the feminine form.

DETAILS AND DIMENSIONS
Print:

Giclee on Fine Art Paper

Size:

6 W x 12 H x 0.1 D in

Size with Frame:

11.25 W x 17.25 H x 1.2 D in

SHIPPING AND RETURNS
Delivery Time:

Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

Ruggero Falanga was born in Taormina on 3rd December, 1914, in a modest Southern family. Soon after Ruggero’s birth his father had migrated to the United States to seek his fortune there, but had no luck. He was to return only after the end of World War II, following a mining accident. His father’s departure placed the burden of the family on the shoulders of his mother. She earned money as an embroideress – an art at which she excelled – but it was hardly remunerative. Despite all kinds of difficulties and in the face of gossip, Ruggero’s mother, in a firm, poised and serene manner, managed to preserve the peace and reputation of her family. Ruggero worshipped her and it was to her that he was to turn for inspiration. The cycle of the “maternities” was to be one of the most important periods of his production. At his mother’s death in 1961, we was overcome with grief. He felt in a barren world – his father having died the previous year – and his outlook on life became even more disconsolate and dramatic. It was to be in that period that his art would reach the depths of exasperation; black became the dominant colour. The walls of his studio were entirely covered with images of grief, with human larvae, the symbol of existential lonliness. Falanga turned down an excellent job as a cloth designer for a fashion firm, a kind of work that he was extremely good at. Soon afterwards, he turned down another job in the film industry, which his friend and pupil, Gatti, had got for him. He even refused an offer the offer to paint the murals for a new church at Sestriere, a popular winter resort. He had thrown away a fortune to embark on an ascetic, penurious life; he had left behind the pragmatic world of money. In his Turin studio – right in the middle of the industrial capital of the north – he relives myth of his ancient Taormina, its freedom, its colours, its vitality. He lives in the heroic world of the Greek metope. In 1947 his representational phase inspired by the ancient mediterranean world, is over; Falanga moves on the abstract expressionism and tries out ever new ways. He exhausted himself and his themes, as well as using up huge quantities of artists materials. “I worked from Saturday at 9.30 pm until Monday morning non-stop. I cannot understand how I could be a slave to a kind of work that makes my head and even my body spin! I am unsatisfied over and over again.

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