Featured artists on Egidi MadeinItaly
Alberto Ricci
Alberto Ricci was a Roman artist.
He specialized in figurave sculpture with particular interest in the study of movement.
Aldo Mazza
He created some sixty posters with advertising or political subjects. These included the famous calendar for the Cooperative Union of Milan in 1917 and many theater bills and postcards.
Angelo Mangiarotti (1921-2012)
“The more I formalize a thing, the more I give it an independent life” by Angelo Mangiarotti
Antonietta Raphaël
Each sunset is a day in our past lives that will never return. And at every sunset I ask myself: "What good have you done today, Antoniette?" Antonietta Raphaël
Armando Spadini
Even after his death, his work became a touchstone for young Roman artists and in 1930, a large exhibition was organized by Pier Maria Bardi at the Galleria di Roma.
Arturo Martini
He was a truly great figure at the forefront of the revival of 20th-century sculpture.
Bongiovanni and Vaccaro
The success of the Bongiovanni Vaccaro-workshop was a driving force for other craftsmen who, during the nineteenth Century, specialized in this particular subjects that were ‘the only singular and heartfelt manifestation of art that Caltagirone ceramics offers us in the second half of the XIX century’
Cagnaccio di San Pietro
Cagnaccio delineates the sculptural form with clarity with an energy that verges on surreal hallucinations, using color that is usually hard and glass-like, suggesting the Murano painters of the 15th century.
Castelli Majolica Manufacture
The Grue family, a great dynasty of ceramic artists
Claudio Verna
As the founder of Analytical Painting, Claudio Verna developed an artistic approach that focuses on color, light, and visual perception.
Dante Ricci
In 1931 the Egyptian government chose Dante Ricci to found the Royal Egyptian Academy in Rome
Della Robbia manufacturing
Della Robbia ceramics