Featured artists on Egidi MadeinItaly

Achille Perilli

Achille Perilli

He took part in the 34th Venice Biennale in 1968, which was the year of great protest, with a room dedicated to him but he closed the room in support of the protests underway.  

Adriana Pincherle

Adriana Pircherle

Adriana Pincherle was the older sister of writer Alberto Moravia. When her work debuted in 1931, she immediately drew the attention of critic Roberto Longhi.

Square Glass Plate Marilyn Designed by Andy Warhol for Studio Line

Andy Warhol

Andy Warhol, the great American artist of 1960s Pop Art.

Assen Peikov

Assen Peikov

Bulgarian sculptor who moved to Rome in 1938. He worked in the Via Margutta studio and collaborated with Marcantoni Ceramiche

Posillipo School Marine Landscape

Attilio Pratella

His landscapes are of real sensitivity; you can find several in the museums of Rome and Budapest

Polychrome Terracotta Sculpture Bongiovanni Vaccaro

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’

Charles Napier Kennedy the Mermaid oil on painting

Charles Napier Kennedy

Charles Napier Kennedy was distinguished by his mythological painting.

For Sale on Egidi MadeinItaly Website Old Master Paintings

Claudio Verna

As the founder of Analytical Painting, Claudio Verna developed an artistic approach that focuses on color, light, and visual perception.

Enrico Pollastrini

Painter of Romantic temperament, known in the Italian art scene for large canvases of historical themes preserved in important Italian museums and for those of a religious character

Fabio Fabbi

The critic Paolo Stivani described him as "an illusionist and affabulator of images".

Fausto Pirandello on Egidi MadeinItaly

Fausto Pirandello

In the mid-1930s, Fausto Pirandello reached a new maturity as an artist. He married the tonalism of the Roman School with an entirely personal approach to the figure

Federico Faruffini painting

Federico Faruffini

"Too much of a painter to be a photographer, too much of a photographer to be a painter".