Reflecting the growing interest in international artistic exchanges after World War II, a breif overview of third issue of "Italian Modern Art" aims to analyze the pivotal role played by the 1949 exhibition Twentieth-Century Italian Art at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, including a literature review, methodological framework, and acknowledgements. Twentieth-Century Italian Art exhibition was the first opportunity after World War II for American audiences to see the work of a substantial group of contemporary Italian artists. Curated by James Thrall Soby and Alfred H. Barr, Jr., the exhibition was followed by a vast campaign of acquisitions: MoMA added key Italian artists, from Umberto Boccioni to Lucio Fontana, to its permanent colle...
From 1935 – when Italy invaded Ethiopia – until World War II, the Italian government sent across ...
The opening of MoMA in 1929 in New York marks a crucial moment, because it introduces a new idea abo...
In contrast to the museum, exhibitions, by virtue of their temporary nature, allow art to be mobilis...
The third issue of \u201cItalian Modern Art\u201d journal by CIMA (Center for Italian Modern Art) is...
La mostra "Twentieth-Century Italian Art", tenutasi al MoMA di New York nel 1949, ha rappresentato l...
The paper considers the theme of postwar cultural exchange between Italy and the United States throu...
La mostra "Twentieth-Century Italian Art", tenutasi al MoMA di New York nel 1949, ha rappresentato l...
This essay looks at modern Italian art circulating in the United States in the interwar period. Prio...
L\u2019esposizione Twentieth-Century Italian Art a cura di Alfred H. Barr, Jr. e James T. Soby press...
La mostra "Twentieth-Century Italian Art", tenutasi al MoMA di New York nel 1949, ha rappresentato l...
From May to June 1948, and with the approval of MoMA\u2019s trustees, Alfred H. Barr, Jr., and James...
La mostra "Twentieth-Century Italian Art", tenutasi al MoMA di New York nel 1949, ha rappresentato l...
Export / Import examines the exportation of contemporary Italian art to the United States from 1935 ...
L’Obelisco was among the most international of galleries in Rome (1946–81). Its owners, Gaspero del ...
L’inaugurazione del Moma nel 1929 a New York segna un passaggio cruciale, introducendo una nuova con...
From 1935 – when Italy invaded Ethiopia – until World War II, the Italian government sent across ...
The opening of MoMA in 1929 in New York marks a crucial moment, because it introduces a new idea abo...
In contrast to the museum, exhibitions, by virtue of their temporary nature, allow art to be mobilis...
The third issue of \u201cItalian Modern Art\u201d journal by CIMA (Center for Italian Modern Art) is...
La mostra "Twentieth-Century Italian Art", tenutasi al MoMA di New York nel 1949, ha rappresentato l...
The paper considers the theme of postwar cultural exchange between Italy and the United States throu...
La mostra "Twentieth-Century Italian Art", tenutasi al MoMA di New York nel 1949, ha rappresentato l...
This essay looks at modern Italian art circulating in the United States in the interwar period. Prio...
L\u2019esposizione Twentieth-Century Italian Art a cura di Alfred H. Barr, Jr. e James T. Soby press...
La mostra "Twentieth-Century Italian Art", tenutasi al MoMA di New York nel 1949, ha rappresentato l...
From May to June 1948, and with the approval of MoMA\u2019s trustees, Alfred H. Barr, Jr., and James...
La mostra "Twentieth-Century Italian Art", tenutasi al MoMA di New York nel 1949, ha rappresentato l...
Export / Import examines the exportation of contemporary Italian art to the United States from 1935 ...
L’Obelisco was among the most international of galleries in Rome (1946–81). Its owners, Gaspero del ...
L’inaugurazione del Moma nel 1929 a New York segna un passaggio cruciale, introducendo una nuova con...
From 1935 – when Italy invaded Ethiopia – until World War II, the Italian government sent across ...
The opening of MoMA in 1929 in New York marks a crucial moment, because it introduces a new idea abo...
In contrast to the museum, exhibitions, by virtue of their temporary nature, allow art to be mobilis...