Michele Guerrisi (23 February 1893 – 29 April 1963) was an Italian sculptor, painter and writer.[1]
Biography
At an early age, Michele Guerrisi moved to Palmi, where he attended the gymnasium and simultaneously practiced in the studio of the painter Domenico Augimeri. He subsequently attended high school Galileo Galilei in Florence.[2]
He was also a painter and writer,[13] author of some books of history and art criticism, of an autobiography, useful to trace the iter of his artistic formation. He published a history of Cinquefrondi, and authored some books on history and art criticism.[citation needed]
The Gipsoteca Michele Guerrisi of Palmi holds a number of his works, mostly maquettes in plaster, and some watercolours donated by his wife.[14][15][16][17]
He died on 29 April 1963 in Rome. Some of his work was shown during the ninth Quadriennale di Roma in 1965–1966.[2]
Expositions
Guerrisi was present at the Venice Biennial of 1934[18] and 1936[19] (with his sculptures: Figura femminile inginocchiata[20] and Donna negra, with which he was awarded[21]).
Between 1931 and 1956 he participated in the first seven editions of the Quadrennial of Rome;[23] At the IX Quadrennial (1965), two years after his death, a retrospective exhibition was dedicated to him.[24] He also participated in 1953 in the collective exhibition Art in the life of Southern Italy at the Palazzo delle Esposizioni in Rome.[25]
Dalle botteghe agli studi, Torino: Le Arti Belle, 1926
Discorsi su la scultura, Torino: L'Erma, 1930
Il Giudizio di Michelangelo, Rome: AVE, 1947
L'idea figurativa, Milan: Mondadori
L'errore di Cèzanne, Pisa: Nistri/Lischi, 1954.
Acknowledgments
Michele Guerrisi has been entitled the Gipsoteca of Palmi,[28][29] which houses plaster casts of his works and several watercolors offered by his wife,[30] the Scientific High School of Cittanova, the Artistic High School of Palmi[31] and the Technical Institute for Surveyors and Social Activities of Reggio Calabria Righi-Guerrisi. In addition, a square in Cittanova and two streets in Palmi and Cinquefrondi were named after him.
^Polistena Michele Guerrisi. "Deposizione". Foto archivio Amici Casa della Cultura. Archived from the original on 29 October 2014. Retrieved 4 November 2021.
Walter Canavesio, Uno scultore calabrese nella Torino degli anni Trenta: Michele Guerrisi, in Studi piemontesi, n. 1, 2006, 51–64.
Enzo Le Pera (2008). Enciclopedia dell'arte di Calabria, Ottocento e Novecento. Soveria Mannelli: Rubbettino. pp. 216–219. ISBN978-88-498-2028-7.
Alfonso Panzetta (2003). Nuovo dizionario degli scultori italiani dell'Ottocento e del primo Novecento. Da Antonio Canova ad Arturo Martini. Vol. 1 (A–L). Torino: AdArte. p. 448. ISBN88-89082-00-3.