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Giorgio de Chirico: Horses: The Death of a Rider

By: Ron Horning

Vito Schnabel Gallery. 43 Clarkson St #1A, New York, NY. It’s usually too soon to write off what might seem, at first glance, a great artist’s less compelling work, as these small paintings would make abundantly clear if nothing else did. For more than a hundred years, Giorgio de Chirico has been revered for the so-called metaphysical paintings he made before, during, and right after the first World War.

Then, in 1919 according to John Ashbery, de Chirico’s painterly genius “evaporated,” and he moved on to subjects radically different from the flatly painted and vividly titled empty town squares and arcades, smoking trains, vacant gloves, dressmaker’s dummies, archaic busts, vanishing point vistas, and anonymous civic statues that occupied his canvases starting about 1912.

Source: https://brooklynrail.org

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