Eaismo Explained
Eaismo was a 20th-century avant-garde movement born in Italy in 1948, founded by the painter, Voltolino Fontani, who was the main representative of it, with the poet Marcello Landi, the literary critic Guido Favati and the painters Angelo Sirio Pellegrini and Aldo Neri.
It was also the Italian writer Carlo Cassola, to talk about Eaismo by writing some articles for the magazine "Il Mondo".[1] [2]
The Manifesto of Eaismo, signed also by the painters Angelo Sirio Pellegrini and Aldo Neri, highlighted the pessimism and the optimism of the Atomic age, but was skeptical about the supposed revolutionary power of atomic energy.[3]
The Manifesto of Eaismo,[4] published in 1948, was followed by the Manifesto pittura nucleare by Enrico Baj (1951), and by the Mystical Manifesto, written by Salvador DalĂ (1951).
Further reading
- Riccardo Rossi Menicagli, Eaismo 1948 e Post Eaismo 2018, sottotitolo: Arte dell'Era Atomica e Arte dell'Era Post Atomica, Kindle Direct Publishing del 22 dicembre 2018.
- Edited by the Voltolino Fontani Archive and the Municipality of Livorno, Eaismo: Livorno 1948 saw the birth of the Art of the Atomic Age: conference proceedings, Giovanni Fattori Civic Museum, Villa Mimbelli, Livorno 4 December 2018, Press Center Municipality of Livorno, May 2019.
- Riccardo Rossi Menicagli, L'Eaismo e l'Era Post Atomica in fuga verso la fine, Kindle Direct Independent Publishing, Firenze, 01 ottobre 2020.
External links
Notes and References
- Carlo Cassola, La cultura in provincia, Il Mondo, Roma, 1954
- Carlo Cassola,Il commercio delle Muse, Il Mondo, Roma, 1954
- V.Fontani, M.Landi, G.Favati, A.S. Pellegrini, A.Neri, Manifesto dell'Eaismo, SocietĂ editrice italiana, Livorno, 1948
- Manifesto of Eaismo http:[//www.wiki.base.co/index.php?title=Manifesto_of_Eaismo]