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Giacomo Balla Futur Balla

Giacomo Futur Balla, 1871-1958, Marvelante Abstract Sailboat Serigraph, LTD Ed.
By (after) Giacomo Balla
Located in Jensen Beach, FL
Limited edition screen print on canvas mounted on wood, with hand-painted frame to emulate the way an original would have been created. Likely a posthumous edition.
Category

20th Century Contemporary Art

Materials

Canvas, Wood, Paint

Recent Sales

Spatial Balance, Serigraphy, Futurism, Futur-Balla
By Giacomo Balla
Located in Milano, IT
Equilibrio Spaziale, 1925-26 è la sperimentazione di Balla sullo spazio e sul movimento risalente
Category

1920s Futurist Abstract Prints

Materials

Screen

Project for folding screen (futurist work)
By Giacomo Balla
Located in Rome, IT
Provenance Casa Balla, Rome [1962]. Private collection, Bologna [Seventies] Exhibitions Giacomo
Category

20th Century Abstract Paintings

Futur Libecciata - Original Serigraph by Giacomo Balla - 1920
By Giacomo Balla
Located in Roma, IT
Futur Libecciata is a rare original colored artwork realized by the Futurist artist Giacomo Balla
Category

1920s Futurist Abstract Prints

Materials

Screen

Marvelante - Original Serigraph by Giacomo Balla - 1920
By Giacomo Balla
Located in Roma, IT
Marvelante is an original colorful artwork realized by Giacomo Balla in 1920. Serigraph on canvas
Category

1920s Futurist Abstract Prints

Materials

Screen

Linee Forze Di Mare - Original Serigraph by Giacomo Balla - 1920
By Giacomo Balla
Located in Roma, IT
Linee Forze Di Mare is an original artwork realized by Giacomo Balla in 1920. Rare serigraph on
Category

1920s Futurist Abstract Prints

Materials

Screen

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Giacomo Balla for sale on 1stDibs

Giacomo Balla was born in Turin in 1871. Since he was a young boy, when he began to attend the Accademia Albertina, he dedicated his studies to the violin and painting. His first artistic accomplishment dates back to 1894, a self-portrait. In 1895, Balla moved to Rome with his mother and then in 1900, he moved to Paris for several months. His early years as a painter indicate an interest in the divisionist paintings of Giuseppe Pellizza da Volpedo and Giovanni Segantini, Impressionism and French Post-Impressionism. In 1910, together with his pupils Gino Severini and Umberto Boccioni, he signed the Manifesto of the Futurist Painters. It is in 1912, with works of art such as the famous Dynamism of a Dog on a Leash, that Balla’s art begins to show clear futuristic characteristics, demonstrating a special focus for the objective analysis of detail. Also in 1912, Balla made a provocative gesture with which he auctioned off all of his artwork and declared himself dead, still famous, the phrase pronounced on this occasion, “Balla is dead. Here are sold the works of art of the late Balla,” that marks the clear intention of the artist to deny himself and provoke the public, pushing him towards a reexamination of the values of art. Between the end of 1912 and 1914, the artist painted the Iridescent Compenetration, paintings in which the abstractionism of the composition and the geometry of the shapes prevail. In 1915, together with Fortunato Depero, he signed the Manifesto of the Futurist Reconstruction of the Universe. Towards the end of the Thirties, Balla’s futurist production was always more sporadic; the artist gradually returned to a more figurative painting. During his last years, Balla painted according to a realistic naturalism, that however, even if occasional, he had never completely abandoned.