“From here, the Futurist Movement launches its challenge in the moonlight shimmering on the canal.” We are at Via Senato, not far from the headquarters of the giants of the fashion world, but it is the irreverent spirit of the Futurists we find along with the plaque affixed to house number “2” here - the home of Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, the guru of Italy’s avant-garde who launched his revolutionary plans in this very building. Milan has a special tie with Futurism - the dynamism of this modern metropolis held an irresistible appeal to Marinetti and his comrades. And the movement left its traces in numerous parts of the city. On Corso Venezia, for example, the Casa Museo Boschi Di Stefano is not merely a treasure trove of artistic masterpieces. In the early years of the XX Century, artists gathered in this historic abode to discuss poetry, art and politics, the evening often ending in brawls. Today, the Casa Museo is an unforgettable stop for getting to know the painting of the 1900s - throughout eleven rooms, there are 300 of the collection’s two-thousand paintings, sculptures and drawings on display, all the effort of the collecting couple of Antonio and Marieda Boschi Di Stefano, a prominent fixture in Italy’s art history. The adventure continues at the Museo del Novecento, which holds the largest collection of works by Umberto Boccioni in the world. Along with iconic pieces such as Elasticità and Forme Uniche della Continuità nello Spazio, are masterpieces by Giacomo Balla, Fortunato Depero and Gino Severini.
Twelve restored plaster busts by Antonio Canova, discovered in a villa in Veneto, are the highlight of a new exhibition at Milan’s Pinacoteca di Brera, celebrating Neoclassical sculpture and the return of the marble Vestale.
Brera Honors Giorgio Armani: A Timeless Tribute to an Unforgettable Master
Pinacoteca di Brera celebrates Armani’s 50-year legacy with over 120 archival pieces shown alongside Italian art treasures, a moving homage to his enduring vision.
A major exhibition rediscovers Andrea Appiani, painter to Napoleon and Master of Neoclassicism, through portraits, frescoes, and drawings from Italian and international collections.