Francesca Lacatena
The Intermediate Quest
Filippo de Pisis makes himself
available to his audience, perhaps today more than ever, in a new re-reading that involves the very act of painting, provocative
gesturality, and poetry. Covering the first half of the 20th century, his work exposes the complexity, aesthetic depth and
cultural significance of an oeuvre which resulted from a blissfully immoral, deviant personality. De Pisis' experiences and
research were diverse, contaminated by vast erudition, vices and clamors.
With a particular focus on the Paris
years (1925-1939), the sequence of paintings and drawings that we will look at, some little-known or even unreleased, will
highlight the DNA of a specific, constitutional pluralism, both intellectual and psychological.
If we engage with
the task of retracing the discontinuous weave, and the new syntax established by de Pisis´ ability to explore, by difference
or by reminder, the forms of the patriarchal world and the unrest of all, we may even be able to investigate with lesser inertia
the scattered fields of new possibilities, because a stable reflection can only be a tension, never a reality.