Pasquale Rizzoli

Pasquale Rizzoli
Born (1871-04-09)9 April 1871
Bologna, Emilia Romagna
Died 30 January 1953(1953-01-30) (aged 81)
in Bologna, Emilia Romagna
Nationality Italian

Pasquale Rizzoli (born 9 April 1871, Bologna) was an Italian sculptor. He was born to a family of wealthy merchants and was married to Adelinda Serra Zanetti in May, 1896. Rizzoli was a student of Salvino Salvini at the Accademia di Belle Arti of Bologna. In addition to his most famous bronze sculpture that, made in 1903, which is found in the Parco della Montagnola in Bologna, many of his works are in the cemetery Certosa of Bologna.

Style

Rizzoli’s artistic style is characterized by a mix of realism, with an interest in the effects of light, and the emerging art nouveau. This combination is evident in his sculpture for the Possenti-Vecchi family in which he uses the realist style for the faces but has many ornamental details on the same tomb.

As time progressed he began increasingly to favour the art nouveau style over his realism past. His mature style can be see in the monumental tomb for the Ferrari family (1928).

In the later stages of his life, Rizzoli faced a difficult dichotomy: the desire to make sculptures faced with his disdain of the public taste for art, which he found lacking. Rizzoli did not seek to renovate his style and stopped having exhibits of his works.

Legacy

Despite little production at the end of his career he had an important and fundamental impact on the artistic panorama of Bolognese art at the start of the 20th century. His impact continued to the middle of the century due to his ability to analyse, personalise, and synthesise the artistic trends that were present in Europe at the time.[1]

References

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