Product Description


Montini Umberto Flowers Composition
1.200,00€ 750,00€
Montini Umberto, polychrome flowers composition, oil on canvas painting dating back to 1950’s circa, signed lower left U.Montini by the Milanese artist Umberto Montini (Milano 1897- Busto Arsizio 1978).
The work comes from a private villa of Milan and is in good condition, within a gilt wood modern frame measuring 80 x 60 cm.
This antique still life depicts a bouquet of polychrome flowers, , dalias, red lilies, within a clear glass vase placed near a blue pottery vase, blue background.
This painting is made of shiny colors, it might seem a casual composition but it is wisely balanced with an inanimate blue pottery vase on the left side.
Height: 80 cm – canvas 70 cm
Width: 60 cm – canvas 50 cm
Period: 1900
Article size:
height: 70 cm
width: 50 cm
Email to a friend
GET A SHIPPING QUOTE FOR THIS PRODUCT
DELIVERY IN 72 HOURS
Thanks to agreements with the most important transport companies we are able to deliver within 72 hours from all over Italy!
MAXIMUM CARE PACKING
The attention and care in packaging allow us always to travel the purchased goods with confidence and safety.
INSURED GOODS
Each shipment is traceable and insured for the full value!
AUTHENTICITY CERTIFICATE
Within each package you will find tax records and the object authenticity certificate.
Our offers
Edmund Pick-Morino still life of flowers, an oil on canvas painting signed lower right by the Austro Hungarian painter Edmund Pick-Morino (Vienna 1877-1958 Brussels). A very decorative and bright flowers painting of polychrome peonies, rose and red peonies arranged in a dark vase, and white flowers lying on the top. This beautiful flowers bouquet is portrayed with fast stretches, immediate strokes, it might seem a casual composition but it is wisely balanced, mixing polychrome elements, such as the white peony lying on the table on the left side. In good condition, this European first canvas painting measures 70h. x 60 cm without frame, dates back to early 20th century and it is set in an old gilt wood frame showing old signs of gilding restoration.
1877-1958 Born in Hungary, Pick-Morino was raised in Vienna and studied at the Akademie in Munich; he also studied in Paris and Florence (under Arnold Broecklin). In 1901 he moved to Paris, later moving to Baden and Vienna. He returned to Hungary but left in 1958, and resided until his death in Belgium. He was noted as an artist of impressionist inspiration, particularly for floral pieces.
A flowers painting, an Italian polychrome roses composition set in a blue pottery vase, a 20th century Italian still-life of flowers, oil painted on Masonite panel, measuring 56,5 cm by 35, signed lower left A.Tosi by the Italian Lombard painter Arturo Tosi (Busto Arsizio, 25 luglio 1871 – Milano, gennaio 1956).
The late work is in good condition, set in a giltwood frame and dates back to 1953, as per the red inscription on the verso of the masonite panel: 4-7-53 A-T (Arturo Tosi).
The Italian painter Arturo Tosi (1871–1956) was born in Busto Arsizio (near Varese). He moved to Milan in 1882 and attended the school of nude studies at the Brera Academy of Fine Arts from 1890 to 1891. He made his debut at the 1st Esposizione Triennale di Belle Arti in 1891 and attracted the attention of Vittore Grubicy, who steered him towards the late 19th-century Lombard tradition. Specialising in landscapes of the valleys around Bergamo, he presented work at the national exhibition held in Milan to mark the inauguration of the Sempione tunnel in 1906. His participation in the Venice Biennale began in 1909 with the 8th Esposizione Internazionale d’Arte della Città di Venezia and continued uninterruptedly until 1956. Tosi came into contact with the critic Margherita Sarfatti in the 1920s and held his first solo show in 1923 at the Galleria Pesaro in Milan. He served on the Novecento Italiano governing committee and took part in the movement’s first and second exhibitions (Milan, 1926 and 1929) as well as those held outside Italy. One of the most respected Italian painters from the 1930s on, he became a member of the Academy of San Luca in 1943. He died in Milan in 1956.