De Chirico Museum House: a metaphysical experience in Rome

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De Chiricho Museum HouseEverybody has his own favorite painter, in Rome there is the house-museum of one of the greatest whom many admire and take in high esteem for his art: Giorgio de Chirico.

 

He was born in Volos, Thessaly, Greece. In the early years of his life he traveled around Europe knowing other culturally lively realities in Germany, France and Italy. It is right here, in Italy, that the maestro will settle for the rest of his life, in the country where the town squares stimulate that metaphysical sentiment the whole world has learned to appreciate thanks to his paintings.

 

We can define as metaphysical an artistic movement which has the purpose of catching the observer unprepared, an art producing a very marked sense of melancholy in he who peers at it,  due to the fact that the urban landscapes portrayed are architecturally bared, lived in by shadows or imperceptible figures which stand out in the background. De Chirico's paintings engender pure bewilderment, the objects drawn close to each other are devoid of any logical relationship and solitude penetrates every corner of these squares, the mystery of which is not given to us to know.

 

De Chiricho Casa MuseoEntering the house of the "pictor optimus" you will have the pleasant surprise of finding some of the most famous works like Pianto d'amore and Le Maschere. Unfortunately, the time at your disposition will not be much because you will have only forty-five minutes to carry out the visit and any overrunning of the time is not foreseen by the strict rules. A guide will accompany you among the various rooms introducing the subjects step by step and answering any questions you may have. (But who knows, perhaps you yourselves know more...)

 

Apart from the great living rooms which open to our sight, one of the curiosities you will have a way to note is de Chirico and his wife sleeping in different rooms. The room of the "pictor classicus" is of modest dimensions, very spartan, whereas the wife's one is slightly larger and more airy. Also from these peculiar clues it is possible to notice the genius's stigmata. The room where the maestro used to paint is on the last floor, and it will communicate to you an effect of extreme solitude. In this space he worked at his paintings every day. A full-blown Stakhanovite!

 

The commissions he received when he was still alive were innumerable and it is for this reason too that many fakes circulated and continue to circulate. In the past a great scandal burst and there were many talks about it. In the same way, de Chirico's positions have always been scandalous within the artistic circles of his time. In the full avant-garde period, de Chirico will detach himself from a certain experimentalism to retie a connection with the past and with classicism.

 

Inside the house-museum there are many paintings to see, so the cost of the ticket is more than reasonable, only five euros. At the exit there are many volumes on sale, even though the price is a little high. In case you would like to delve into it is advisable to seek cheaper books in the city center book-shops. They are not difficult to find. You can also leave a remark in the guest book, maybe reporting one of the catchy phrases written by de Chirico. A suggestion could be the statement that appears in his Autoritratto: "Mihi fama perennis quaeritur in toto semper ut orbe canar".


The Giorgio de Chirico House Museum is in Piazza di Spagna 31 ( metro stop Spagna )

 

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