"What I am looking for is neither the real nor the unreal, but the unconscious, the instinctive mystery of the race." Amedeo Modigliani
Amedeo Modigliani represents a case in itself: the delicacy of the languid female faces he portrayed continues to enchant viewers with the mystery of the poetics of an enigmatic artist.
Although he was one of the protagonists of the cosmopolitan and international milieu of Paris in the 1910s, that took place in the heart of Montparnasse, where he was in contact with artists such as Constantin Brancusi, Marc Chagall and Pablo Picasso, Modigliani remains an isolated case. His style is one of a kind and revolves around a few themes: the portrait, the female nude, and the studies for sculptures.
Despite his several failures in his professional life, Modigliani was tenaciously faithful to his ideas and his art, which was the result of personal interpretations and reworkings. He never gave in to a more commercial approach to painting, which was closer to the taste of the time. As he noted: “You must continue to pursue your dreams.” In a whirlwind of self-destruction, an icon of the cursed and romantic artist, brilliant and full of passions, Modigliani died while pursuing his dreams at only 36 years old.