A long road, blanched by the noonday sun, angles towards the far-off back of the composition. It is flanked on the left by a shoulder of greenery, silvery as it too is pierced by light; on it rest, nearly weightless, the simple cubes of two houses, without shadow.
At this time Morandi’s longest period of etching “alongside” painting was drawing to a close – the period stretching from 1927 to 1933-34. These intense last two years of etching produced such masterpieces as Natura morta a tratti sottilissimi and Grande natura morta scura, crowded and darkened, “tragic” or “melancholy” as this capital work has been called. In this etching, Morandi tends towards a different feeling: for one last time he appears to regain the calm, constructive sense of space that marked some of the 19th-century French painting he most loved – Corot above all. This view of the landscape of Grizzana – the hillside village near Bologna where Morandi usually spent his summers – slips into a luminous diapason that seems to drown all perturbation of the soul in this “remote echo of an infinitely dusty summer” (to cite Francesco Arcangeli).
Giorgio Morandi, La strada bianca
La strada bianca
20th century AD
Landscape
Artist
Date
1933
Material and technique
Etching
Measurements
20,8 x 30,3 cm
Compiler
Fabrizio D'Amico