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Luigi Pericle (1916-2001) was a rare talent-a self-taught
illustrator and painter, a man of letters, mystic, theosophist, and
intellectual whose work and legacy eludes any categorization. Under
his proper name Pericle Luigi Giovanetti he had great success as an
illustrator and cartoonist in the 1950s. His cartoons were
published worldwide in daily newspapers, such as the Washington
Post or Herald Tribune, as well as in satirical magazines like
Punch. His comic strip Max the Marmot, published in newspapers and
books, was hugely popular across Europe, the United States, and
Japan. In 1958, he turned to explore abstract expression through
painting and ink drawing. He quickly gained international
recognition as an artist and his paintings were exhibited in
gallery and museum shows in Britain and Switzerland during the
1960s. Yet recognition was not what he was looking for, and he
disappeared voluntarily from the art world to lead an increasingly
secluded life dedicated entirely to his art and writing. His home
Casa San Tomaso on the legendary Monte Verita in Ascona, in
southern Switzerland, offered ideal surroundings for an artist so
strongly drawn to spirituality. Luigi Pericle. Ad Astra, published
to coincide with a major exhibition at the MASI Museo d'arte della
Svizzera italiana in Lugano, offers a fresh look at how the
spiritual environment and tradition of Monte Verita influenced
Pericle as an artist and how Asian calligraphy and Zen Buddhism
were influential to his drawing practice. Moreover, the book
investigates Pericle's understanding of abstraction in art and his
own syncretism of modern mysticism. Text in English, German and
Italian.
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