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Giovanni Segantini's (1858-99) three paintings La Vita-La Natura-La
Morte (Becoming-Being-Passing) of 1898/99 do not reveal at first
glance anything about their equally complex and interesting
background. Originally planned for the 1900 Paris Exposition of
1900 as a gigantic, multimedia "Alpine symphony" panorama 722 ft
long and 66 ft high, Segantini was forced to reduce his work to
three purely pictorial main paintings, owing to a lack of financial
means. When he died in 1899, whilst still working on it, he left
behind an incomplete triptych that was intended to embody "the
spirit of nature, of life, and of death." In this book, Swiss art
historian and Segantini-expert Juerg Albrecht traces this
monumental landmark piece in the artist's oeuvre as one of the last
programmatic works of fin de siecle art. Apart from its genesis,
the book explains, as well the cycle of life and death that the
three paintings visualise, whose origins Segantini sought both
privately and creatively in the mountains of the upper Engadine
valley during his lifetime. Text in English and German.
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