Giacometti, Alberto (1901-1966), Swiss sculptor and painter, born in Stampa. After a period of study in Geneva and Rome, Giacometti settled in Paris in 1922. He established himself as one of the leading surrealist sculptors of the 1930s with work that showed a great deal of wit and imagination.

Perhaps the most outstanding of his surrealist pieces is The Palace at 4 AM (1932-33, Museum of Modern Art, New York City), an architectonic skeleton holding suspended figures and objects that expresses the subjectivity and the fragility of the human sense of time and space.

In 1948 Giacometti exhibited his works after a 12-year lapse, during which he experimented in sculpture and painting. From his experiments Giacometti evolved a distinctive style of highly expressive, attenuated figures.

Infused with a pervasive melancholy, both his paintings and sculptures convey a sense of tenuous existence, as though the figures were constantly threatened with obliteration by the surrounding space. In such paintings as The Artist's Mother (1950, Museum of Modern Art), the seated figure seems about to disappear in the web of lines and strokes that delineates the sitting room and its faintly ominous furnishings.

 
[A] [B] [C] [D] [E] [F] [G] [H] [I] [J] [K] [L] [M] [N] [O] [P] [Q] [R] [S] [T] [U] [V] [W] [X] [Y] [Z]
Leonardo Da Vinci
Michelangelo
Pablo Picasso
Vincent Van gogh
Rembrandt
Edvard Munch
Cézanne
Edgar Degas
Marc Chagall
Matisse

Caravaggio
Georges Seurat
Pissarro

Raphael
Jan Van Eyck
Andy Warhol
Vermeer Jan

Arcimboldo Giuseppe
Albrecht Durer
Audubon

Alfred Sisley
Magritte
Frida Kahlo
Camille Corot
Mondrian Piet
Appel Karel
Albers Josef
Gustav Klimt

Gericault
Frans Hals
Modigliani
Miro
Macke August
Roy Lichtenstein
Wassily Kandinsky
Edward Hopper
Marcel Duchamp
Pieter Bruegel
Arp Jean

Watteau
Verrocchio

Titian
Rubens

Diego Velazquez
Antonello