Antonio Bertè (1936-2009) - Crocifissione






Master’s in culture and arts innovation, with a decade in 20th-21st century Italian art.
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Antonio Bertè (1936–2009) presents an oil painting titled Crocifissione in a contemporary Blu, Rosso and Bianco palette, a original edition executed in the 1990s depicting a maritime landscape and signed, measuring 50 by 70 cm and sold with frame by either owner or dealer, in good condition.
Description from the seller
Antonio Berté (Naples, August 6, 1936 – Naples, July 17, 2009) was an Italian painter. Publicist journalist, graduated in Classical Literature. Since childhood he has always felt a love for art and a "vocation" for painting[1]. After establishing himself in the 1960s, from the early 1970s, already loved by the public and well received by critics, he began to spread his art by深化 and pursuing his own original discourse; his painting becomes increasingly a description and interpretation of high moments of literature, music and theater[2][3]. This happens through large thematic cycles dedicated to Federico García Lorca[4][5] (1970 and 1990), Alessandro Manzoni[6][7][8] (1973), Kafka[9] (1974), Eduardo and Pirandello (1980), La Morte di Pietra (1981) (cycle dedicated to the Irpinia earthquake of 1980), La Sabbia del Tempo (1984) (cycle dedicated to Salvatore Di Giacomo), Leopardi[10] (2006).
Seller's Story
Antonio Berté (Naples, August 6, 1936 – Naples, July 17, 2009) was an Italian painter. Publicist journalist, graduated in Classical Literature. Since childhood he has always felt a love for art and a "vocation" for painting[1]. After establishing himself in the 1960s, from the early 1970s, already loved by the public and well received by critics, he began to spread his art by深化 and pursuing his own original discourse; his painting becomes increasingly a description and interpretation of high moments of literature, music and theater[2][3]. This happens through large thematic cycles dedicated to Federico García Lorca[4][5] (1970 and 1990), Alessandro Manzoni[6][7][8] (1973), Kafka[9] (1974), Eduardo and Pirandello (1980), La Morte di Pietra (1981) (cycle dedicated to the Irpinia earthquake of 1980), La Sabbia del Tempo (1984) (cycle dedicated to Salvatore Di Giacomo), Leopardi[10] (2006).
