The bard celebrates two other fine practitioners of the art, and laments a lost brewer
Osvaldo Licini: Rebellious Angel
Esoterick Collection, London
OSVALDO LICINI (1894-1958) was born to a seamstress and a commercial artist in the hill town of Monte Vidon Corrado in Italy’s Marche region.
He studied at Bologna’s Academy of Fine Art from the age of 14 and by 1913, when not yet 20 years old he had already participated in Futurist events, thereby showing a precocious hunger for avant-garde departures from traditional styles. Yet even his early works never shared Italian Futurism’s aggressive stylistic and ideological characteristics.
Having being seriously injured while soldiering as a conscript in the first world war, Licini moved to Paris in 1917 to convalesce with his parents who had moved there permanently in 1902.
JAN WOOLF ponders the works and contested reputation of the West German sculptor and provocateur, who believed that everybody is potentially an artist
KEVIN DONNELLY accepts the invitation to think speculatively in contemplation of representations of people of African descent in our cultural heritage
MICHAL BONCZA, MARIA DUARTE and ANGUS REID review The Other Way Around, Modi: Three Days On The Wing Of Madness, Watch The Skies, and Superman
NICK MATTHEWS previews a landmark book launch taking place in Leicester next weekend


