“What is especially needed is great sensitivity: to look upon everything in the world as enigma…” — Giorgio de Chirico
“What is especially needed is great sensitivity: to look upon everything in the world as enigma….To live in the world as in an immense museum of strange things.” So wrote the Italian artist Giorgio de Chirico, who made paintings of classical piazzas populated with spectral figures and shadows, knitting together purposefully distorted perspectives and tilted grounds. These claustrophobic dreamscapes, with their atmosphere of melancholy and uneasy menace, captivated the French avant-garde of the 1910s and later inspired the Surrealists. Arriving in Paris in 1911, de Chirico immersed himself in the city’s avant-garde circles. Guillaume Apollinaire, the experimental poet and defender of Cubism, soon became the artist’s champion, writing in an early review of a small exhibition de Chirico staged in his studio, “The art of this young painter is an interior and cerebral art which bears no relation to that of the painters of recent years.” (De Chirico would later encourage this perception of himself as an outsider.) Apollinaire also noted that de Chirico’s “very sharp and very modern sensations” often assumed an “architectural form,” perhaps in reference to The Anxious Journey, with its overlapping colonnades, which was included in that exhibition. In The Enigma of a Day, painted a year after The Anxious Journey, in 1914, de Chirico took up the motifs of his previous composition and expanded them. The sharply delineated shadows and sun-bleached arcades now framed a piazza, deserted but for a towering marble statue, a partially obscured moving carriage, and two human figures casting exaggerated shadows in the distance. One of de Chirico’s great innovations was to marry these vaguely classical, if highly simplified, architectural elements with the recently developed pictorial language of Cubism, typified by flattened spatial structures, shapes reduced to bold and simple planes, muted tones with little modeling, and compressed space. Another hallmark of his style was a seemingly effortless conjunction of incompatible spatial systems into a single, coherent scene. In The Enigma of a Day, he plays with both shallow and steep spaces and employs numerous vanishing points. These spatial inconsistencies only reveal themselves on close examination, undermining any initial impression of stability. In 1917, recently returned to Italy, de Chirico founded the Scuola Metafisica (or Metaphysical School), formulating its principles with his brother Alberto Savinio and the Futurist artist Carlo Carrà. De Chirico compared the metaphysical work of art to “the flat surface of a perfectly calm ocean,” which “disturbs us…by all the unknown that is hidden in the depth.” The term would come to encompass all his work produced between roughly 1911 and 1917; it is this “metaphysical” period that would prove highly influential to the Surrealists in the following decade. Led by André Breton, himself inspired by the writings of Sigmund Freud, Surrealism sought to give greater license to the irrational forces of the unconscious and to represent this artistically through what Breton described as the poetic “juxtaposition of two realities.” In paintings like The Song of Love, with its incongruous combination of familiar objects, the Surrealists saw an important precedent; indeed, Breton later called de Chirico a “sentry.” But even as the Surrealists collected and exhibited de Chirico’s paintings from the 1910s, the artist himself had left that work behind, calling for a return to skilled drawing in an apparent about-face that provoked their scorn.
Natalie Dupêcher, independent scholar, 2017
Works in Collection
36 works
Apparizione del Cigno (Apparition of the Swan) (plate, fo...
Giorgio de Chirico
1934
Conversazione Misteriosa (Mysterious Conversation) (plate...
Giorgio de Chirico
1934
Euripides
Giorgio de Chirico
1921
Gare Montparnasse (The Melancholy of Departure)
Giorgio de Chirico
Paris, early 1914
Gladiator (Gladiatore) from Metamorphosis
Giorgio de Chirico
1929
Great Metaphysical Interior
Giorgio de Chirico
Ferrara, April-August 1917
Hebdomeros from Metamorphosis
Giorgio de Chirico
1929
Il Bagnante Solitario (The Solitary Bather) (plate, folio...
Giorgio de Chirico
1934
Il Centauro Misterioso (The Mysterious Centaur) (plate, f...
Giorgio de Chirico
1934
L'Idolo nei Bagni Misteriosi (The Idol in the Mysterious ...
Giorgio de Chirico
1934
L'Ospite Misterioso (The Mysterious Guest) (plate, folio ...
Giorgio de Chirico
1934
La Fuga Inspiegabile (The Inexplicable Escape) (plate, fo...
Giorgio de Chirico
1934
Mysterious Baths (Bagni misteriosi) (plate, folio 9) from...
Giorgio de Chirico
1935
Nella Piscina Inquietante (In the Disquieting Pool) (plat...
Giorgio de Chirico
1934
Playthings of the Prince
Giorgio de Chirico
fall 1915
Portrait of Giovinetto Aldo Castelfranco
Giorgio de Chirico
1920
Raduno Inspiegabile (The Inexplicable Rally) (plate, foli...
Giorgio de Chirico
1934
School of the Gladiators II (Scuola di Gladiatori II) fro...
Giorgio de Chirico
1929
Solitude
Giorgio de Chirico
1917
Sotto la Cabina Misteriosa (Under the Mysterious Cabin) (...
Giorgio de Chirico
1934
Supplementary drawing from Mythologie by Jean Cocteau
Giorgio de Chirico
1934
The Amusements of a Young Girl
Giorgio de Chirico
late 1915
The Anxious Journey
Giorgio de Chirico
Paris, spring-summer 1913
The Archaeologists IV (Gli Archeologi IV) from Metamorphosis
Giorgio de Chirico
1929
Exhibitions
80 exhibitionsJan 19, 1930 – Mar 02, 1930
Painting in Paris
26 artists
Jun 15, 1930 – Sep 28, 1930
Summer Exhibition: Painting and Sculpture
52 artists
Jul 20, 1932 – Oct 05, 1932
A Brief Survey of Modern Painting
38 artists
Jul 10, 1933 – Sep 30, 1933
Summer Exhibition: Painting and Sculpture
48 artists
Oct 03, 1933 – Oct 27, 1933
Modern European Art
53 artists
Nov 16, 1933 – Dec 08, 1933
Gifts and Loans from the Collection of Mrs. Sadie A. May
15 artists
Jan 15, 1934 – Feb 25, 1934
International Exhibition of Theatre Art
122 artists · 1 curator
Aug 13, 1934 – Sep 21, 1934
Color Reproductions: Modern Watercolors and Pastels
24 artists
Nov 19, 1934 – Jan 20, 1935
Modern Works of Art: 5th Anniversary Exhibition
117 artists
Jun 04, 1935 – Sep 24, 1935
Summer Exhibition: The Museum Collection and a Private Collection on Loan
53 artists
Mar 02, 1936 – Apr 19, 1936
Cubism and Abstract Art
113 artists · 1 curator
Apr 27, 1936 – Sep 02, 1936
Modern Painters and Sculptors as Illustrators
100 artists · 1 curator
Dec 07, 1936 – Jan 17, 1937
Fantastic Art, Dada, Surrealism
179 artists · 1 curator
May 10, 1939 – Sep 30, 1939
Painting, Sculpture, Prints
154 artists
Jan 12, 1940 – Mar 03, 1940
Paintings and Sculpture from the Museum Collection
55 artists
Oct 23, 1940 – Jan 12, 1941
Painting and Sculpture from the Museum Collection
80 artists
May 06, 1941 – Apr 30, 1941
Painting and Sculpture from the Museum Collection
74 artists
Jul 01, 1941 – Jul 15, 1941
Animals in Art; Designing a Stage Setting
28 artists
Dec 09, 1942 – Jan 24, 1943
Twentieth Century Portraits
159 artists · 1 curator
Dec 16, 1942 – Feb 28, 1943
New Acquisitions: Photography by Alfred Stieglitz, European and American Art
20 artists
Jul 28, 1943 – Sep 26, 1943
Recent Acquisitions: European and American Paintings and Rugs
10 artists
Feb 16, 1944 – May 10, 1944
Modern Drawings
120 artists · 3 curators
May 24, 1944 – Oct 15, 1944
Painting, Sculpture, Prints
133 artists · 1 curator
May 24, 1944 – Sep 17, 1944
Dance and Theatre Design
46 artists
Mar 06, 1945 – Mar 25, 1945
What is Modern Painting?
37 artists
May 02, 1945 – Aug 01, 1945
Works from the Museum Collection of Dance and Theatre Design
11 artists
Jun 20, 1945 – Feb 13, 1946
The Museum Collection of Painting and Sculpture
174 artists
Nov 28, 1945 – Feb 03, 1946
Portraits of Ondine: Dance and Theatre Design
6 artists
Feb 19, 1946 – May 05, 1946
The Museum Collection of Painting
67 artists
Jul 02, 1946 – Sep 22, 1946
Paintings from New York Private Collections
37 artists · 1 curator
Jul 02, 1946 – Sep 12, 1954
Paintings, Sculpture, and Graphic Arts from the Museum Collection
112 artists · 1 curator
Apr 15, 1947 – Jun 01, 1947
Drawings in the Collection of The Museum of Modern Art
83 artists
Nov 16, 1948 – Jan 23, 1949
Timeless Aspects of Modern Art
21 artists · 1 curator
May 10, 1949 – Jul 10, 1949
Master Prints from the Museum Collection
132 artists · 2 curators
Jun 28, 1949 – Sep 18, 1949
Twentieth Century Italian Art
45 artists · 2 curators
Mar 28, 1950 – May 07, 1950
Recent Acquisitions
15 artists
Jul 11, 1950 – Sep 05, 1950
Three Modern Styles
94 artists
Jul 25, 1950 – Nov 05, 1950
Recent Acquisitions
15 artists
Mar 27, 1951 – Jun 03, 1951
New Lamps
24 artists · 1 curator
Oct 19, 1954 – Feb 06, 1955
XXVth Anniversary Exhibition: Paintings from the Museum Collection
260 artists
Mar 05, 1955 – Apr 24, 1955
Painting and Sculpture from the Museum Collection: New Acquisitions
22 artists · 1 curator
Sep 06, 1955 – Oct 30, 1955
Giorgio de Chirico
1 artist · 1 curator
Nov 13, 1957 – Jan 05, 1958
Recent Acquisitions
37 artists
Oct 08, 1958 – Nov 09, 1958
Works of Art: Given or Promised
22 artists · 1 curator
Oct 08, 1958 – Nov 09, 1958
Philip L. Goodwin Collection
11 artists
Oct 11, 1960 – Jan 02, 1961
100 Drawings from the Museum Collection
74 artists · 1 curator
Feb 01, 1961 – Mar 04, 1961
Painting and Sculpture from the James Thrall Soby Collection
37 artists
Aug 19, 1961 – Jan 30, 1962
Modern Allegories
20 artists · 1 curator
May 27, 1964
Painting and Sculpture from the Museum Collection
169 artists
May 27, 1964 – Mar 23, 1965
Drawings from the Museum Collections: A Selection
57 artists · 1 curator
Nov 02, 1965 – Jan 02, 1966
The School of Paris: Paintings from the Florence May Schoenborn and Samuel A. Marx Collection
14 artists · 1 curator
Jan 17, 1968 – Mar 04, 1968
The Sidney and Harriet Janis Collection
55 artists · 1 curator
Mar 27, 1968 – Jun 09, 1968
Dada, Surrealism and their Heritage
94 artists · 1 curator
May 28, 1969 – Sep 01, 1969
Twentieth-Century Art from the Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller Collection
119 artists · 1 curator
Feb 11, 1971 – Apr 18, 1971
Surrealist Illusion from the Museum Collection
5 artists · 1 curator
Jul 28, 1971 – Nov 01, 1971
Ways of Looking
132 artists · 1 curator
Oct 18, 1972 – Jan 07, 1973
Philadelphia in New York: 90 Modern Works from the Philadelphia Museum of Art
41 artists · 2 curators
Jan 22, 1973 – Mar 18, 1973
25 Recent Acquisitions
16 artists
Mar 07, 1973 – Jun 04, 1973
Works on Paper
58 artists
Dec 27, 1973 – Feb 24, 1974
Portraits
47 artists · 1 curator
Aug 23, 1974 – Nov 10, 1974
Gods, Heroes, and Shepherds
19 artists · 1 curator
Aug 05, 1975 – Sep 28, 1975
Modern Masters: Manet to Matisse
21 artists · 1 curator
Sep 05, 1975 – Nov 11, 1975
Drawings: Recent Gifts
15 artists · 1 curator
Aug 20, 1976 – Nov 14, 1976
Between World Wars: Drawing in Europe and America
66 artists · 1 curator
Jul 10, 1978 – Oct 03, 1978
Artists and Writers
62 artists · 1 curator
Mar 22, 1979 – May 09, 1979
The James Thrall Soby Bequest
9 artists · 1 curator
Aug 09, 1979 – Nov 13, 1979
Gifts of Drawing
54 artists · 1 curator
Nov 14, 1979 – Jan 22, 1980
Art of the Twenties
167 artists · 1 curator
Oct 23, 1980
Reinstallation of the Collection
129 artists
Oct 25, 1980 – Jan 27, 1981
Masterpieces from the Collection: Selections from the Late Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Centuries
26 artists · 1 curator
Aug 20, 1981 – Oct 06, 1981
Words and Pictures
49 artists · 1 curator
Mar 01, 1982 – Mar 16, 1982
A Century of Modern Drawing, 18811981
59 artists · 1 curator
Mar 30, 1982 – Jun 29, 1982
Giorgio De Chirico
1 artist · 1 curator
Oct 26, 1983 – Jan 03, 1984
The Modern Drawing: 100 Works on Paper from The Museum of Modern Art
81 artists · 1 curator
May 17, 1984
Selections from the Permanent Collection: Painting and Sculpture
59 artists · 2 curators
May 17, 1984
Selections from the Permanent Collection: Drawings
61 artists · 2 curators
Jan 24, 1987 – Jun 14, 1987
Drawings Acquisitions
65 artists · 1 curator
Aug 06, 1987 – Dec 08, 1987
Surrealist Prints from the Collection of The Museum of Modern Art
29 artists · 1 curator
Oct 24, 1987 – Mar 01, 1988
European Drawing Between the Wars
59 artists · 1 curator
Nov 24, 1988 – Jan 10, 1989
Recent Acquisitions
22 artists · 1 curator