0 item(s) in your cart / TOTAL: $0.00
Search
Alexander Kalifano Gemstone Globes
Luxury Services
FMR Art Publications
Luxury Pens
Briefcases/Business Cases
Executive Gift Ideas
Popular Luxury Gifts
Gifts for Him
Luxury Leather Goods
Luxury Leather Belts
Alligator Belts
Gold & Silver Belt Buckles
Luxury Accessories
Men's Jewelry
Handbags
Crystal Gifts
Home Decor
Gourmet
Chess Sets
Paperweights
Geochron Global Clocks
Men's Automatic Watches
Automatic Watch Winders
Watch Storage Cases
Weather Stations
World Globes
World Maps

Under $300
$301 to $500
$501 to $1000
$1001 to $3000
$3001 to $5000
$5001 to $10,000
Above $10,000


 

Home > FMR Art Publications > FMR Magazine
New FMR Magazine: No.19Item Number:  16012019
New FMR Magazine: No.19
Cover - New FMR Magazine Issue No. 19
Price
Your Price:
$50.00
Availability:
In Stock
Choose Options and Quantity
Select Lanquage
Optional Library Case
No case
Library Case [+$30.00]
Send to:
or add name: help
We'll ask for shipping info at checkout
Quantity
 
 Description
FMR is a bi-monthly magazine published simultaneously in English, French, Italian and Spanish.
 
To preserve the magazine in your library, FMR offers its subscribers an elegant library case for the 6 annual issues.
 
Editorial for Issue 19
When “looks” are under discussion, we would do as well to reckon with that of Medusa, at once so captivating and so deadly. “Why is it the face which causes us to fall in love?” asked Giacomo Casanova, who knew something about it. FMR’s “look” is of another kind: it is cast lovingly upon things, it calls for a different kind of complicity, a different reciprocity. It is a luxury of the mind, in the very act of pleasing the eye: it is awareness, not some obscure seeking after loss. In this sense, it is a European “look”, perhaps indeed a more specifically Italian one. It is not a yearning for some unattainable amalgam of all things Italian. It is identity, pure and simple. In short, it is what shines out from amidst the dazzle of gems and metal created by Wolvinius, a barbarian – though the term is inapt, at a time when the classical had already worked its magic upon “barbarity” – called upon to make a monument for the mortal remains of Bishop Ambrose, proudly signing himself “Vuolvinius Magister Faber”. Magister, faber. Knowledge, knack. Genius, technique. Art, craftsmanship of the highest order. This is the starting-point for a journey leading us right down to Gianfilippo Usellini, another magister faber who chose his allegiances with care, and who realised that in the twentieth century the great myth of art could perhaps only be dreamed of, but still upon a wall, and still within a work of architecture; with the landscape outside. And so on to our own day. To Vasc Bendini, a master of “Veronicas” which may be both persuasive and dramatic, but which are always full o light, a brave golden light. “Light. In fact,” as Bendini himself says, “we do not know quite what light is, except that it has almost nothing to do with reality. We tend to think of the sun, or artificial forms of light, but that is no the light I am referring to. Light is way of representing things in manner that is... how can I put it… absolute, perhaps it is internal, not external, and so has nothing to do with objective things. But it is a light which sustains me, which sustains us all.” And so we end as we began: with matters sacred.
 
Flaminio Gualdoni
  • FIL ROUGE Alda Teodorani e Roger Caillois a cura di Angela Catrani - Femme Fatale: With her seductive yet murderous gaze, Medusa is a mythical figure, but above all the symbol of a femininity interpreted over the centuries in various ways. From the nineteenth century onwards, she became the paradigm of the femme fatale, of a dialogue between love and death, between the classical ideal and bourgeois culture.
  • MAPPA MUNDI Franco Cardini -“ad instar Sancti Sepulcri”: In 1160, the Master of the Templars, Gualdim Pais, a heroic veteran of the wars in the Holy Land, gave orders for the building of a castle, on a hill surrounded by a water course which the Arabs called Tomar. This legendary castlefortress is one of the greatest and most haunting buildings in European history.
  • WUNDERKAMMER Carlo Bertelli - Wolvinius & Angilbertus: A masterpiece of Carolingian art, the altarpiece which Wolvinius made to house the tomb containing the relics of Saints Ambrose, Gervase and Protase is one of the jewels of the basilica of Sant’Ambrogio, in Milan, executed at a time when the classical style and the novelties brought with them by the “barbarians” were affecting one another in surprising ways.
  • STORIES OF THE EYE Antonio Bonet Correa - Thinking Architecture: An architectural historian of international repute, Joaquín Bérchez has always pursued his research not just through words, but also – sometimes above all – by marshalling his extraordinary talent as a photographer. This “photographic essaywriting” is seen here at its most powerful.
  • MNEMOSYNE Paolo Campiglio - Rustic Dreams: Villa Crespi, near Vigevano. Here Gianfilippo Usellini, the author of paintings at once dreamy and theatrical, painted a fresco cycle reminiscent of those in oldcountry villas, a perfect interpretation of the watchwords of the time, which called for an art which was “very Italian, and very modern”.
  • THE GREAT BAZAAR Federico Poletti - The Heyday of the Parasol: The symbol of the Belle Epoque par excellence, the parasol – shielding delicate complexions from the sun, and coiffures from the rain – was a crucial accessory for the elegantly dressed beauty of the time. One of Italy’s most unusual museums traces its history through an assortment of extraordinary examples.
  • STORIES FROM ART Edith Wharton - The Verdict: A pitiless observer of the snobbish and Europeanized “new America”, Edith Wharton published one of her finest and most caustic short stories in Scribner’s Magazine in 1908.
  •  Related Items
    FMR Magazine Subscription
    $785.00
    Add to Cart
    New FMR Magazine: No.20
    $50.00
    Add to Cart
    New FMR Magazine: No.17
    $50.00
    Add to Cart
    Review this item
    Email this page to a friend
    :  Terms and Conditions :  Privacy Policy :  Return Policy :  Shipping Policy :
    Solution Graphics
    Copyright © 2008 Pianki. All Rights Reserved.