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Dualism
and ambivalence in the paintings of
Annalisa Cima
1964 - Dualism
Because of uncertain phraseology, of verbose and mysterious
expressions which confer upon art criticism judgments devoid
of meaning, it is very difficult to make oneself understood
and to orient oneself in the intricate hornets nest
from which one has to face, with confusion, the various trends
in contemporary painting. Rather than try to fit Annalisa
Cimas paintings into one of the anonymous pigeon-holes
of this frantic and inconclusive carrousel of hopelessly longwinded
definitions, we place her in an environment free of prejudices,
where we are able to ana-lyse art according to meanings dictated
by clarity, logic and simplicity.
The dualism expressed by Annalisa Cima, in which her aesthetics
is firmly rooted and which characterizes her current style,
lies only in its intention and not in its form. Having its
origin in a twofold vision of phantasmagoric essence and yet
pursuing its development on two separate tracks, her painting
remains coherently unified. The parallelisms of composition
associate both naturalism and expressionism with gay charm,
stripping them of their cumbersome elements by a subtle process
of sifting.
If there are two ways of judging this intended parallelism
- it may be approached from the viewpoint of naturalism or
expressionism - we must admit, nevertheless, that Annalisa
Cima has joined two contrasting principles in a harmonious
units unity. If we trace the course of her inspiration to
its origin, we can see the specific root from which it has
sprung, just as one can easily perceive that a single plastic
motif has been carefully hidden from the outset behind a calculated
movement of alternate concepts. Her primary, compelling, system
of aesthetics which unites antagonistic concepts, does not
lead at all to ambiguity. Annalisa Cima puts the opposing
features into a systematic equilibrium that is both plastic
and chromatic. Aside from terrestrial forms, mobile or flat,
and the heavily laden skies pierced by extraordinary apparitions,
her painting puts order into compositions and structures where
contrasts create analogies accentuated by sudden shades of
light and shadow.
The plastic forms elaborated by Annalisa Cima converge into
a singular pole of attraction and therefore have no descriptive
or pictorial qualities. They are elegant forms created by
an intimate and perspicacious impulse which seeks gracefully
an open road for her imagination, her rhythm, her colors,
and which is free of cumbersome and symbolic trappings.
1967 - Ambivalence
The painting of Annalisa Cima, and her aesthetic principles,
from which her work springs, have entered a new phase that
is rich in attractions and deep reflections. We shall not
here attempt a complete analysis of her work since Annalisa
Cima is engaged in greater enterprises. But we shall insist
on the spirit of synthesis which to-day is one of the major
motives in her art.
Our considerations, drawn from previous comparisons, suggest
a rich germination. One can understand how the artist has
tried to broaden her field of vision, perfecting her style,
modifying her proportions. What is more surprising, on the
other hand, is her ever-present attempt to change volume by
absorbing it into the surface. The initial thread remains
visible and the similarities can be recalled, but the meaning
of the work changes completely. In fact, the first idea has
been reconsidered in connection with a concept whose function
is to illustrate the essence of a selective experience.
We must not lose sight of the number of adopted forms that
has been voluntarily limited, since that number does not in
the least restrict the visionary and imaginative area of Annalisa
Cima. This principle translates in full a plastic mechanism,
orderly and flexible, which regulary magnetizes color. With
highly sensitive means, the intimate character of this kind
of painting identifies itself with the secret language of
hermetic poetry. This has undoubtedly led her closer to lyric
rather than geometric drawing.
Stemming often from categorical imperatives, the emerging
plastic signs clearly trace unified and pellucid divisions,
which characterize the spontaneous originality of her present
mode. We shall have no difficulty, therefore, in discovering
the hidden path followed by Annalisa Cima to bring into focus
the various facets of her private world. Plainly but sharply,
her colors reveal their presence like an avowal of happiness.
The unfolding of her system has occurred according to a method
of moderation and of great precision.
A way of painting so openly revealed is not the result of
a series of weak coincidences. A certainty must have led Annalisa
Cima to her current artistic phase. Precisely for this reason
we realize she will continue without hesitation to capture
the sense and vitality of the various currents guiding her.
We can also understand how an undercurrent of images, half-seen
and never completely formulated, is embedded in a well determined
structure, which establishes certain polychrome question marks
animating the horizons they reveal.
In a world often burdened by the splitting of thought and
by narrow false opinions, the threefold compositions - these
pages showing a clear and free synthesis - demonstrate that
Annalisa Cimas work personifies the magic symbols of
a series of spiritual themes which stigmatize the false revolution
of myths as well as the antagonism of those antiquated theories
which have had only a fortuitous and accidental existence
outside the concrete realm of art history.
To-day, Annalisa Cimas temporary dualism has reached
creative ambivalence.
Alberto Sartoris
Translated by Margaret Meringer
Serigrafia, 1968
Perfection, 1963
Oil on canvas,
60 x 120 cm, Milan, private collection
Simbolismo, 1963
Oil on canvas,
65 x 80 cm
Movement, 1963
Oil on canvas,
50 x 30 cm
Movement orange - blu - white,
1965
Oil on canvas,
90 x 120 cm
Upward Bands, 1967
Oil on canvas,
90 x 125 cm
Black segment, 1967
Oil on canvas,
40 x 60 cm
Disegno n. 1.

Disegno n. 2.
Disegno n. 3, 1967
Milano, collezione Vanni Scheiwiller
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