Georgio the Chirico
1888-1978
Major Italian painter, who founded the metaphysical school. He was born in Volos, Greece, the son of an Italian
engineer. He studied art in Athens and in Munich, where he was strongly influenced by the allegorical works of
the 19th-century Swiss painter Arnold Böcklin. In Turin and Florence and in Paris, where he settled in 1911, he
painted deserted cityscapes, such as Enigma of an Autumn Night (1910) and Mystery and Melancholy of a
Street (1914). These early metaphysical works, through sharp contrasts of light and shadow and exaggerated
perspective, evoke a haunting, ominous dream world. As an army conscript in Ferrara in 1915 de Chirico met the
futurist painter Carlo Carrà; together they founded the magazine Pittura Metafisica in 1920. From 1915 to 1925
de Chirico painted bizarre, faceless mannequins and juxtaposed wildly unrelated objects in his still lifes, a
technique adopted by the surrealists. From 1924 to 1930 de Chirico gave enormous impetus to the surrealist
movement and influenced such surrealists as Yves Tanguy and Salvador Dalí. By the mid-1930s he had turned to
an outworn academic style and chose to become a fashionable portraitist.













The Vexations of the Thinker