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Modigliani and his women, Paul Newman, the Borsino of artists on FIRST Arte

The evocative story of Amedeo Modigliani, the Borsino degli artists dedicated to Alberto Biasi, the ABìCinema focused on the N of neorealism and Paul Newman and the main current exhibitions: this and much more on this week's FIRST Arte, which can be consulted for free throughout the summer

Modigliani and his women, Paul Newman, the Borsino of artists on FIRST Arte

Amedeo Modigliani and his unbridled passion for women, the Borsino degli Artisti dedicated to Alberto Biasi, ABìCinema focused on the letter N as neorealism but also as Paul Newman: these are the cover services of this weekend of FIRST Art, the site launched by FIRSTonline on the world and the art market and more generally on current culture.

“An artist, a man, a bohemian, according to the best romantic tradition: Amedeo Modigliani – writes FIRST Arte – was simply possessed by the frenzy of living his short life in an intense, pure and passionate way like his art”. Decisive was for him, a legendary figure of Montmartre and then of Montparnasse in Paris, the knowledge of the art of Toulouse-Lautrec but also the influence of Cezanne and Constantin Brancusi.

The Borsino degli Artisti is instead dedicated to Alberto Biasi, Master of the dynamic visions of art: protagonist of the history of post-war Italian art, the figure of Biasi is one of the "most coherent and authoritative at an international level in what in Italy it has been defined as programmed art, kinetic art or optical art”.

This week's ABìCinema, the vademecum of the big screen, is focused on the letter N as the neorealism of Roberto Rossellini, Vittorio De Sica, Cesare Zavattini and many others but also like the great Paul Newman in the unforgettable "Someone up there loves me ”.

But on FIRST Arte, which will remain available for a fee throughout the summer and which is continuously updated, you can find much more: from the Pablo Picasso exhibition between myth and intimacy at the Palazzo Reale in Milan to that of Joseph Mallord William Turner at the Chiostro of Bramante in Rome, from the Canaletto exhibition at Palazzo Braschi in the capital to the "Unesco Sites Network" project which enhances the many forgotten beauties of Southern Italy.

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