| Howard N. Fox: dal cat. della mostra A New Romanticism - Sixteen Artists from Italy. Hirshhorn Museum, Washington, 1985. |
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The natural world of Bartolini's pictures is a dream state that derives from an archaic vision of the natural world; his is an evocation of nature and what, in a postromantic and postindustrial age, the romantic myth of nature has come to connote. [...] But in Bartolini's philosophical presumption that nature is invented by man, there is perhaps another possibility to be reckoned with: that Bartolini is perpetuating the romantic idealization of nature through art as a genuine spiritual affirmation and as the consummate creative expression of the human imagination. Bartolini's vision of the natural world is not corroborated by nature itself: mountains, trees, and streams may in fact be demonstrated empirically to be present in the external world, but our concept or myth of nature as a more-or-less systematized belief that we have inherited through two centuries of Western culture exists only in the mind and in art, which is an extension of the mind. [...] |
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