Project Description
The “In Arte Libertas” Society (1886-1903)
Catalog presentation: Friday, November 22th at 5:30 PM
Inauguration: Friday, November 22th at 6:00 PM
Exhibition: November 23th to December 21st
On February 10, 1886, in Rome, at Via San Nicola da Tolentino 72, a group of artists launched an independent exhibition of their works, breaking away from the annual show organized by the Amateurs and Supporters of Fine Arts. This marked the birth of the “In Arte Libertas” society, which would go on to exhibit annuallyâboth in Rome and beyondâuntil 1903, affirming the right to “freely love art each in his own way,” as stated in the first article of its statute.
The first exhibition involved painters such as Vincenzo Cabianca and Onorato Carlandi, Alessandro Castelli and Enrico Coleman, Mario De Maria and Lemmo Rossi Scotti, Norberto Pazzini and Gaetano Vannicola, as well as the younger artists Alessandro Morani and Alfredo Ricci, who were responsible for securing the participation of Nino Costa himself.
It was indeed Costaâfresh from an artistic journey that took him from the Macchiaioli circles in Florence to the Salons of Paris and ultimately to England, which became his second homeâwho many recognize as the charismatic leader capable of answering the desire to engage with trends from abroad, while resisting market fads and academic-governmental interference. The belief was that while “truth” required direct observation of reality, the revelation of “Truth” demanded contemplation, a “feeling” akin to that found in music and poetry. However, modernity was accused of having forgotten or denied the voice of the soul, a voice that artists like Bellini or Botticelli had once known how to listen toâvoices to which one must inevitably turn to remember, relearn how to love, and therefore to be free. Only in this way could nature truly live again in the artistâs spirit, just as artists of the past had been able to perceive it without tension, uncorrupted by time.
This was the spirit of the Etruscan School, the Anglo-Roman movement that arose around Costa in the winter of 1883-84, of which “In Arte Libertas” was a natural evolution within the cultural climate of the Eternal City. Here, the symbolist and aestheticist tendencies promoted by Gabriele DâAnnunzio and Angelo Conti took root, and in turn influenced the inclinations of the Society, whose membersâat its very inceptionâparticipated in illustrating the DâAnnunzian verses of Isaotta Guttadauro.
It was amidst “bold aspirations and infinite despondencies,” borrowing Contiâs words, that “In Arte Libertas” passed through the twilight of the century and welcomed the dawn of the new one. At times, it extended its boundaries to anticipate, in certain respects, the role of the Venice Biennale itselfâwhere the Society would secure a room in 1899âby exhibiting works by foreign artists on Via Nazionale, including Edward Burne-Jones and Dante Gabriel Rossetti.
Giulio Aristide Sartorio, a member himself, would later recall the story of “In Arte Libertas,” speaking of its meaningful battles “aimed at shaking off the intellectual torpor of Rome.”
Great names stood alongside virtually unknown artists, then as now, where even the great ones have too often fallen into oblivion. The common denominator, in Costaâs terms, was to stimulate, create a study environment, and showcase research done with “sincerity” and “love.”
Through paintings, drawings, and sculpturesâincluding works by extremely rare artists in the market, such as Vannicola, Pontecorvo, Formilli, and the almost unknown Attilia Mariniâthis exhibition seeks to pay homage to such research and draw attention back to the impact of a movement that shaped the aesthetic culture of Rome in the last two decades of the 19th century.
The scholar Federico De Mattia, who dedicated his doctoral research to “In Arte Libertas,” curated an important catalog for the exhibition.

















































