Born in Macerata in 1901, Ivo Pannaggi had an eclectic personality. As early as 1919, when he exhibited two Futurist paintings at the Casa d'Arte Bragaglia in Rome, his work enthused Marinetti and... Read full biography
Born in Macerata in 1901, Ivo Pannaggi had an eclectic personality. As early as 1919, when he exhibited two Futurist paintings at the Casa d'Arte Bragaglia in Rome, his work enthused Marinetti and Balla. In 1922, together with Vinicio Paladini, he wrote the Manifesto of Futurist Mechanical Art,... Read full biography
Born in Macerata in 1901, Ivo Pannaggi had an eclectic personality. As early as 1919, when he exhibited two Futurist paintings at the Casa d'Arte Bragaglia in Rome, his work enthused Marinetti and Balla. In 1922, together with Vinicio Paladini, he wrote the Manifesto of Futurist Mechanical Art, while also working with Anton Giulio Bragaglia's Teatro degli Indipendenti as a set designer. At the same time, he established himself as a successful graphic designer and caricaturist. He went to the... Read full biography
Born in Macerata in 1901, Ivo Pannaggi had an eclectic personality. As early as 1919, when he exhibited two Futurist paintings at the Casa d'Arte Bragaglia in Rome, his work enthused Marinetti and Balla. In 1922, together with Vinicio Paladini, he wrote the Manifesto of Futurist Mechanical Art, while also working with Anton Giulio Bragaglia's Teatro degli Indipendenti as a set designer. At the same time, he established himself as a successful graphic designer and caricaturist. He went to the Bauhaus from 1927 until April 12, 1933, the day it was closed down. Subsequently, he matriculated at the Faculty of Architecture and worked as an architect and designer in Italy and in Norway, where he settled in 1942. Pannaggi's project for the... Read full biography
Born in Macerata in 1901, Ivo Pannaggi had an eclectic personality. As early as 1919, when he exhibited two Futurist paintings at the Casa d'Arte Bragaglia in Rome, his work enthused Marinetti and Balla. In 1922, together with Vinicio Paladini, he wrote the Manifesto of Futurist Mechanical Art, while also working with Anton Giulio Bragaglia's Teatro degli Indipendenti as a set designer. At the same time, he established himself as a successful graphic designer and caricaturist. He went to the Bauhaus from 1927 until April 12, 1933, the day it was closed down. Subsequently, he matriculated at the Faculty of Architecture and worked as an architect and designer in Italy and in Norway, where he settled in 1942. Pannaggi's project for the interiors of the Zampini family house in Esanatoglia, in the Marches, dates back to the year 1926. It is one of... Read full biography
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