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Leonetta Cecchi Pieraccini (31 October 1882 - 23 September 1977) was an Italian painter, originally from Tuscany. Like many artists of the period, she is known principally for portraiture, employing watercolours or oils. Her actual output was more diverse, however. She produced a number of landscapes and monotypes. She was also a diligent diarist, and during the later part of her life published several books, which were autobiographical in character. Her work resonated with art lovers and commentators during the first and middle parts of the twentieth century, through which she lived, survivin

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Leonetta Cecchi Pieraccini (31 October 1882 - 23 September 1977) was an Italian painter, originally from Tuscany. Like many artists of the period, she is known principally for portraiture, employing watercolours or oils. Her actual output was more diverse, however. She produced a number of landscapes and monotypes. She was also a diligent diarist, and during the later part of her life published several books, which were autobiographical in character. Her work resonated with art lovers and commentators during the first and middle parts of the twentieth century, through which she lived, surviving to a good age. By the time she died, to the regret of admirers, her work was beginning to fall out of favour, however.

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A permanent home in Rome: More networking: More success In 1924, the Cecchis relocated again, this time to a more permanent home in the city centre. Their fifth-floor apartment along the Corso d'Italia enjoyed a fine view over the Villa Borghese: it quickly became a meeting place for members of Rome's literary (and artistic) community, and on occasion a source of help and support for friends who found themselves in need. Despite its central location, there was space in the substantial apartment for an "Open Sunday" to be held each week for members of the Cecchis' social circle who lived in Rome or who found themselves visiting the capital. Those who had been regular guests at the Via Nomentana apartment before 1916 were still on the list, which continued to grow during the later 1920s, the 1930s, and beyond. Younger recruits included Nino Rota, Leo Longanesi, Vitaliano Brancati, Mino Maccari and Elsa Morante. Many of the regulars became portrait subjects for Leonetta, including Cesare Pascarella, Massimo Bontempelli, Mario Praz, Riccardo Bacchelli, Giuseppe Ungaretti, Vincenzo Cardarelli, Alberto Moravia, Roberto Longhi and Anna Banti. Of course, the member of the circle whose image she reproduced most frequently, both in drawings and in…

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1930s Through the 1930s her works again featured at major exhibitions, and Pieraccini's work continued to receive positive reviews. From the early part the decade sources pick out the seventeenth Venice Biennale in 1930, the II Sindacale del Lazio exhibition at around the same time, the first Rome Quadriennale in which her work featured as part of a characteristically very large exhibition in January 1931, the Baltimore Museum of Art, the Syracuse Museum of Fine Arts in 1931–32, and in 1933 the Fine Arts Exhibition organised by the "Sindacato nazionale fascista" (loosely, "national fascist union") in Florence. 1934 was a particularly rich year for exhibitions featuring her work. Some of these were the Fourth Exhibition of the Fascist Fine Arts Syndicate of Lazio, held at Trajan's Market, the Interregional Women's Exhibition of Fine Arts at Rome, the Castellammare Prize Exhibition and the nineteenth Venice Biennale at which, memorably, she exhibited four monotypes along with three portraits, respectively depicting the writer Achille Campanile, the painter Gisberto Ceracchini, and someone identified simply as the "Lady with the Monkey". For Leonetta Pieraccini personally the most important exhibition of 1934 was the one held in December of that year at the Lyceum Gallery in…

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"Visti da vicino" (1954: loosely, "Neighbourhood scenes") in an essentially autobiographical work in which the author recalls a few of her many encounters and conversations with the writers and painters who were (or, when still alive, had been) frequent and welcome visitors to the Cecchis' Rome apartment. Some of the many the arts-world celebrities featured in the book's 303 pages were Cesare Pascarella, Giovanni Fattori, Armando Spadini, Dino Campana, Medardo Rosso and Trilussa. "Vecchie agendine, 1911-1929" (1960: loosely, "Old diaries ..."') is a similarly autobiographical work, revisiting much of the same ground, but which now, in the words of one commentator, includes "all the private reflections [absent from the] earlier book". "Agendina di guerra, 1939-1944" (1964: "War diary ...") follows much the same pattern, with the difference that it deals with the war years. In 1911, if not earlier, Leonetta Cecchi Pieraccini became a serious diarist. Much about their character and quality can be inferred from the three volumes that she wrote on them. She continued to add to her diary till 1971, by which time she was a few months short of her ninetieth birthday, by which point she had filled approximately forty notebooks and adapted desk diaries, with…

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Provenance and early years Leonetta Pieraccini was born into a family of landowners in Poggibonsi, at a time when it was still a small country town, set in the Elsa Valley ("Valdelsa") in the hill country north of Siena. Ottaviano Pieraccini, her father, was a physician, prominent in the town as a socialist and an intellectual. She was among her father's younger children. Her mother, born Argene Zani (1848-1926), was her father's third wife. Some indication of the spirit of the household in which she grew up can be inferred from the fact that all her brothers grew up to become physicians and socialists. Her youngest brother, Gaetano Pieraccini also came to prominence during the summer of 1944 as the first mayor of Florence following the fall of fascism and the liberation of the region. Leonetta was nine when a court confiscated most of her father's assets in order to compensate shareholders who had lost money by investing in a local bank that he had founded. Losses resulted from a fraud perpetrated by Ottaviano Pieraccini's business partner. Ottaviano Pieraccini spent the years 1891–1894 as a prisoner, in part in his own home under house arrest and in part as an…

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Art student She returned to Tuscany in 1902, aged 20, and enrolled at the Academy of Fine Arts in Florence, where she was taught painting by Giovanni Fattori and "decoration" by Augusto Bruchi. Fattori was a leading exponent of the innovative and influential (at that time) Macchiaioli movement in painting. Student contemporaries who became friends included Fillide Levasti, Tommaso Cascella Armando Spadini and his future wife, the beautiful Pasqualina Cervone. It was also during this period that Leonetta Pieraccini first came across the man who later became her husband, Emilio Cecchi. Both were enthusiastic letter writers: thick files of their correspondence survive in accessible archives, to the delight of art history students and scholars of that period. During her first two years at the academy she won four silver medals. In 1904, she obtained a degree that entitled her to teach ornamental design in secondary schools. In 1905, she obtained a further degree in figure drawing and painting.

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Early work In 1906, at the annual "Promotrice per le belle arti" exhibition at the academy, Leonetta Pieraccini exhibited for the first time. The work in question was a large self-portrait, showing the artist in an outdoor "walking dress", with a background of clouds and foliage. At this time, she was fascinated by the classical romanticist approach of the artist Giovanni Costetti, a noted portraitist. That same year Ottaviano Pieraccini, her father, suffered a cerebral haemorrhage which left him immobilised.

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Emilio Cecchi and Rome In 1910, Leonetta Pieraccini became engaged to her friend, the essayist Emilio Cecchi, known for his work as a critic of art and literature and as a screenwriter. The two had met some years earlier at the home of their mutual friend Fillide Levasti. Cecchi was also from Tuscany, but had lived and worked in Rome since 1906. The marriage took place at Poggibonsi in 1911 and was followed in 1912 by the painful loss of Mario, their first child, who was stillborn. Three more children were born to the couple in 1913, 1914 and 1918: all three grew to adulthood. Despite the pressures of managing a young family, Leonetta Cecchi Pieraccini did not abandon her painting. Indeed, according to one commentator, the decade between 1911 and 1920 was, in terms of her artistic output, the most fruitful of her life. Directly after the wedding, the couple had moved into their new home, a studio apartment at Via Nomentana 331, in a fashionable district at what was then the north-eastern edge of Rome.

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Networking During the early years of the Cecchis' marriage, Emilio Cecchi was working intensively on a commission he had accepted from Olindo Malagodi to produce a History of Nineteenth Century English literature for La Tribuna: the volume was published in 1915. The Cecchis' apartment quickly became a popular meeting point for a generation of Rome's artists and intellectuals. Frequent visitors identified by Leonetta herself in her later writings include Armando and Pasqualina Spadini (who had also made the move to Rome), Antonio Baldini, Alfredo Gargiulo, Giuseppe Antonio Borgese, Fausto Torrefranca, Giovanni Amendola, Sibilla Aleramo, Vincenzo Cardarelli, Goffredo Bellonci and Cesare Pascarella, as well as Olga Resnevič and her physician husband, Angelo Signorelli (1878–1952). It seems also to have been at around the same time that Leonetta began to keep a diary, which she would faithfully maintain for the rest of her life, and which would provide material for books which she would publish half a lifetime later.

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Early successes. War years In 1912, she exhibited a portrait at the 81st exhibition of the Society of Fine Arts Lovers ("Società di amatori e cultori di belle arti") in Rome. In the years that followed she exhibited at the Second and Third International Arts Exhibitions of the Rome Secession. During 1915, after many months of secret negotiations with governments in Berlin, London and Paris and much political division at home, Italy joined the belligerents in World War I, persuaded to fight alongside the British by promises of post-war territorial rewards. Emilio Cecchi was conscripted and on 10 May 1915 headed off for Alessandria in Lombardy. Sent to join the fighting on the northern front, he combined his military duties with a distinguished role as a war correspondent for La Tribuna. In September 1916, he was posted to a desk job with the 8th Army Corps, which involved a posting to Florence. Leonetta left Rome with their two small daughters and joined her husband in Florence. Two of her pictures from this period were exhibited at the Fourth International Arts Exhibitions in 1916 and won powerfully positive reviews from Cipriano Efisio Oppo in L'Idea Nazionale, Arturo Maraini in La Tribuna…

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After the war In 1918, as the war drew to a close, three of her portraits and a landscape were included in the "Young Artists' Exhibition" ("Mostra d’arte giovanile") organised by Carlo Tridenti and Marcello Piacentini at the Casina de Pincio in Rome. Again, her work was met with favourable critical reviews. Later that year, Emilio Cecchi was offered and accepted a journalism assignment by the "Italian foreign action Bureau" which meant a lengthy stay in England for him, while Leonetta remained in Florence with the children, of whom there were by this time three. During 1919, the couple were able to meet up together for a short stay in Paris. They returned to Florence soon afterwards and immediately set about moving back to Rome. On account of a desperate shortage of suitable housing in the capital, during 1920, they set up their family home, temporarily, at Ariccia, in the hills to the east of Rome, however. Before too much longer, they were able to move to within the city limits, acquiring an apartment along the Via Appia Nuova. Cecchi returned to working on La Tribuna and was also one of seven co-founders of the La Ronda, a monthly literary…

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First solo exhibitions. Critical reactions In February 1921 Leonetta Cecchi Pieraccini agreed to collaborate in her first solo exhibition. The location was the "Casa d'Arte Bragaglia" (gallery), opened three years earlier by Anton Giulio Bragaglia. Leonetta was encouraged to go ahead with the exhibition by her friend Armando Spadini, who also helped with the selection of pictures to be exhibited. The exhibition featuring approximately 50 oil paintings and watercolours was a critical success, receiving another enthusiastic review from Oppo in L'Idea Nazionale. The first solo exhibition of her own works which she arranged herself involved 42 of her paintings, displayed a few years later in 1928, at the "Art Room" attached to the literary magazine La Fiera Letteraria ("Literary fair") in Milan. Through the 1920s her work continued to appear at exhibitions in Rome, notably at the Art Biennale exhibitions held in Rome in 1921 and 1923. The second of these included two of Pieraccini's "oval portraits" of women, featuring Andriulli Peruzzi and Rosina Pisaneschi, the wife of the writer-commentator Alberto Spaini. These two portraits were picked out for special commendation by Ugo Ojetti, who wrote in Corriere della Sera that "Leonetta Cecchi Pieraccini presents portraits that draw their appeal…

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New York In July 1930, Leonetta and her husband sailed for New York aboard the SS Conte Grande. Emilio Cecchi had been invited to teach two literature courses at the University of California, Berkeley. Leonetta stayed in the first instance on the eastern seaboard, spending three months in New York. With her friends, the polyglot journalist-scholar Henry Furst and the writer-filmmaker Mario Soldati, she undertook an intense programme of visits to the city's museums and studies of its vistas. Many drawings, watercolours and paintings resulted. She also made some potentially lucrative contacts with principal galleries concentrating on contemporary artworks. She visited Chicago and re-joined her husband at the university campus, before returning to Italy.

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Writing As she slowly disengaged from participation in art exhibitions, Leonetta Pieraccini became increasingly active with her pen. The 1940s were a period during which several new important news magazines were launched and/or came to prominence. She worked as a journalist with several periodicals and newspapers, especially after the fall of fascism, including Omnibus, launched by Leo Longanesi in 1937, Oggi, L'Europeo and Il Gazzettino. During the Fascist years her magazine contributions frequently appeared not under her own name, but with the by-line "T.T.T.", though the focus of her journalism was on the arts, and not directly political. "T.T.T." was a reference to "Tètta", a diminutive which friends sometimes used in place of "Leonetta". Leonetta Cecchi Pieraccini's exceptional and acute powers of observation with regard to the world around her were put to good use in her written work, just as they had been in her paintings. Three substantial volumes, published in 1952, 1960 and 1964, display those powers with stark clarity:

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Personal tragedy Although Leonetta Cecchi Pieraccini was blessed with a long, active life, she suffered the double tragedy of being predeceased by two of her four children. Mario, her eldest son, was born dead in 1912. Then, in 1959, her elder daughter fell gravely ill. Seven years later, on 16 July 1966, Giuditta 'Ditta' Cecchi Natinguerra died at the conclusion of a long and brutal illness.

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