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De Chirico, 160 previously unpublished works published

Surprising paintings such as ''The Poetic Dreamer'' from 1937, acquired by the Israel Museum in Jerusalem. Or more traditional works, such as the 1934 Self-Portrait, which emerged from a private collection. A brilliant and prolific artist, active throughout nearly the entire 20th century, the great Giorgio De Chirico never ceases to amaze. So much so that 36 years after his death in 1978, 160 previously unpublished or otherwise unknown works have come to light—along with countless fakes. This is the latest development in a new General Catalog, the first volume of which is currently available in bookstores from Maretti Editore. The catalog aims to complete the cataloging of the master's impressive output while also stemming the phenomenon of forgeries, which has further increased in recent years. Introduced by an essay by Claudio Strinati, the volume—the first in a series of at least four—collects the fruits of years of work by the Giorgio and Isa De Chirico Foundation, whose mission is to "search for and catalog works deemed authentic by the master," in addition to managing the house museum in Piazza di Spagna and preserving a collection of over 550 canvases and drawings. This work, explains Foundation President Paolo Picozza, seeks to bring to a close the vast output of the inventor of Metaphysical Art, 27 years after the publication of the "historic" General Catalogue edited by Claudio Bruno Sakraischik (now out of print), which authenticated 2,600 De Chirico paintings and which was interrupted in 1991 with Sakraischik's death. Collected in this first volume of the Maretti General Catalog are 450 works dating from 1912 to 1976, which were not included in Sakraischik's catalog. Of these, 290 are accompanied by a bibliography (published in the appendix), while another 160 are currently unpublished and virtually unknown to scholars, as Strinati notes, "even though a certain number of paintings appearing in the volume have appeared at auctions or exhibited in exhibitions with related catalogs, some authoritative, others marginal." During his long life, De Chirico—according to President Picozza—produced some 5,000 paintings and drawings. The Foundation's goal, he explains, is to finally bring order to this vast sea of ​​works within a few years, cataloging and publishing the more than two thousand missing works from Sakraischik's oeuvre and establishing a reliable chronological order. Following the recently published volume, a second volume, with another 450 works, is planned for January 2015, followed by a third of equal weight at the end of 2015, and then a fourth "until the collected material is exhausted." All this is to "provide scholars and collectors with an important and comprehensive tool for consultation, comparison, and work." But also, the lawyer emphasizes, "to try to stem the ever-recurring phenomenon of forgeries."
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