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Peggy Guggenheim Collection

Solomon’s niece Peggy — wealthy, high-spirited, and rebellious — was 40 years old before she discovered a vocation for which she was perfectly suited: art patronage.
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The Angel of the City
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Marino Marini, The Angel of the City, 1948 (cast 1950?). Bronze, Height, To Top of Base and Arm Span of Figure: 65 15/16 x 41 3/4 inches; Base: 31 5/8 x 20 9/16 x 1 3/4 inches. Peggy Guggenheim Collection. 76.2553.183. Marino Marini © 2007 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/SIAE, Rome.


Marino Marini drew on the tradition of Etruscan and Northern European sculpture in developing his themes of the female nude, the portrait bust, and the equestrian figure. By interpreting classical themes in light of modern concerns and with modern techniques, he sought to contribute a mythic image that would be applicable in a contemporary context.

The evolution of the subject of the horse and rider reflects Marini’s personal response to that changing context. The theme first appears in his work in 1936, when the proportions of horse and rider are relatively slender and both figures are poised, formal, and calm. By the following year the horse rears and the rider gestures. In 1940 the forms become simplified and more archaic in spirit, and the proportions become squatter. By the late 1940s the horse is planted immobile with its neck extended, strained, ears pinned back, and mouth open, as in the present example, which conveys the qualities characteristic of this period of Marini’s work—affirmation and charged strength associated explicitly with sexual potency. Later, the rider becomes increasingly oblivious of his mount, involved in his own visions or anxieties. Eventually he was to topple from the horse as it fell to the ground in an apocalyptic image of lost control, paralleling Marini’s feelings of despair and uncertainty about the future of the world.

Lucy Flint