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Amedeo Modigliani — The fat child
Amedeo Modigliani

The fat child

1915

Painted in 1915, a pivotal year in Amedeo Modigliani's development, "The Fat Child" presents the artist's already distinctive formal language applied to one of his most tender subjects. The child's rounded form is rendered with the elongated, simplified contours that define Modigliani's mature style, yet here the geometry softens into something genuinely warm. Flesh tones move between ochre and rose, layered with characteristic thinness against a muted background that pushes the figure forward with quiet insistence. The face, with its characteristic almond-shaped eyes and gently mask-like quality, carries an introspective calm that transcends straightforward portraiture. At just 45.5 by 37.5 centimetres, the work possesses an intimacy that larger canvases cannot replicate. This scale invites close looking, rewarding the viewer with the sensitivity of Modigliani's brushwork and the subtle tonal shifts that animate the skin. Works from this transitional period, before the artist fully consolidated the elongated neck and tilted head that would define his most celebrated portraits, carry particular art-historical significance. The composition demonstrates his synthesis of influences ranging from Cézanne's structural resolve to African sculptural form, already filtered through a vision that was unmistakably his own. For the discerning collector, signed works by Modigliani from 1915 represent an extraordinary intersection of rarity, historical importance, and visual immediacy. Held within the collection of the Pinacoteca di Brera, one of Italy's most prestigious institutions, the work carries a provenance that speaks to its long-recognized significance. Small-format oils of this period seldom come to market, and the accessibility of the subject, a child rendered with both formal rigour and genuine tenderness, broadens its resonance without diminishing its scholarly weight.

Medium
Oil on canvas
Overall
Signed
Yes
Location
Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan, Italy

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About this work

Amedeo Modigliani, The fat child, 1915

Painted in 1915, a pivotal year in Amedeo Modigliani's development, "The Fat Child" presents the artist's already distinctive formal language applied to one of his most tender subjects. The child's rounded form is rendered with the elongated, simplified contours that define Modigliani's mature style, yet here the geometry softens into something genuinely warm. Flesh tones move between ochre and rose, layered with characteristic thinness against a muted background that pushes the figure forward with quiet insistence. The face, with its characteristic almond-shaped eyes and gently mask-like quality, carries an introspective calm that transcends straightforward portraiture. At just 45.5 by 37.5 centimetres, the work possesses an intimacy that larger canvases cannot replicate. This scale invites close looking, rewarding the viewer with the sensitivity of Modigliani's brushwork and the subtle tonal shifts that animate the skin. Works from this transitional period, before the artist fully consolidated the elongated neck and tilted head that would define his most celebrated portraits, carry particular art-historical significance. The composition demonstrates his synthesis of influences ranging from Cézanne's structural resolve to African sculptural form, already filtered through a vision that was unmistakably his own. For the discerning collector, signed works by Modigliani from 1915 represent an extraordinary intersection of rarity, historical importance, and visual immediacy. Held within the collection of the Pinacoteca di Brera, one of Italy's most prestigious institutions, the work carries a provenance that speaks to its long-recognized significance. Small-format oils of this period seldom come to market, and the accessibility of the subject, a child rendered with both formal rigour and genuine tenderness, broadens its resonance without diminishing its scholarly weight.

Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
overall: 45.5 x 37.5 cm
Year
1915
Signed
Hand-signed by the artist
Seen at
Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan, Italy

More works by Amedeo Modigliani

Collected by

Musée d'Art Moderne de Paris, Cleveland Museum of Art, Sebastián Naranjo