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This page is dedicated to Antonio Bardi, Florentine painter
(1862-1924). It was created in 1998 by his great-grandson Ugo
Bardi.
Antonio Bardi worked as a painter for most of his life but after his death in 1924 his work and his story have been almost totally lost. Over his career he must have painted hundreds of paintings. Of these, just a few are still kept in the house in Florence where he lived during the last period of his life (still property of his heirs). One of the main purposes of this page is to try to collect data about Antonio Bardi and his paintings. If you happen to have seen - or you own - one, the author would very much appreciate if you could contact him. (Click here to see Antonio Bardi's signature). In time it may be possible to be able to put together a data base of Antonio's paintings. |
Picture Gallery
Antonio Bardi's photographic portrait, circa 1910
Untitled, no date - The author's father drinking at a table
Untitled 1885 - Two men seated at a table
Portrait of Ferdinando Bardi, the artist's father
Marble head
Portraits of Antonio Bardi's wife, Emma Ardinghi:
Emma as a young woman
Emma as a mature woman.
Emma in late life (photographic portrait).
Other paintings by Antonio Bardi still exist, hidden in the mass of objects in his former house. More of them will be placed on-line when possible.
Text of the 1877 newspaper article about Antonio Bardi
Antonio Bardi's father was Ferdinando and his mother Caterina (born Setti), both Florentines, both of modest conditions and living in the "S. Frediano" quarter on the south side of the river Arno. Ferdinando's occupation is reported in the acts of the city hall to have been "torcitore di seta" (silk worker) and also "carbonaio" (coal delivery man). The main event of Ferdinando's life was to join Garibaldi's "thousand" volunteers in the Italian revolution of 1860. From that war he returned with four silver medals of which the ribbons are still conserved by his heirs. The medals themselves were lost in the 40s, when they were donated to "the country" in support of the war effort, but they can still be seen in Ferdinando's portrait , made by his son. From the records still kept we also know that Ferdinando was born in Firenze on August 22nd 1822, that his father was Antonio Bardi, "pentolaio" (tinker) in S. Frediano and his mother Caterina (born Guidi), weaver.
Antonio Bardi was born in 1862 in Firenze. How he became a painter is told in an article published in a 19th century newspaper. The clip is still conserved, unfortunately the title, date and the name of the newspaper are missing. From what can be read in what is left, the date should be the first half of March 1877. The author of these notes has searched for that article in the three newspapers published in Firenze around the right time in "Archivio di stato", but could not find it. Anyway, the published story says that, approximately one year before, a famous Brazilian painter, one Pedro Americo, was taking a walk near the Uffizi gallery. There, he spotted a young boy drawing the head of a warrior on the pavement with a chalk. Somehow, that Brazilian gentleman decided that the boy had talent, so he took him as apprentice in his studio and helped him to get an education at the Art Academy in Firenze. He also helped the boy's family which, we are told, "versed in dire poverty". This story appears in the newspaper just before a report on the visit to Firenze of Pedro II, emperor of Brazil. The two stories may have been related, and the good deed of the Brazilian painter Pedro Amerigo may have had the main purpose of improving the public image of the emperor. Apparently even at that time the concept of "public relations" was not unknown in politics.
The boy, Antonio Bardi, finished his studies and became a full time painter. He married Emma Ardinghi, a florentine woman, and had two sons, Bardo and Raffaello. Very little is known about Antonio's career: it seems that he remained based in Firenze for most of his life. However, it seems also that he visited Spain. For sure he maintained some contacts with his Brazilian benefactors and it is remembered that he was acquainted with the ambassador of Brazil since he made a portrait of him. Antonio worked as a painter until an illness to the eyes (maybe he was 45?) forced him to reduce his artistic activities and take a job as a guardsman in the "Sant'Ambrogio" produce market in Firenze. He died at 62, (in 1924) of a throat cancer. Apparently he had been a convinced smoker all his life. His wife Emma survived him of a few years, dying one snowy day, on February 10th 1929. It is remembered that before dying she expressed the wish that nobody of the family should come to her funeral, so the priest had the funeral passing under the windows of the house, then in via Pisana. Her daughter in law (Rita), was at that time pregnant with her last son (Antonio).
Of Antonio Bardi's life, there remain the recollections of those who have known him personally, in particular his grand-daughter Renza, aunt of the author. At the time when these notes were written Renza was 81, but she still remembers her grandfather well. According to her, Antonio was a stern man. Renza remembers how once she met him on the stairs of their house in Via Pisana after she had just bought a chocolate sweet. Antonio took her back to the shop and ordered her to give back the sweet saying to the salesman "It is not right to sell things to children". This hardness of character is not so typical of the Bardi family as it appears nowadays, but those were harder times and Antonio Bardi's life was surely not easy. Finding a benefactor in the person of the Brazilian painter Pedro Amerigo was a stroke of luck that gave him a chance to escape the destiny of his father, a humble worker. Nevertheless, at his time just as today, life was not easy for someone who wanted to make a living out of painting. Antonio had to survive spending a lot of time in activities that today we would not think as very noble for a painter. He made and sold portraits, and the kind of realistic portraits that people would buy; not fancy "artistic" ones. In an age when photography was still something exotic and rare he owned a few cameras himself (still conserved), probably used for a quick snapshot of the subject to be elaborated on canvas later. Antonio also made, and sold, reproductions of the masterpieces conserved in the Florentine major galleries, from Raffaello, to Masaccio and Michelangelo. This activity, too, was something that could produce a modest revenue. As color photography did not exist yet, the visitors of the time (rather cultured ones in comparison to the present lot) would appreciate reproductions painted "from the original", as it would be stamped and sanctioned on the canvas by a museum officer. Finally, Antonio also painted and sold religious images: saints, madonnas, and so on. It is not clear today how he regarded these activities and if he would rather have liked to conduct a life more appropriate to an artist, painting only when and as inspiration dictated.
Over his career as a painter, Antonio must have painted hundreds of paintings. Of these, only a few remains in the hands of his heirs. We have two portraits of his wife Emma and one of his father Ferdinando with his medals. Two paintings showing the artist's father are kept by an old friend of the family who lives now in another town. We also have several sketches and unfinished paintings, and some copies of ancient masterpieces. One of these is a reproduction of the "Madonna della seggiola" by Raffaello (the original is presently at the Uffizi museum in Firenze). Several of Antonio's drawings while he was in school also remain, as well as a fragment of the portrait of a Japanese woman wearing a kimono. He also made and restored a "tabernacolo" fresco in via Palazzo dei Diavoli which was recently (1984?) torn down in building the large avenue named viale Talenti. A Florentine antiquarian, mr. M. Parronchi, told to the author that he has seen paintings signed A. Bardi, but that he would be unable now to find them.
Artists are supposed to use their skills to express concepts an ideas, not just to reproduce reality. But for Antonio Bardi we can't say much in this respect. So few of his paintings are left, and these few are just those which, presumably, had no market value: portraits of members of Antonio's family and juvenile sketches. We can only say that, undoubtably, he was skilled with his brush, and that he could paint fine portraits. His watercolor reproduction of Raffaello's "Madonna della Seggiola" is a small masterpiece of technical skill and mastery but, of course, it is not what we would call nowadays a "work of art". If Antonio had the inclination and the possibility to do more than that, it is difficult today to tell. We can only, maybe, try to give a meaning to some of the works he left. His portraits of his wife Emma are, no doubt, impressive, and not just from a technical viewpoint. The young Emma looks at us from the canvas with her large brown eyes. The warm red of the dress, the large black ribbon, the hint of hair collected in bun, give an idea of a constrained vitality. As a mature woman Emma looks stern and energetic, reminding to the author the figure of his grandmother Rita: the same stern expression, the same hair style. It is known that men tend to marry women who look like their mothers, that's maybe what Antonio's son Raffaello did when he chose Rita for his wife.
Also the portraits of Antonio's father Ferdinando may tell us something. First Antonio showed him as a vigorous bemedaled hero. Then, in a later painting we see again Ferdinando Bardi, this time as an aged man in poverty. Seated at a old and probably shaky table, with only a bowl of soup and some bread as dinner, Ferdinando's expression somehow conveys the idea of a life that was hard for everyone, and in particular for an old man who had lost all of his teeth and had to content himself with such a meager meal. Little consolation he had that he had been a glorious hero in his youth, now he had only three flasks of wine left. But decline is everyone's destiny, not just of heroes, and perhaps when Antonio Bardi painted his father in such way was also thinking to his own brief moment of notoriety, when he had met the Brazilian painter Pedro Amerigo. Also for Antonio, life was to become harder in old age.
We don't know if Antonio thought that his life as a painter was a success or a failure. But the fact that eventually he had to stop painting, officially because of eyes problem, seems to tell us something. For painters, Antonio's time was one of experimentation and of novelty. It was the age of the French "impressionistes" and of other schools which aimed at bringing true colors and light to previously dull and dark canvases. It was the time of Renoir, of Van Gogh, of Monet, of Gauguin, a time when all the great painters of the world seemed to have congregated in Paris. Of all this movement, of all this excitation, there is little or no trace in Antonio Bardi's paintings. In all what we have, he was a "classic" painter, one of the old school, surely a heavy inprint of his academic studies. If he did experiment with the new techniques it is probable that he had no success in a sleepy provincial town as Firenze was a that time. Far away from Paris, always in financial trouble, Antonio must have seen the world passing him by, with younger Italian painters gaining national and international renown. For example, Filadelfio Simi (1849-1922) was 13 years older than Antonio and had a remarkably similar story. Born in a poor family, he was noted by an older benefactor, this time an Italian painter named Vegni. Unlike Antonio, however, Filadelfio Simi is still well remembered, most likely because he had the luck that his master sent him to study in Paris, where he gained an international reputation even though his style always remained classic, without ever a hint of being influenced by the Parisian impressionists. Another still known Florentine painter of that period is Galileo Chini (1873 - 1956), about a decade younger than Antonio, he lived in another age of international contacts and "Art-Nouveau" influences. Among other things, Chini had the luck to be invited by the King of Siam and to spend 5 years in Bangkok in the fascination of the orient: glamour, exotism, bright colors and lights.
We don't know if Antonio tried to gain an international reputation and to follow the glamorous careers of some of his contemporaries. His granddaughter Renza says that he visited Spain and that he made a portrait of the Spanish and the Brazialian ambassadors in Italy. But these attempts eventually ended in failure, leaving Antonio to toil with his portraits of saints and Madonnas and his reproductions of ancient mastepieces. It is difficult to say how serious was Antonio's eye sickness, and if it really was what caused him to stop painting at 45. Surely it was not be so serious that it would not stop him from patrolling the old produce market at night, carrying a gun with him. It may not have been actually an excuse but, maybe, after so much hope at the beginning, the old painter was tired and in the end he gave up. We may imagine him during the last years of his life, stern, dressed in his rather formal clothes, sitting on his armchair smoking his cigarette and never saying much; a trait that the family seems to have maintained up to the present times.
Antonio Bardi's heirs
As a last note about Antonio Bardi, it may be worth remarking
that his life and personality had a profound impact on his heirs. His sons
(Raffaello and Bardo) were not painters but they could enjoy a relatively
well to do life. Of the two, Bardo died young, a few years after marrying.
Raffaello, instead, led a long life (he died at 84) and for most of it he
worked as an employee of a Swiss company which owned a factory of straw
hats in Firenze. In comparison with the average worker of the time, Raffaello
was a cultured man. He could read and write, and speak at least a few words
of German and Spanish, something clearly useful for him to work in an international
company. The effect of Antonio's career as a painter was most evident with
the second generation of children. Raffaello had two daughters (Anna and
Renza) and two sons (Giuliano and Antonio). All of them pursued careers
which had some artistic components. The sons became both architects, and
both daughters dabbled in painting. Renza followed her grandfather in painting
reproductions of masterpieces and became specialized in that (there are
still many of these reproductions in the family house). Later, however, she moved
to a non artistic career with the straw hat company which also employed her
father. Anna painted all of her life, following a path that we may imagine
as somewhat similar to that of her grandfather, although temporally inverted.
She started from very humble pursuit, selling portraits and painting trinkets
for tourists. Only during the last years of her life (she died in 1987)
she could finally became a full time artist, painting what she liked and
when she liked. The skill of painting seems to have disappeared from
the subsequent generation of heirs of Antonio (which includes the author
of the present notes). There is one more generation coming up, though,
and time will tell if the genetic imprint of the old painter will resurface.
This page was created in January 1998 by Ugo Bardi . Last revision January 1999.