WORKS AND PRESENTATION

PRESENTATION EXTRACTS FROM MONOGRAPHIES, CATALOGUES AND MAIN NEWSPAPERS


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All the works introduced in this site belong to public and private collections.

          

        

" Franz Borghese is the real painter. Differently, for example, from Mino Maccari, he does not like to minimize his engagement as artist. In fact he considers his work as life itself, and not as a joke. He brings up all his resources for the best of his innate skill, in a "Catherine-wheel" of whimsical stories, landing at the fantastic, and never falling into the cynical caricature. His colours are antiheroic, Franz Borghese does not concede to the observer any surprise. Thre chromatic choices, in fact, apply to an essential fan of possibilities. We may suspect - why to deny it ? - he is afraid of what is unusual, unforeseen, since he is too inclined to an excessive lyrism, he nearly refuses to confess, becuase of his modesty, a soft romanticism after all. The chromatic range, does not go beyond yellow, red, black, white, seldom blue and sky-blue. This is nearly a monochromatic range for his enchanted inventions. The research of Borghese always presents itself to the observer in figurative terms of full stylistic coherence. Elegant painter, he never goes out of the guard position. Because of his modesty, because of his politeness ? In our opinion, brecause of both things. His painting school is a first-rate school, daughter of a hand that decides the first movement when the work is already mentally completed.. His laboratory is made of paint-brushes, pens, brush-pens, water-colours, faesite boards, as support. These are the instruments of his thought, which make the painted man or woman, the angel, the devil, the good, person, the awkward person, more than the bad person. For Borghese, in fact, Evil does not exist. The moral categories, for him, are always deliciously interchangeable. And, maybe, more than two.

Milan, 1993                                                                                                                                   Paolo Levi

(Franz Borghese - Publishing House Selfart)            

       

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