Emilio Gola
Emilio Gola was an Italian Impressionist painter.
Biography
Born in Milan, then part of the Austrian Empire, into a noble family, Gola was encouraged to develop his interest in art in his adolescence by his father, a dilettante painter. He graduated in industrial engineering from the Polytechnic University of Milan in 1873. He did not enrol at the Brera Academy, but took private lessons from Sebastiano De Albertis. At the same time he became interested in the works of Tranquillo Cremona and Daniele Ranzoni. His wealthy family background enabled him to make a series of visits to France, the Netherlands and England where he encountered the work of foreign artists.Gola made his artistic début at the Brera Annual Exhibition in 1879 with a Study from Life and Head: Study from Life. His early work was already noted for its strong colour combinations and vigorous brushwork, as in the portrait of Contessa Gola, Mother of the Artist. Gola participated regularly in national exhibitions, but obtained his greatest official recognition at the European level. By the 1880s he was an esteemed portrait who depicted women of the Milanese nobility in their fashionable, worldly dimension but with a vigorously naturalistic approach. His portraits were accompanied by a rich repertoire of views of Milan and the countryside of Brianza in bright colours that were to constitute his stylistic hallmark. Active in the region of Liguria and Venice, he focused in his late period on seascapes distinguished by great formal synthesis and expressive intensity. One of his pupils was Alberto Malaspina.
Work
Gola’s oeuvre can be divided principally by subject-matter: landscapes with figures, mostly executed in Brianza, such as Washerwoman and Landscape: The First Thaw ; the Milanese canals ; seascapes, particularly of Alassio and the Venetian lagoon ; and portraits.Gola was influenced by the work of the Scapigliati, particularly by their use of juxtaposed or superimposed brushstrokes to attain certain effects of light and colour. However, his subject-matter was different, his colours more brilliant, his brushwork freer, occasionally virtually ignoring form, and at times his figures seem carelessly positioned on the canvas. At his most successful, however, he could produce such splendidly original works as his several interpretations of the theme Washerwomen at Mondonico.