In Michelangelo Antonioni’s first feature film of 1950, Una Cronaca di un amore (‘Story of a love affair’, but better in Italian), the private investigator commissioned by the husband of Paola Molon to find out more about her and her past, spends time in her home town of Ferrara. He goes to the liceo, Ferrara’s notable school,
he goes to the tennis club to talk to the caretaker,
he is seen strolling along Corso Ercole I
then round the corner,
and the camera follows him to look up Corso Rossetti.
This last shot is cinematic dead time because it tells us nothing about the story. On the other hand it tells us a great deal about its mood, and foreshadows the end, that this love story will lead to a fruitless, unconsummated, unredeemed end.
Antonioni was born (1918) and brought up in Ferrara, a city of long streets, high walls and the formidable Castello Estense, moat and all, at its centre.
He went to the Liceo Ludovico Ariosto (on its old site, in Via Borgo dei Leoni);
he frequented the tennis club in Via Saffi (made famous in Giorgio Bassani’s novel, ‘The Garden of the Finzi Continis’);
he also must have liked to stroll up the Corso Ercole
to the crossroads with Corso Rossetti, past the Palazzo dei Diamanti and the Palazzo Prosperi-Sacrati (below).
Another important Ferrarese denizen in his mind must have been Giorgio De Chirico, who while not a native was invalided there from 1915 to 1918, and painted some notable pictures there. ‘Le Muse Inquietanti’ [s.v. Wikipedia] of 1918, for example, features the Castello Estense. His imagination made something quite new out of empty streets, shadowed porticos, statues in the piazza, and lone figures. The bleak absence of the ordinary living human must have informed Antonioni’s own imagining of cities, explored in several of his films, and most famously in the final sequence of L’Eclisse (1961).
The shot of Corso Rossetti in the winter light of an evening is powerfully imagined. This image
is crucially different from the one above, since it shows a person stepping, like a figure from a De Chirico painting, into the building on the right, defined as much by his shadow as by his figure.
Intriguingly, it echoes the comments of English visitors found in the Blue Guide to the Romagna, which I was using on my visit. Hester Piozzi wrote in 1789: “My pen was just upon the point of praising its cleanliness . . . till I reflected there was nobody to dirty it.” In 1826, William Hazlitt wrote in his ‘Notes of a journey through France and Italy’: “You enjoy the most perfect solitude, that of a city which was once filled with ‘the busy hum of men’”; in his ‘Pictures from Italy’ of 1846, Charles Dickens described old Ferrara as “more solitary, more depopulated, more deserted than any city of the solemn brotherhood”.
It’s not like that now. Here is the Corso Rossetti from a position close to the one above. (If you took the photo from the middle of the road you risk being run over.)
The extensive pedestrianisation of Ferrara, preserving cobbles where possible, and the high prevalence of bicycles preserve the poetry of the city but in parts that poetry has been put paid to by the ubiquity of the car whether driven or parked, and the fact that cobbles have given way to asphalt. The city seems to be economically prosperous and there are coachloads of tourists, indeed I was one myself, which drains the poetry of solitude away. I wonder if Antonioni ever regretted this.
Next post: ‘Ferrara made me (2): Giorgio Bassani’
Hi Tim. Very nice blogs and photos. How many of the photos did you take? I always loved to talk and teach about the De Chirico, Antonioni and Ferrara links. And if I remember correctly, Antonioni’s segment in Beyond the Clouds was shot in Ferrara too.
Hi Donato. Interested to know you taught on Antonioni and Ferrara. Have you written that up anywhere for me to look at? I’d be most interested to see it. Beyond the Clouds first episode has scenes in Ferrara and Comacchio. Part of Visconti’s Ossessione filmed there as well.
We had only three days in Ferrara as part of an 11-day trip to cities in the Romagna. I took 550 photos, and got that down to 200, most of which are on Flickr.com, and I reckon that Ferrara was where I took the most. We found it fascinating, and my next blogpost will be on Giorgio Bassani, another Ferrarese of course. Hope to post that tomorrow.
I’ve never written on that link, but only lectured on it. I do have a powerpoint I lectured with back in 2008 that has essentially comparisons between De Chirico paintings and stills from Antonioni films. If you want I can email that to you if you are curious just to see the comparisons, at least visually, since the actual lecture is in the lecture stratosphere somewhere between the earth and the ozone layer!
Sorry to be slow in replying, but I’ve been away for a few days. I’d love to see those visual links if you could email them to me. Tim