- Azerbaijan mourns 38 killed in plane crash in Kazakhstan
- Konstas and Khawaja put Australia on top in 4th Test against India
- Lakers pip Warriors after another LeBron-Curry classic
- India readies for 400 million pilgrims at mammoth festival
- Nepal hosts hot air balloon festival
- Asia stocks up as 'Santa Rally' persists
- Tears, prayers as Asia mourns tsunami dead 20 years on
- Sydney-Hobart yacht crews set off on gale-threatened race
- Key public service makes quiet return in Gaza
- Fearless Konstas slams 60 as Australia take upper hand against India
- Bridges outduels Wembanyama, Celtics lose again
- Hungry Sabalenka ready for more Slam success
- Mass jailbreak in Mozambique amid post-election unrest
- Azerbaijani jet crashes in Kazakhstan, killing 38
- Bridges outduels Wembanyama as Knicks beat Spurs
- 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami: what to know 20 years on
- Asia to mourn tsunami dead with ceremonies 20 years on
- Syrians protest after video of attack on Alawite shrine
- Russian state owner says cargo ship blast was 'terrorist attack'
- 38 dead as Azerbaijani jet crashes in Kazakhstan
- Crisis-hit Valencia hire West Brom's Corberan as new boss
- Suriname ex-dictator and fugitive Desi Bouterse dead at 79
- 35 feared dead as Azerbaijani jet crashes in Kazakhstan
- Pope calls for 'arms to be silenced' in Christmas appeal
- Syria authorities say torched 1 million captagon pills
- Pope calls for 'arms to be silenced' across world
- 32 survivors as Azerbaijani jet crashes in Kazakhstan
- Pakistan air strikes kill 46 in Afghanistan, Kabul says
- Liverpool host Foxes, Arsenal prepare for life without Saka
- Japan FM raises 'serious concerns' over China military buildup
- Pope's sombre message in Christmas under shadow of war
- Zelensky condemns Russian 'inhumane' Christmas attack on energy grid
- Sweeping Vietnam internet law comes into force
- Pope kicks off Christmas under shadow of war
- Catholics hold muted Christmas mass in Indonesia's Sharia stronghold
- Japan's top diplomat in China to address 'challenges'
- Thousands attend Christmas charity dinner in Buenos Aires
- Demand for Japanese content booms post 'Shogun'
- As India's Bollywood shifts, stars and snappers click
- Mystery drones won't interfere with Santa's work: US tracker
- Djokovic eyes more Slam glory as Swiatek returns under doping cloud
- Australia's in-form Head confirmed fit for Boxing Day Test
- Brazilian midfielder Oscar returns to Sao Paulo
- 'Wemby' and 'Ant-Man' to make NBA Christmas debuts
- US agency focused on foreign disinformation shuts down
- On Christmas Eve, Pope Francis launches holy Jubilee year
- 'Like a dream': AFP photographer's return to Syria
- Chiefs seek top seed in holiday test for playoff-bound NFL teams
- Panamanians protest 'public enemy' Trump's canal threat
- Cyclone death toll in Mayotte rises to 39
From Da Vinci to Picasso, doodles on display in Rome
Hidden on the backs of canvases or scrawled on scraps of paper, doodles have allowed artists down the ages, from Michelangelo to Picasso, to test, explore and unleash their creativity.
Rome's Villa Medici is showcasing this long-ignored facet of artistic production in a new exhibition spanning the period from the Renaissance to the present day.
Entitled "Scribbling and Doodling - From Leonardo da Vinci to Cy Twombly", the unusual collection of nearly 300 original works ranges from playful and whimsical to transgressive and political.
It brings to light delightful discoveries never intended for the public eye -- with some even in the most unexpected of places.
The wooden panels of the majestic "Triptych of the Madonna" by Giovanni Bellini conceal a world of drawings on the back "that have nothing to do with the front", Francesca Alberti, one of the show's curators, told AFP.
On close observation, one can distinguish overlapping figures sketched onto the raw wood, one wearing a bishop's mitre and grimacing grotesquely.
"What we show in this exhibition is a whole series of drawings where the artist's hand has been liberated."
- Kids' drawings -
Whether on the walls of artists' workshops, underneath frescoes or in the margins of other drawings, the doodles and sketches include out-of-proportion figures, crude renditions of heads and bodies, comical caricatures and wobbly lines, scribbles and hatchings.
These "experimental, transgressive, regressive or liberating graphic gestures", as the catalogue describes them, are not subject to the rules and constraints of academic art and call to mind children's doodles.
"It took me a lifetime to learn to draw like them," Pablo Picasso said of the freshness and creativity of children's art.
Less rigid and more spontaneous, the works represent the hidden side of the artists' talent, plunging the visitor into the heart of the creative process.
The exhibit deliberately ignores chronology and happily mixes eras, proposing new connections between Renaissance masters from Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo to modern and contemporary artists like Jean-Michel Basquiat, Jean Dubuffet, Pablo Picasso and Cy Twombly.
- 'Putin out' -
Displayed in the villa's wide, gently rising staircase, originally built to accommodate horses, "a dialogue between Renaissance drawings and contemporary drawings" plays out, with 16th-century sketches juxtaposing doodles produced four centuries later.
A "Madonna and Child" by the Mannerist Taddeo Zuccari, who lived from 1529 to 1566, "decomposes and unravels into a whole series of scribbled lines as if, in fact, the artist's hand was completely free", Alberti said.
These sketches and doodles were important to the artists, Alberti explained, as they allowed them to "release the tension accumulated while drawing".
"You also need to free yourself from drawing to be able to draw again with the same energy," she said.
Visitors to the exhibition are themselves invited to unleash their inner creativity in a charcoal grey room, with chalk provided.
Current events have inspired many of the scribblings visitors have left on the walls. The slogans "Putin out!" and "Long live peace" appear next to a depiction of Ukraine's yellow and blue flag.
X.Karnes--AMWN