When Hyundai and I are analyzing the art form, it is important to understand the background and creator of creation. This is especially true when traveling Casa Malaparte designed by Curzio Malaparte. Curzio calls Casa Malaparte "a house like me" and I hope it will be a manifesto of modern architecture. From the fireplace point of view Casa Malaparte creates a modern atmosphere incorporating many building elements from the roof terrace to the white curved Bliss Soleil.
Casa Malaparte is the most famous example of architectural design designed within the original surrealist founded in France by André Breton in the 1920s. Between the start and the construction of the villa, the client / architect Curzio Malaparte has edited avant - garde magazines about surrealism. These include works by French surrealists such as Brittany and Paul Ehreu and works by Italian metaphysical members such as Giorgio de Chirico and Alberto Sabinio. Thoughts are mixed. It is a house. He may even argue the project with surreal artists in a journal. The picture of Savinio not only hangs on Casa Malaparte, it also designed tiles. Therefore, Malapati loses in surrealistic culture, absorbs, transforms and establishes similar sensibility in his house.
Casa Malaparte, meaning that familiar things are spliced by random opportunities or revealed by wrinkle or elimination, will reconstitute simple and familiar shapes to a wonderful effect. Walls, stairs, doors, sails, red - familiar elements in the Italian regional landscape - from the background of Casa Malaparte. In fact, Casa Malaparte seems to quote most of de Chirico's work. With the arrival of Kiriko in 1912 and the mystery of the afternoon, the red wall was cut horizontally on the canvas and 169 were collected.