UniCredit Art Collection company logo
UniCredit Art Collection
Skip to main content
  • Menu
  • Artists
  • Collections
  • Video
  • Exhibitions
  • Learning Centre
  • Our Places
  • News
  • UniCredit Art Collection
  • EN
  • IT
  • DE
Menu
  • EN
  • IT
  • DE

Achille Virgilio Socrate Funi: Italian, 1890-1972

An Italian painter, founder of the 900 group, he brought back the ideals of classicism by creating large murals.

Achille Virgilio Socrate Funi Italian, 1890-1972

  • Biography
  • Works
  • Biography
    View works. Achille Virgilio Socrate Funi, Visione di una città ideale Figure in uno sfondo architettonico con scultura, 1951
    Visione di una città ideale Figure in uno sfondo architettonico con scultura, 1951
    View works
    Share
    • Facebook
    • X
    • Pinterest
    • Tumblr
    • Email

    Achille Virgilio Socrate Funi (Ferrara, Italy 1890 - Appiano Gentile, Italy 1972)

    Born in Ferrara in 1890, Virgilio Funi (he acquired the name Achille just before 1920), he grew up deeply admiring the frescoes in the Schifanoia Palace, following his passion by attending the Dosso Dossi School of Fine Arts in Ferrara.

    In 1906, he moved to Milan with his family, where he studied at the Brera Fine Arts Academy and formed friendships with the artists who would later create Futurism.

    With the display of his works at the New Tendencies exhibition in 1914, he openly declared his artistic distance from the movement, preferring a less disruptive and more realistic art. In the same year he volunteered for the war.

    When he returned to Milan, the artistic and social scenario of the city had changed: in 1919, Funi joined the famous meeting in Piazza San Sepolcro in Milan, which gave birth to fascism and exhibited at the Great Futurist Exhibition of the Cova Palace.

    In the 1920s, he frequented Margherita Sarfatti’s salon, where he met, among others, Mussolini, Sironi and Arturo Martini. With Martini, he spent nine months on Lake Como, guests of the patron, Preda. This was a fundamental period for the development of a new pictorial language focused on the solidity of forms and an essential composition, of direct Renaissance derivation.

    From here, Funi began an intense personal journey to recover classical models, with a particular interest in the human figure, which became the ideal fulcrum and main subject of his artwork, together with an attention to crafts.

    In 1922, he founded the 900 group together with Anselmo Bucci, Mario Sironi and other artists. They made their national debut in 1924 at the Venice Biennale.

    Funi was part of the steering committee until 1930, when the group began to disintegrate, affected by the first cracks in their association with fascism, now consolidated and in power.

    Facing the need for an art capable of embodying the ideals of the fascist state, Sironi brought an answer with mural painting, a trend which Funi followed to create a series of important commissions between Rome, Ferrara and Tripoli.

    In 1939, he began teaching at the Brera Fine Arts Academy and, in 1944, he took over the direction of the Institute. He joined the teaching staff in 1448 and, in 1961, returned to a management role. He also taught at the Carrara Academy in Bergamo, where he created a school dedicated to frescoes.

    He died in Appiano Gentile in 1972.


    Copyright the artist. Photo UniCredit Group (Sebastiano Pellion di Persano)

    Related artist

    • Detail of an abstract oil painting of a landscape in green, brown and blue.

      Ennio Morlotti

      View Artist Page
  • Works
    • A mixed-media painting of a male figure dressed as a merchant.
      Figura maschile abbigliata da mercante, 1951
      View details
    • A tempera painting of a group of three male figures dressed as merchants.
      Gruppo di tre figure maschili abbigliate da mercanti, 1951
      View details
    • A mixed-media painting of a male figure with drapery.
      Statua classica con panneggio, 1951
      View details
    • A tempera painting of a Piazza with a monument by the sea.
      Visione di una città ideale Figure in uno sfondo architettonico con scultura, 1951
      View details
    • A tempera painting with a view of a port with a central sculpture, figures and architectural elements of classical inspiration.
      Visione di una Città ideale. Edifici, colonnati, tempio in costruzione, statua centrale, personaggi sulla piazza e porto sullo sfondo, 1951
      View details
    • A tempera painting of a Piazza by the sea.
      Visione di una Città ideale. Figure su fondale architettonico di ispirazione classica, 1951
      View details
    • A tempera painting with a view of a port with a central temple, figures and architectural elements of classical inspiration.
      Visione di una città ideale. Porto con tempietto, palazzo, colonnati e figure., 1951
      View details

    Related artist

    • Detail of an abstract oil painting of a landscape in green, brown and blue.

      Ennio Morlotti

      View Artist Page
  • Related artists

    • Detail of an abstract oil painting of a landscape in green, brown and blue.

      Ennio Morlotti

      Read more

UniCredit Art Collection Logo.

  • UniCredit Art Collection
  • UniCredit Website

Terms of Use

 

For referrals, loan requests and other projects                                                                                                   

WRITE TO US

Instagram, opens in a new tab.
LinkedIn, opens in a new tab.
Youtube, opens in a new tab.
Twitter-x, opens in a new tab.
Privacy Policy
Accessibility policy
Cookie Policy
Manage cookies
Copyright © 2025 UniCredit Art Collection

This website uses cookies
This site uses cookies to help make it more useful to you. Find out more about cookies.

Manage cookies
Accept

Cookie preferences

Check the boxes for the cookie categories you allow our site to use

Cookie options
Required for the website to function and cannot be disabled.
Improve your experience on the website by storing choices you make about how it should function.
Allow us to collect anonymous usage data in order to improve the experience on our website.
Allow us to identify our visitors so that we can offer personalised, targeted marketing.
Save preferences
Close

Join our mailing list

Signup

* denotes required fields

In order to respond to your enquiry, we will process the personal data you have supplied in accordance with our privacy policy.