Plinio Nomellini

That same year, at the Society, he displayed the following paintings: In the Sun, The Strike; The Journey is Finished; Wild Flowers; Mouth of the Calambrone, and The Summer of San Martino.

In 1894, due to similar paintings and his apparent support for a Genoese labor group, he was arrested on charges of anarchism.

After spending several months in prison, he was tried and acquitted, thanks to contributions from his fellow artists which provided for his legal defenses.

[4] After World War I, what had been a quiet rural area became more developed so, in 1919, he moved to Florence, where he focused on landscape painting, making numerous trips to Capri and Elba.

[1] This was expressed most Notably in a painting called Incipit Nova Aetas, which celebrates the Blackshirts coming to Florence.

Plinio Nomellini (date unknown)