The Permanent Collection of the Museo Nazionale dell'Arte Moderna officially opened to the public on 14 December 2025.
“Bianco Lombardo” dedicated to Antonio Pedretti at Villa Borghi in Biandronno.
a long-awaited event that returns to the Varese area one of its most important interpreters
intense and recognizable. We can consider this occasion a more unique event than
rare, considering how special the opening of a museum space dedicated to
a still living artist.
Born on February 2, 1950 in Gavirate, Pedretti trained at the Castello painting school
Sforzesco and continued his studies at the Brera Academy, which he left in 1972 to follow a
personal research already well defined. Very precocious, at only sixteen years old he organized an exhibition
personal exhibition at the Ca' Vegia Gallery in Varese: lake landscapes, farmhouses, flowers and still waters,
spread with a spatula with a vibrant pictorial material, deeply linked to its land
of origin.
In the following years he took part in important group exhibitions, including the Varese National Prize
Art, and in 1970 he presented at the Ghiggini Gallery a series of nudes influenced by De Pisis and
Bonnard, alongside Sicilian landscapes full of light and emotional tension. Criticism
recognizes early on the technical and expressive strength: Gian Franco Maffina underlines his
ability to translate the emotional reaction to the landscape into painting, while in 1972, at
Galerie L'Angle Aigu in Brussels, also receives praise from Renato Guttuso for
the commitment and quality of his work.
The “Bianco Lombardo” – a stylistic feature that made Pedretti unmistakable – becomes in
time a poetics: a white that is not neutral but alive, layered, capable of evoking silences,
Fogs, architecture, and memories of the North. The new permanent collection at Villa Borghi
collects emblematic works of his career, offering the public a coherent journey
in his artistic evolution.
The opening on December 14, 2025 is not just an exhibition event, but an act of
cultural valorization for the entire territory. Villa Borghi thus becomes the place where the
Pedretti's research finds a stable home, in dialogue with the landscape that inspired it
since the very beginning.
An opportunity to discover an artist who was able to transform the Lombard light into
pictorial material, and to celebrate an art history that continues to speak to the present.


