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Genovese gallerist Francesco Masnata, founder of La Bertesca, dies at 77

other · 2026-05-04

Francesco Masnata, the influential Genovese gallerist who founded La Bertesca in 1966, died on August 31, 2018, at age 77 after a brief illness. Born in Genoa on July 22, 1941, he co-founded the gallery with Nicola Trentalance at age 25. La Bertesca debuted with a show of American Pop artists (D'Arcangelo, Dine, Lichtenstein, Rosenquist, Warhol, Wesley, Wesselmann) in late 1966. Masnata is best known for organizing the first-ever Arte Povera exhibition in 1967, curated by Germano Celant, held from September 27 to October 20 at La Bertesca. The show featured artists Boetti, Fabro, Kounellis, Paolini, Pascali, Prini (Arte Povera) and Bignardi, Ceroli, Icaro, Mambor, Mattiacci, Tacchi (Im Spazio). Over the years, La Bertesca moved to several Genoa locations: Salita Santa Caterina (1972), Via Gavotti (1975), Salita della Tosse (1980), and back to Salita Santa Caterina (1983). Masnata also opened spaces in Milan (Modulo Arte Contemporanea, 1970), Düsseldorf (1974-1977), and Rome (Via del Babuino, 1977). He produced the self-managed magazine Pallone and founded Edizioni Masnata, limited-edition publications now sought by collectors. In the 1990s, through Kaiman Art, he pursued international collaborations, and in the 2000s, he engaged with emerging artists in Russia and China. Under the pseudonym Bibesco, he created artworks using painting, collage, maps, and writing.

Key facts

  • Francesco Masnata died on August 31, 2018, in Genoa at age 77.
  • He was born in Genoa on July 22, 1941.
  • He co-founded La Bertesca gallery in 1966 with Nicola Trentalance.
  • La Bertesca's logo was designed by Marcello Morandini.
  • The gallery's first exhibition featured American Pop artists in late 1966.
  • Masnata organized the first Arte Povera exhibition in 1967, curated by Germano Celant.
  • The Arte Povera show ran from September 27 to October 20, 1967.
  • La Bertesca moved to multiple locations in Genoa: Salita Santa Caterina (1972, 1983), Via Gavotti (1975), Salita della Tosse (1980).
  • Masnata opened galleries in Milan (1970), Düsseldorf (1974-1977), and Rome (1977).
  • He founded the magazine Pallone and Edizioni Masnata.
  • He created works under the pseudonym Bibesco.
  • He collaborated with Kaiman Art in the 1990s and engaged with artists in Russia and China in the 2000s.

Entities

Artists

  • Francesco Masnata
  • Nicola Trentalance
  • Marcello Morandini
  • Michelangelo Pistoletto
  • Mario Schifano
  • Marcel Duchamp
  • Arman
  • Gianni-Emilio Simonetti
  • Ettore Sottsass jr.
  • Germano Celant
  • Alighiero Boetti
  • Luciano Fabro
  • Jannis Kounellis
  • Giulio Paolini
  • Pino Pascali
  • Emilio Prini
  • Piero Bignardi
  • Mario Ceroli
  • Paolo Icaro
  • Gianfranco Mambor
  • Eliseo Mattiacci
  • Franco Tacchi
  • Victor Vasarely
  • Josef Albers
  • Alberto Burri
  • Max Bill
  • Piero Manzoni
  • Lucio Fontana
  • Georges Braque
  • Pablo Picasso
  • Joan Miró
  • Nobuo Sekine
  • Shusaku Arakawa
  • Roman Opalka
  • Mimmo Rotella
  • Robert Filliou
  • George Brecht
  • Daniel Spoerri
  • Wolf Vostell
  • Robert Watts
  • Andy Warhol
  • Allan Kaprow
  • Ben Vautier
  • Gerhard Richter
  • Bernhard Becher
  • Hilla Becher
  • Christian Boltanski
  • Gilbert & George
  • Anne Poirier
  • Patrick Poirier
  • Dan Flavin
  • Donald Judd
  • Sol LeWitt
  • Francesco Clemente
  • Sandro Chia
  • Enzo Cucchi
  • Nicola De Maria
  • Mimmo Paladino
  • Hermann Nitsch
  • Ubaldo Abate
  • Roberto Barni
  • Franco Bertocci
  • Gianni Di Stasio
  • Omar Galliani
  • Giuseppe Mariani
  • Linda Kaiser

Institutions

  • La Bertesca
  • Modulo Arte Contemporanea
  • Kaiman Art
  • Edizioni Masnata
  • Pallone
  • Artribune

Locations

  • Genoa
  • Italy
  • Via SS. Giacomo e Filippo
  • Salita Santa Caterina
  • Via Gavotti
  • Salita della Tosse
  • Milan
  • Düsseldorf
  • Germany
  • Rome
  • Via del Babuino
  • Russia
  • China

Sources