In the tense years leading up to World War II, while the specter of another global conflict loomed, the Fascist regime of Benito Mussolini launched a surprising cultural offensive across the Atlantic. The operation, which we might anachronistically call Raffaello on the Road , involved sending the most celebrated works of the Italian Renaissance—including masterpieces by Raphael, Titian, and Botticelli—on a triumphant tour of the United States. Far from being a simple gesture of cultural goodwill, the 1938-40 exhibition circuit was a calculated act of political propaganda, designed to launder the brutal reality of Fascism with the luminous gold leaf of the Renaissance. The Context: A Regime in Search of a Past By the late 1930s, Mussolini’s Italy was a pariah state. The Ethiopian War (1935-36) had led to international sanctions, and the Pact of Steel with Nazi Germany (1939) alienated democratic powers. Yet Mussolini harbored a unique advantage: Italy possessed the most potent cultural brand in Western history. The regime had long exploited the romanità (Romanness) of the Empire. Now, needing to appeal to a broader, less militaristic American audience, it pivoted to the softer, universally admired power of the Renaissance.
Today, the episode serves as a cautionary tale. It reminds us that art is never neutral when it travels under a national flag. The beauty of a Raphael Madonna can be a bridge between cultures—or a shield for oppression. The question the 1938-40 tour leaves us is not whether Fascists loved art (they did, instrumentally), but whether a nation’s masterpieces should ever be used as propaganda without being recognized as such. In the tense years leading up to World
The Fascist slogan became literal: “Difendere l’arte italiana nel mondo è difendere la civiltà italiana” (“To defend Italian art in the world is to defend Italian civilization”). The defender, of course, was Mussolini. The exhibition, officially titled “Masterpieces of Italian Art” (or similar variations in different venues), was not a single event but a traveling roadshow. It opened at the prestigious Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (1938), moved to the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York (1939), and then traveled to other major cities, including Chicago and Washington, D.C., before concluding around 1940. The Context: A Regime in Search of a
Furthermore, a few American intellectuals and anti-fascist Italian émigrés (such as the art historian Lionello Venturi, exiled by Mussolini) denounced the tour. They pointed out the cruel irony: while Raphael’s paintings celebrated human dignity, the Fascist regime had suspended civil liberties, exiled dissidents, and enacted racial laws against Italian Jews in 1938—the very year the exhibition began. Raffaello on the Road was a brilliant, cynical operation. For two years, it successfully masked dictatorship with the aura of Renaissance humanism. The road taken by those paintings was not just a physical journey from Florence to New York, but a metaphorical one: from the freedom of art to the service of power. The regime had long exploited the romanità (Romanness)