Education
He studied art at the Asociación de Estímulo de Bellas Artes (Fine Arts Association), and made several trips to study art in the Argentine interior, Bolivia, Chile and Uruguay. He studied at the Fine Arts Association with teachers Reynaldo Giudici, Ernesto de la Cárcova and Eduardo Sívori.
Career
He was a post-Impressionist, a part of a movement started in the first decade of the twentieth century. Known as "the philosopher of trees", he devoted himself exclusively to landscape painting in his free time from working in his advertising agency. Malinverno was born in Buenos Aires on 20 April 1890.
In 1910 at the age of 20, he submitted a work at the Centennial International Exhibition.
Exhibitions devoted to his own work were held at the Salón Castellani in Rosario in 1919 and 1921, and at the National Commission of Fine Arts in 1921. He held another individual exhibition at the Cultural Association of Bahia Blanca in the hall of the Municipal Palace in December.
In 1923 he took part in the sixth Salón de Otoño exhibition in Rosario. Awards included Gold Medal at the Centenary Exhibition in Tandil (1923), Bronze Medal at the Community Exhibition (1924), and the Estímulo del Salón Nacional prize (1927).
He died in Buenos Aires on 21 June 1936.
More recently his work has featured repeatedly in exhibitions at the Alvear de Zurbarán Collection in Buenos Aires: individual exhibitions in 1986, 1991, 1994 and 1998, and as part of collective exhibitions in 1982 and 1997. Also in 1986 his work was included in the "Italian Roots in Argentine Art" exhibition at the Estudio de Buenos Aires. Malinverno"s work is on display at:
Blue Room of the Casa Rosada presidential palace, Buenos Aires
Permanent collection, Museo de Arte del Tigre
Eduardo Sívori Museum, Buenos Aires
Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, Buenos Aires
Museo de Arte Hispanoamericano Isaac Fernandez Blanco, Buenos Aires.