Thursday, September 26, 2024

"A Legacy of Making" at Regis College, Weston, Mass.




Calandra Institute, New York City, A Legacy of Making: 21 Contemporary Italian American Artists

 

Connecticut College, New London, A Legacy of Making: 26 Contemporary Artists Inspired by Their Italian Heritage
A new version of the show, A Legacy of Making: Contemporary Artists Inspired by Their Italian Heritage, Part 1, ran through December 21.
at Regis College in Weston, Massachusetts.  The work of New England artists is featured in this dramatically angled space in the Fine Arts Center. Part 2 opens in February



A panoramic view before we begin our walk-through of the Carney Gallery at Regis College
Here, the work of Jennifer Cecere, suspended from the ceiling, takes the modesty of women's traditional handwork into ambitiously large scale: Doily, printed and laser-cut industrial screening, eight feet in diameter


We are the children and grandchildren of Italian immigrants. We are American by birth, education, and culture, but by heritage and home life we are Italian. We grew up navigating between identities in the languages we spoke or responded to, the foods we ate, the references we understood, and the often vastly different expectations each culture held for us (especially for women). 

Despite the disjunct, we recognized early on the richness of our Italian traditions. While much was passed down along gendered lines—the women sewed and cooked; the men built—there were exceptions. Men were tailors or chefs, just as women made wine or tended businesses. Everyone made things, fixed things, figured out ways to get things done. We observed and learned, often helping out. Filtered through the experience of art school training, we brought many of these skills into our art practice. Our progenitors might be shocked at how we have put our skills to use, but translating is not just for language. In Part One of A Legacy of Making, on view through the end of this semester, we look at these translations of culture in three areas: Immigration, the Natural World, and the Textile Tradition.


View from the entry. We begin our tour from the left wall






























From left: Charyl (Urbano) Weissbach, Claudia DeMonte, Joanne Mattera, Brian Alterio



Charyl Weissbach
Baroque, celadon, 2017, encaustic, gold leaf, mica pigments, UV resin on Belgian linen on panel, 16 x 16 inches

Etude 8, 2020, encaustic and gold leaf on panel, 24 x 12 inches


Baroque, peacock, 2014, encaustic, mica pigments, and gold leaf on Belgian linen on panel, 12 x 12 inches

Charyl (Urbano) Weissbach is represented by a selection of small, ornate paintings in encaustic. The element of Neapolitan Baroque is strong in her work: dramatic patterns in high relief inflected with gold leaf. If there is a suggestion of wrought iron in the compositions, it may be because her paternal grandfather was a metalsmith, a trade that fascinated the young Weissbach, especially when she watched him cast molten metal into objects. And although it may not be intended by the artist, there is the visual suggestion of brocade, a silk fabric embellished with floral patterns. This richness of design is brought to bear in the medium Weissbach chooses for her painting, neither metal nor fiber, but encaustic paint. Worked when molten, encaustic, which is pigmented wax, can be built up or carved into, making it ideal for the sensuous physicality of the artist’s expression.



Claudia DeMonte
Cose Che Ho Fatto (Things I have Done), embroidery on linen, 49 panels, overall 73.5 x 60 inches

Detail below


Here’s a little of what you will learn from Claudia DeMonte’s installation, Cose Che Ho Fatto (Things I Have Done): She danced with Rudolf Nureyev at a disco, walked on the Great Wall of China with Mohammed Ali, had lunch with the protean sculptor, Louise Nevelson. She sailed on the Ganges, made offerings to the orisha Yemanja on New Year’s Eve in Rio de Janiero, and worked as a model. This is not the life of an Italian American girl who grew up in the Sixties, yet she conveys the anecdotes of a world traveler through the medium of embroidery, which every Italian woman learned at home.



Weissbach, DeMonte, Joanne Mattera, Brian Alterio

Joanne Mattera
Silk Road 338, 2016, encaustic on panel, 12 x 12 inches

My own work is suggestive of fabric. In a series I have titled Silk Road, the paintings are first and foremost color fields, reductive in hue and composition. However, a textile influence is apparent in the edge-to-edge swipe of the paint, just as a fabric is woven selvedge to selvedge, and in the visually tactile surfaces whose ridges and slubs are suggestive of douppioni silk. I am the great granddaughter of weavers, the granddaughter of a tailor, and the niece of two women—one a dressmaker, the other an embroiderer and lacemaker—whose handwork has left an undeniable imprint on my expression. The sewing and knitting I did with my aunts opened a creative pathway to art school, and there I became a painter.

Brian Alterio
Garlic Scapes, 2012, photograph

After a long career on the technical side of digital photography, Brian Alterio returned to a view through the lens, as he had in art school. Described in one review as “a digital scientist with a poetic soul,” Alterio photographs nature in all its aspects, from the human form to landscape to plant life, the latter represented in this exhibition by a vividly illuminated black-and-white image. “I think that from my Italian blood was borne a passion for life. That passion spawned my photographic language. My images are about life,” says the artist. With its graceful arabesques, Alterio’s Garlic Scapes connects culturally and horticulturally to one of the most notable elements of Italian cuisine.


Milisa Galazzi, Debra (Messina) Claffey


Milisa Galazzi
Super String Theory,  2015, paper, thread, and encaustic,  93 x 40 x 12 inches

As a child, Milisa Galazzi learned to sew a from her paternal grandmother who dispensed advice like,  “Good girls should always be sewing” and “A lady always mends and fixes.” Galazzi found Grammy’s comments “annoying,” but appreciated learning the skills. Now she makes “lace” that originates as a drawing whose line she stitches by hand. (Grammy would be proud!) After cutting away the negative space of the drawing, Galazzi dips each hand-stitched sheet into a vat of warm wax, which stiffens and transparentizes the paper, and then installs it, with other similarly cut and waxed sheets, into a layered relief sculpture whose shadows are as integral to the work as the cut paper itself. In this installation, her Super String Theory not only dialogs with its own shadows but with the twists and curves of Brian Alterio’s Garlic Scapes, near which it is placed.


Debra Claffey
Turners II, 2017, encaustic monotype in 18 panels, overall, 48 x 96 inches

Although Debra Claffey‘s sole connection to gardening as a child was caring for the family’s backyard tomato plants, she has cultivated a strong relationship to horticulture in her adult life. One might attribute the connection to her Sicilian genes, which are closely aligned with the cycles of planting, cultivating, and harvesting. (She is a Messina on her mother’s side.) A career in garden care—she founded her own company—is intertwined with a studio practice that focuses on plant forms.  “I celebrate plants: their great age and history on the planet, their intelligence and successful adaptations, their beauty of form, shape, and infinite color,” she says. Her Turners II is a large-scale, multipart encaustic monotype dense with layers of ferns, suggestive of a botanical garden.



Claffey, Tracy Spadafora


Tracy Spadafora
Vestige (Part 10), 2012, mixed media on wood boxes, 14 x 10 x 3 inches 
Vestige (Part 11), 2012, mixed media on wood boxes, 14 x 10 x 3 inches


















The maternal side of Tracy Spadafora’s family is from the cool Alpine north while her paternal side is from the hot Mezzogiorno. In Italy this would have been an improbable family union, but in the melting pot of the United States it is not so unusual. Both sides of the family were gardeners, which not only put food on the table but brought color and beauty into their homes. “My own love of gardening and appreciation for the natural environment is one thing from my Italian heritage that has influenced my artwork directly,” says Spadafora, who addresses what she describes as “a complex and shifting relationship between humans, our biological roots, and the shaping of our natural environment.”  Her Vestige (Part 10) and Vestige (Part 11) express her thinking about the environment that sustains us all, right down to the DNA of things.


Spadafora, Jeanne Brasile, John Avelluto


Jeanne Brasile
Mixed Messages, 2021, blended and shredded card catalogs, 15 x 8 x 8 inches

Language is a challenge for non-English-speaking arrivals to this country. Italians typically spoke four languages at home: the dialect of their paese, or village; standard Italian by those sufficiently educated; heavily accented English (usually ungrammatical) laden with Italian syntax, which we referred to as Broken English; and standard English, which was spoken by the younger, American-schooled members of the family. A multigenerational family dinner might have all of these languages going at once. Jeanne Brasile’s shredded text in a blender, Mixed Messages, is a wonderful metaphor for this mescolanza, this mix.


“Though I studied the Italian language, I am far from fluent,” says Brasile. Like many of us, she heard dialect at home but was not encouraged to speak it. When she took an Italian class, she was surprised to learn that the “sharp-sounding” language she grew up hearing bore little resemblance to what she describes as the “mellifluous, even poetic” language she was learning in school. “I felt cheated,” she says, “as if somehow my home experience was not quite authentic.” She needn’t have worried. Italian dialects, as well as the creole and patois of other languages, are increasingly recognized by linguists for their own richness of syntax and expression.


Brasile, Avelluto, Cianne Fragione

John Avelluto
Above: Johnny Cakes, 2023, acrylic on panel, 12 x 9 inches

John Avelluto draws from Southern Italian and Sicilian tropes to create art that depicts our foods, customs, and expressions. His trompe l’oeil relief paintings of pastry look tempting enough to taste. But don’t. They are fashioned with acrylic paint. His drawings depict the mal’occhio (evil eye)—maloik in dialect—and the way to protect against it. To Southern Italians, the mal’occhio is a curse cast upon you by someone who is jealous of who you are or what you have. One way to fight off the curse is with the mano cornuto, or horned hand. The index finger and pinkie make horns of the hand, a little deal with the devil to keep evil away. In the 21st-century this may seem laughable, but Southern Italians—those from Naples and farther south—hold fast to their beliefs. Hey, a little protection can’t hurt, right? 


Below
Maloik, 2017, acrylic paint films, 13 x 11 inches framed
Cornuto 2, 2017, acrylic paint films, 13 x 11 inches framed



Cianne Fragione
Heaven and Earth Are Dressed in Their Summer Wear, 2007-2009, oil and fabric on canvas, each  90 x 30 inches; from left: Flapper Dress, Red Dress Curtain, Pink Jacket with Blue Ribbon

There are many influences in any artist’s life. One in particular for Cianne Fragione was a Sicilian nonna who ran a dressmaking business out of the front room of her family’s Hartford, Connecticut, home. “With only a door to separate us, I saw my grandmother all the time. She made me dresses, coats, and hats, which reinforced the integrity of the crafted object for me and at the same time contributed to my sense of composition and form,” she says. Fragione’s long-running, mixed-media series, Heaven and Earth Dressed in Their Summer Wear incorporates clothing into her paintings. The three panels presented here are but a few of many that stretch across a wall, offering a visual connection between the artist’s childhood and her present as a contemporary artist. A “clothesline” is thus her metaphor for time.



Fragione, Amore, back view of  Jennifer Cecere's Doily

 “Until a generation ago, almost everyone practiced handwork,” says Jennifer Cecere. “Women, especially, knitted, crocheted, and embroidered, and girls learned by example. All of us then had a connection to these traditions. Not so much anymore, but what does endure from my own experience, in addition to a love of needlework, is how intent my Italian grandparents were in weaving their traditions into the experience of their children and grandchildren in this new country.”  

Cecere makes public art: large-scale renditions of lace in materials as diverse as ripstop nylon and brushed aluminum, which she has laser cut, bringing together the modesty of handwork with the ambition of a professional artist. She is represented here with an outsize doily printed on screening that stretches across the gallery.

Continuing around: B. Amore, Timothy McDowell (Macellari)



Added to the exhibitions on October 24, 2024: Claudia DeMonte




Claudia DeMonte
Il Corno, 2013, pewter and gold leave on painted wood, 14 x 14 x 3 inches

DeMonte taps into Italian folklore with her Corno sculpture. The corno, or horn, is typically rendered in gold, silver, or coral as a small talisman worn on a chain around the neck. It is meant to ward off the mal’occhio, or Evil Eye, a curse leveled at you by someone who is angry with you or jealous of what you have. In the 21st-century this may seem laughable, but Southern Italians—those from Naples and farther south—hold fast to their beliefs. Hey, a little protection can’t hurt, right? 












B. Amore
Following the Thread II: Giovannina,. 2000, mixed media assemblage, 24 x 48 inches
Below: Giovannina’s handwoven linen sheet with her initials 


"We carry the history of out families and our cultures in our psyches as well as our genes," says 
B. Amore.  
Through a long career, she has researched and documented seven generations of her Italian family, maternal and paternal, a journey that culminated in 2000 in the brilliant installation of photographs, objects, and papers exhibited at the Ellis Island Immigration Museum in New York City. Life Line, Filo Della Vita: An Italian American Odyssey then traveled to museums in San Francisco and Boston, Rome, and finally to Napoli, where her family’s journey began. 

A framed assemblage from that show, Following the Thread II: Giovannina Forte, is included here. This work depicts Amore’s maternal great grandmother who came to America at the age of 54, a reluctant immigrant, with her husband and three children, one of whom was Amore’s grandmother, Concettina.

The filo rosso--the red thread—that runs through the work represents a Neapolitan tradition of departure. The person boarding ship carried a ball of yarn, while the person at the dock held fast to the unfurled loose end. As the ship pulled away, the ball unwound in an attenuated goodbye.

Also on view is a linen bed sheet that Giovannina wove on her domestic handloom and the iron used to press it flat after washing. You’ll note the iron is not electric. Even into the early years of the 20th century, heavy irons like these were heated on the top of a coal or gas stove and then placed on a fabric to flatten it, a process repeated over and over until the ironing was finished. Domestic chores, carried out almost exclusively by women, were physically demanding.




Timothy McDowell
Dream Park, 2023, oil on panel, 30 x 24 inches
Siren’s Call, Lampedusa, 2023, oil on panel,  25 x 20 inches


Despite his Scottish surname, Timothy McDowell has had a lifetime of extended periods in Italy among the members of his mother’s family, the Macellari. His history is not one of Southern Italians fleeing poverty but of educated Northerners remaining on their ancestral land. His is a lineage of accomplished musicians, designers, architects, publishers, and painters. 

McDowell’s images, while often drawn from art history, also depict our contemporary culture. In Dream Park, a Renaissance figure hovers ever so faintly above a Vespa, the motorized scooter that replaced the bicycle in post-World War II Italy and remains a chic and handy means of transportation. In Siren’s Call, Lampedusa, McDowell looks at a different kind of immigration—not away from Italy but to it. North Africans are making the treacherous journey by boat to Southern Italy, often to the Sicilian Island of Lampedusa, which is closer to the coast of Africa than it is to the boot of Italy, for the same reasons our Italian forebears left for America: to make a better life.

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Exhibition essay

A Legacy of Making: Contemporary Artists Inspired by Their Italian Heritage

Part 1, September 27-December 21, 2024

We are the children and grandchildren of Italian immigrants. We are American by birth, education, and culture, but by heritage and home life we are Italian. We grew up navigating between identities in the languages we spoke or responded to, the foods we ate, the references we understood, and the often vastly different expectations each culture held for us (especially for women). This bifurcated identity was normal, simply the way it was—and it’s something that anyone from an immigrant family of any ethnicity will understand.

Despite the disjunct, we recognized early on the richness of our Italian traditions. While much was passed down along gendered lines—the women sewed and cooked; the men built—there were exceptions. Men were tailors or chefs, just as women made wine or tended businesses. Everyone made things, fixed things, figured out ways to get things done. We observed and learned, often helping out. Filtered through the experience of art school training, we brought many of these skills into our art practice. Our forebears might be shocked at how we have put our skills to use, but translating is not just for language. 

In Part One of A Legacy of Making we look at these translations of culture in three areas: Immigration, the Natural World, and the Textile Tradition.

Immigration: From There to Here 
We start with the artists whose contemporary expression has a connection to the past—to the generations, the customs, the language, the food—as it slides into the present.

 "We carry the history of out families and our cultures in our psyches as well as our genes," says 
B. Amore.  Through a long career, she has researched and documented seven generations of her Italian family, maternal and paternal, a journey that culminated in 2000 in the brilliant installation of photographs, objects, and papers exhibited at the Ellis Island Immigration Museum in New York City. Life Line, Filo Della Vita: An Italian American Odyssey then traveled to museums in San Francisco and Boston, Rome, and finally to Napoli, where her family’s journey began. A framed assemblage from that show, Following the Thread II: Giovannina Forte, is included here. This work depicts Amore’s maternal great grandmother who came to America at the age of 54, a reluctant immigrant, with her husband and three children, one of whom was Amore’s grandmother, Concettina.

The
filo rosso--the red thread—that runs through the work represents a Neapolitan tradition of departure. The person boarding ship carried a ball of yarn, while the person at the dock held fast to the unfurled loose end. As the ship pulled away, the ball unwound in an attenuated goodbye. 

Also on view is a linen bed sheet that Giovannina wove on her domestic handloom and the iron used to press it
flat after washing. You’ll note the iron is not electric. Even into the early years of the 20
th century, heavy irons like these were heated on the top of a coal or gas stove and then placed on a fabric to flatten it, a process repeated over and over until the ironing was finished. Domestic chores, carried out almost exclusively by women, were physically demanding.

John Avelluto  draws from Southern Italian and Sicilian tropes to create art that depicts our foods, customs, and expressions. His trompe l’oeil relief paintings of pastry look tempting enough to taste. But don’t. They are fashioned with acrylic paint. His drawings depict the mal’occhio (evil eye)—maloik in dialect—and the way to protect against it. To Southern Italians, the mal’occhio is a curse cast upon you by someone who is jealous of who you are or what you have. One way to fight off the curse is with the mano cornuto, or horned hand. The index finger and pinkie make horns of the hand, a little deal with the devil to keep evil away. In the 21st-century this may seem laughable, but Southern Italians—those from Naples and farther south—hold fast to their beliefs. Hey, a little protection can’t hurt, right?

Because the mal’occhio is seen as so powerful, there is another way to ward off its effects: the corno, or horn, which is typically rendered in gold, silver, or coral as a small talisman worn on a chain around the neck. Claudia DeMonte turns folklore into art with her Corno, a carved wooden sculpture embellished with symbols of good fortune. (It will join the exhibition on October 21).

Language is a challenge for non-English-speaking arrivals to this country. Italians typically spoke four languages at home: the dialect of their paese, or village; standard Italian by those sufficiently educated; heavily accented English (usually ungrammatical) laden with Italian syntax, which we referred to as Broken English; and standard English, which was spoken by the younger, American-schooled members of the family. A multigenerational family dinner might have all of these languages going at once. Jeanne Brasile’s shredded text in a blender, Mixed Messages, is a wonderful metaphor for this mescolanza, this mix.

“Though I studied the Italian language, I am far from fluent,” says Brasile. Like many of us, she heard dialect at home but was not encouraged to speak it. When she took an Italian class, she was surprised to learn that the “sharp-sounding” language she grew up hearing bore little resemblance to what she describes as the “mellifluous, even poetic” language she was learning in school. “I felt cheated,” she says, “as if somehow my home experience was not quite authentic.” She needn’t have worried. Italian dialects, as well as the creole and patois of other languages, are increasingly recognized by linguists for their own richness of syntax and expression.                                                  

Despite his Scottish surname, Timothy McDowell has had a lifetime of extended periods in Italy among the members of his mother’s family, the Macellari. His history is not one of Southern Italians fleeing poverty but of educated Northerners remaining on their ancestral land. His is a lineage of accomplished musicians, designers, architects, publishers, and painters. McDowell’s images, while often drawn from art history, also depict our contemporary culture. In Dream Park, a Renaissance figure hovers ever so faintly above a Vespa, the motorized scooter that replaced the bicycle in post-World War II Italy and remains a chic and handy means of transportation.  In Siren’s Call, Lampedusa, McDowell looks at a different kind of immigration—not away from Italy but to it. North Africans are making the treacherous journey by boat to Southern Italy, often to the Sicilian Island of Lampedusa, which is closer to the coast of Africa than it is to the boot of Italy, for the same reasons our Italian forebears left for America: to make a better life.

Nature
One of the first things Italian immigrants did when they arrived was to put in a garden. Tomatoes, garlic, and basil could be coaxed from even the tiniest plots. As families prospered, gardens often got bigger, not just for the produce they supplied but for the connection to the land that was so much a part of the Italian heritage.


The maternal side of Tracy Spadafora’s family is from the cool Alpine north while her paternal side is from the hot Mezzogiorno. In Italy this would have been an improbable family union, but in the melting pot of the United States it is not so unusual. Both sides of the family were gardeners, which not only put food on the table but brought color and beauty into their homes. “My own love of gardening and appreciation for the natural environment is one thing from my Italian heritage that has influenced my artwork directly,” says Spadafora, who addresses what she describes as “a complex and shifting relationship between humans, our biological roots, and the shaping of our natural environment.”  Her
Vestige (Part 10) and Vestige (Part 11) express her thinking about the environment that sustains us all, right down to the DNA of things.

Although Debra Claffey‘s sole connection to gardening as a child was caring for the family’s backyard tomato plants, she has cultivated a strong relationship to horticulture in her adult life. One might attribute the connection to her Sicilian genes, which are closely aligned with the cycles of planting, cultivating, and harvesting. (She is a Messina on her mother’s side.)  A career in garden care—she founded her own company—is intertwined with a studio practice that focuses on plant forms.  “I celebrate plants: their great age and history on the planet, their intelligence and successful adaptations, their beauty of form, shape, and infinite color,” she says. Her Turners II is a large-scale, multipart encaustic monotype dense with layers of ferns, suggestive of a botanical garden.

 After a long career on the technical side of digital photography, Brian Alterio returned to a view through the lens, as he had in art school. Described in one review as “a digital scientist with a poetic soul,” Alterio photographs nature in all its aspects, from the human form to landscape to plant life, the latter represented in this exhibition by a vividly illuminated black-and-white image. “I think that from my Italian blood was borne a passion for life. That passion spawned my photographic language. My images are about life,” says the artist. With its graceful arabesques, Alterio’s Garlic Scapes connects culturally and horticulturally to one of the most notable elements of Italian cuisine.
 

The Textile Tradition   
“Until a generation ago, almost everyone practiced handwork,” says Jennifer Cecere. “Women, especially, knitted, crocheted, and embroidered, and girls learned by example. All of us then had a connection to these traditions. Not so much anymore, but what does endure from my own experience, in addition to a love of needlework, is how intent my Italian grandparents were in weaving their traditions into the experience of their children and grandchildren in this new country.” 

Cecere makes public art: large-scale renditions of lace in materials as diverse as ripstop nylon and brushed aluminum, which she has laser cut, bringing together the modesty of handwork with the ambition of a professional artist. She is represented here with an outsize doily printed on screening that stretches across the gallery.

Here’s a little of what you will learn from Claudia DeMonte’s  installation, Cose Che Ho Fatto (Things I Have Done): She danced with Rudolf Nureyev at a disco, walked on the Great Wall of China with Mohammed Ali, had lunch with the protean sculptor, Louise Nevelson. She sailed on the Ganges, made offerings to the orisha Yemanja on New Year’s Eve in Rio de Janiero, and worked as a model. This is not the life of an Italian American girl who grew up in the Sixties, yet she conveys the anecdotes of a world traveler through the medium of embroidery, which every Italian woman learned at home.

As a child, Milisa Galazzi learned to sew a from her paternal grandmother who dispensed advice like,  “Good girls should always be sewing” and “A lady always mends and fixes.” Galazzi found Grammy’s comments “annoying,” but appreciated learning the skills. Now she makes “lace” that originates as a drawing whose line she stitches by hand. (Grammy would be proud!) After cutting away the negative space of the drawing, Galazzi dips each hand-stitched sheet into a vat of warm wax, which stiffens and transparentizes the paper, and then installs it, with other similarly cut and waxed sheets, into a layered relief sculpture whose shadows are as integral to the work as the cut paper itself. In this installation, her Super String Theory not only dialogs with its own shadows but with the twists and curves of Brian Alterio’s Garlic Scapes, near which it is placed.

There are many influences in any artist’s life. One in particular for
Cianne Frfagione was a Sicilian nonna who ran a dressmaking business out of the front room of her family’s Hartford, Connecticut, home. “With only a door to separate us, I saw my grandmother all the time. She made me dresses, coats, and hats, which reinforced the integrity of the crafted object for me and at the same time contributed to my sense of composition and form,” she says. Fragione’s long-running, mixed-media series, Heaven and Earth Dressed in Their Summer Wear incorporates clothing into her paintings. The three panels presented here are but a few of many that stretch across a wall, offering a visual connection between the artist’s childhood and her present as a contemporary artist. A “clothesline” is thus her metaphor for time.

Charyl (Urbano) Weissbach is represented by a selection of small, ornate paintings in encaustic. The element of Neapolitan Baroque is strong in her work: dramatic patterns in high relief inflected with gold leaf. If there is a suggestion of wrought iron in the compositions, it may be because her paternal grandfather was a metalsmith, a trade that fascinated the young Weissbach, especially when she watched him cast molten metal into objects. And although it may not be intended by the artist, there is the visual suggestion of brocade, a silk fabric embellished with floral patterns. This richness of design is brought to bear in the medium Weissbach chooses for her painting, neither metal nor fiber, but encaustic paint. Worked when molten, encaustic, which is pigmented wax, can be built up or carved into, making it ideal for the sensuous physicality of the artist’s expression.

My own work fields, reductive in hue and composition. However, a textile influence is apparent in the edge-to-edge swipe of the paint, just as a fabric is woven selvedge to selvedge, and in the visually tactile surfaces whose ridges and slubs are suggestive of douppioni silk. I am the great granddaughter of weavers, the granddaughter of a tailor, and the niece of two women—one a dressmaker, the other an embroiderer and lacemaker—whose handwork has left an undeniable imprint on my expression. The sewing and knitting I did with my aunts opened a creative pathway to art school, and there I became a painter.

In Somma, In Conclusion  
We are Italian American. We are artists. We embrace both identities. But are we “Italian American artists”? I would say no. Even for those of us whose work is informed directly by our ethnicity—and as you can see here, it is powerfully present—our experience is filtered through the lens of art training and our immersion in the contemporary art mainstream. Like so much in our heritage, the influences and inspiration are intertwined.

                                                                                                                                      --Joanne Mattera, curator

Monday, September 2, 2024

"A Legacy of Making" at Connecticut College, New London




Interior entrance to A Legacy of Making: 26 Contemporary Artists Inspired by Their Italian Heritage


A Legacy of Making has legs! The exhibition that took place at the Calandra Institute in New York City has greatly expanded and moved to Connecticut College in New London. In the translation it lost one curator (the estimable Joseph Sciorra) and added five more artists. I flew solo for this effort. With an enormous two-level, three-gallery space, I have been able to show more and larger work by each artist. It's up through October 19.


With its mix of narrative and abstract painting, installation, textile, and sculpture, A Legacy of Making: 26 Contemporary Artists Inspired by Their Italian Heritage might have you wondering, “What exactly is the common aesthetic thread here?” If you are from a big family, you understand that like any gathering with the relatives, an exhibition such as this brings an entire famiglia to the table, each with different ideas and ways of expressing them. Drawing from all of Italian culture and tradition, we continue the legacy in our studios, reinventing it as American art.

The 26 artists in the show are: B. Amore, John Avelluto, the late Nancy Azara, Angelica Bergamini, Gianluca Bianchino, Jennifer Cecere, Chris Costan, Elisa D’Arrigo, Claudia DeMonte, Paul Fabozzi, Milisa Galazzi, Diana González Gandolfi, D. Dominick Lombardi, Lloyd Martin (Maccarone), Joanne Mattera, Timothy McDowell (Macellari), Patricia Miranda, John Monti, Laura Moriarty (Roccio/Policella), Carolanna Parlato, Anna Patalano, Don Porcaro, Mary Schiliro, Karen Schifano, Denise Sfraga, and Lisa Zukowski. 
Scroll to the end for hours, directions, and information on two public receptions.




Entrance to the exhibition from the campus green. This ground-level space, entered both from here and from an interior staircase (opening image), extends to a skylighted upper level, the Atrium Gallery.  Each level is partially visible from the other, affording you a dramatic view of the installation. Additionally, a small gallery off this main space holds an installation by Gianluca Bianchino.

Here, work by John Avelluto, left and center; Lloyd Martin, and  Carolanna Parlato




John Avelluto
Fresco Flex, 2023, acrylic on panel, 12 x 9 inches

Impasta Impasto, 2023, sculpted acrylic paint on panel

Detail





"I grew up in food. There were Sunday dinners at 3:00 in the afternoon downstairs at my maternal grandparents. My father worked at Il Cortile in Little Italy and then had his own restaurant in Port Chester. I worked there as a waiter to earn enough for grad school. Then I opened a small 20-person wine bar in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, which I had for nine years."




Abstraction may not seem initially to be "Italian" or "Italian American," but the artists are informed by their culture, and sometimes there is a direct connection, whether architecture or nature, handwork, food, or the legacy of making things and making do

From left: Paul Fabozzi, Lloyd Martin, Carolanna Parlato




Paul Fabozzi
Above: CL (Rome, Ivo #2), 2018, oil on canvas, 48 x 32 inches
Below: Corviale #1, 2012, colored pencil and ink on Mylar mounted on paper, 35 x 27 inches framed

"Fueled by my decades-long engagement with Italy, my approach to painting and drawing has made me feel more deeply the extent to which spatial experience is the basis of perception." 
































Lloyd Martin
Large Carbon Riff, 2019, oil on canvas, 68 x 92 inches

"Much of what I am today I credit to my grandmother, Filomena Maccarone."




Don Porcaro, Carolanna Parlato



Carolanna Parlato
Juggler 
Swipe Up, both 2022, acrylic on canvas, 42 x 36 inches

"My grandparents from both sides of the family brought Italy into my life."

 




Don Porcaro
Everybody Knows #29, 2023, marble, 13 x 14 x 7.5 inches on pedestal, 30 x 16 x 11 inches

"One of my earliest memories is of visiting my mother's uncle . .  who opened a stone yard in Connecticut. Seeing all the stones, mostly monuments and gravestones, stacked up made a deep impression on me. . .
I can say that from the first time I cut a piece of stone, I knew that it felt right. It fed a driving need to work with a material that speaks to tradition, and I new that that tradition belonged to my culture."




Anna Patalano
Top: Demolished D, 2022, oil on linen panel, 18 x 18 inches
Bottom: Clashing Cs, 2022, oil on linen, 30 x 30 inches

"Perhaps because I was conceived in one country and born in another, I have always felt that I exist in a transitional limbo. The clashing of two sets of different value systems was, and still is, under constant negotiation. It's probably why I needed to make art early on. It became the only language I understand with which to express that negotiation."

Below: Closer view of Demolished D






Entrance to the gallery from inside the building
From left: Work by Claudia DeMonte, B. Amore; on far wall: Diana Gonzalez Gandolfi




B. Amore
Following the Thread IV: Concettina De Iorio, 1999; copper, wood, photo, fabric, thread, 24 x 48 x 3 inches

"We carry the history of out families and our cultures in our psyches as well as our genes."



Claudia DeMonte
Il Corno, 2013, pewter and gold leaf on wood, 14 x 3 x 3 inches

"It would be hard to be raised Italian American and not be influenced by the richness of Italian culture."




Diana Gonzalez Gandolfi

Above: Mapped Waters (Traced Homeland Series), 2021, mixed media on paper, app. 20 x 14 inches
Below: Forgotten and Now Remembered: 1985 Argentina, 2014, encaustic collagraph, pigmented wax, and pigment stick on panel; diptych, 40 x 60 inches





Now We Know Where We Are: 2008 Buenos Aires (Memory Terrain Series), 2017, encaustic monotype, pigmented wax, and oil on panel; diptych, 12 x 18 inches

"Growing up between continents and cultures has given me a sense of identity caught between worlds . . . I focus on themes connected to place, dislocation, exile, identity, and memory, These are some of the same issues my bisnonno experienced when he left Italy."




Claudie De Monte, foreground, with Diana Gonzalez Gandolfi, left, and Timothy McDowell




Timothy McDowell
La Befana, left, and Spaghetti Western, both 2024, oil on panel, 48 x 48 inches

"What links me to my Italian roots is a sense of familiarity with certain places. My grandfather, Francesco, is buried in the mountains northeast of Genoa near the house where he as prior generations of family were born going back hundreds of years."



Installation view: Laura Moriarty, foreground; clockwise around: Diana Gonzalez Gandolfi, Timothy McDowell, Nancy Azara

Below: McDowell, Azara, Schifano, with Moriarty sculpture in foreground






Laura Moriarty
Clockwise up from bottom: Hammerstone 3, Hammerstone 2, Hammerstone 5, Hammerstone 4, Hammerstone 1; all 2024, wax, various dimensions under 12 inches

"My grandmother, Anna Policella, taught me things about grace that are so deeply instinctive I cannot even put them into words, but I know her influence is indelible."



Installation view: Nancy Azara, Karen Schifano

Nancy Azara
From the Greve Series, 2015: Central Leaves with Blue, Seven Central Leaves with Blue,  and Red Hand with Four Panels, all mixed media on Mylar

"I can tell you that I feel a creative bond to Italy, its countryside, its people, and its art. After all, my ancestors lived there for thousands of years, and I feel this history still within myself."

This exhibition is dedicated to Nancy Azara, who died on June 27, shortly after we selected this work. Ave atque vale, dear friend 




Karen Schifano
Top: Hard Won, 2022
Below: Night Visitors, 2023; both flashe on canvas, 28 x 36 inches

"My paintings employs shapes that read as figure and ground, and sometimes windows, doorways, theater spaces (Italian opera!). They are imbued with an emotional narrative from my own life and times as I try to push abstraction into new territory."




Orienting you from the second level
Clockwise: Diana Gonzalez Gandolfi, Timothy McDowell, Nancy Azara on standing panel, Karen Schifano, Paul Fabozzi; sculpture: Laura Moriarty, Don Porcaro


Looking toward the campus entrance
John Monti on standing panel and back wall; Denise Sfraga; Don Porcaro and Laura Moriarty sculpture



Looking into the center of the gallery
Foreground: Laura Moriarty, Don Porcaro; on wall: Lloyd Martin, Carolanna Parlato, Anna Patalano; right: John Monti



Looking from the back of Don Porcaro sculpture toward the opposite wall with a grouping of framed work on paper by Angelica Bergamini




Angelica Bergamini
Long horizontal work: Solo Journey 2, monotype and paper sculpture on paper, 14 x 29 inches

"I have been thinking about how water connects my two lands: Italy, site of my origins, and New York City, where I have chosen to live." 

Below I Will Meet You There #11, 2021, monotype and collage on paper




Installation view: Laura Moriarty, foreground; John Monti sculpture and oval painting;  a glimpse of Denise Sfraga paintings




John Monti
Detail of Black Frost, 2021, urethane resin, pigments, glitter, 40 c 19 x 14 inches
Below: Big Vine, 2021, reclaimed foam, eco resin, urethane resin, Kandy pigments, glitter, 38 x 29 x 3 inches

"Although I am not practicing, I consider myself a cultural Catholic. I love the function of ornament, the embellishments, the reliquaries, the rituals, and the organized design principles."




Installation view: John Monti, Denise Sfraga




Denise Sfraga

"My grandfather lived a few blocks away from Green-Wood Cemetery, The Italian Catholic beliefs about death and rebirth have always resonated with me, and in some subliminal way my work has attempted to explore this duality."



Sick Sweet 1, 2024, colored pencil on paper mounted on wood panel, 14 x 11 inches



Gohone, 2023, flashe, acrylic, watercolor, photograph on paper mounted on wood panel, 24 x 18 inches



Petrichor, 2024, flashe, acrylic, oil pastel, photograph on wood panel, 48 x 36 inches



View up one level to the Atrium Gallery
Nancy Azara on lower level; Patricia Miranda above


Installation view in the Atrium Gallery

From left: Patricia Miranda; far end (barely visible; installation shot coming): three by Mary Schiliro; back wall: Elisa D'Arrigo, Lisa Zukowski; right wall: Jennifer Cecere, Milisa Galazzi




Elisa D'Arrigo
On wall: Reconstructed 1, 2008, handmade paper, cloth, pigments, thread, actulic medium, 15 x 11 x 5 inches and Reconstructed 5, 2009, handmade paper, thread, acrylic paint, marble dust, 18 x 8 x 8 inches; on pedestal, On a Limb, 2017, hand built and glazed ceramic, 6 x 12 x 8.5 inches

"Growing up first-generation Sicilian-Italian American, there was a pervasive do-it-yourself ethos, but also an express-yourself atmosphere, Everyone made things, repaired things, jerry-rigged things. That had a powerful effect on my sensibility and it is with me still."

Below: Closer view of On a Limb



Continuing around the Atrium Gallery: Lisa Zukowski, Jennifer Cecere



Lisa Zukowski
On wall: Sotto Bosco, 2022, oil on canvas, 48 x 36 inches
Sculptures, identified below, all 2018, terra cotta, encaustic, string

"The heritage of being blue-collar working class created a condition of secrecy that offered protection from the world outside the family. This has manifested strongly in my art. I almost always hide things in my work: secret meanings, hidden objects . . . they are wrapped up in string as a kind of safekeeping." 


Things Fall Apart , 12 x 9.5 x 8 inches



Things Fall Apart II, 7 x 7.5 x 6 inches


Things Fall Apart VI, 7.5 x 7 x 6 inches




Jennifer Cecere
Rose Window, 36 inches diameter; Green Rose, 24 inches diameter; Red Star, 36 inches diameter; all 2011, acrylic on ripstop nylon

Below: closer view of Rose Window




Milisa Galazzi
A conversation in thread between the artist and her grandmother about the value of sewing; all 2010, thread and encaustic on linen handkerchief with embroidery hoop. The artist is in white thread; Grammy in black

"I found her comments annoying, yet I appreciated learning the sewing skills."



hi, grammy



r u doing any handwork, dear?




b/c good girls should always be sewing





b/c a lady always mends and fixes



UGH





Installation view: Milisa Galazzi, Chris Costan



Chris Costan
Glow Worm, 2016, fabrics and sewing notions on paper 
Below: I Believe 4, 2023, textile pieces and mixed media on paper, both 17 x 21.5 inches framed

"My birth certificate liste me as Costantino, but when I was 5 years old and beginning public school, my mother shortened the name. She felt it would be easier for me if my origins were not clear. The extended family was disappointed. Once I reached graduate school, I thought about changing it back but felt it was too late. I suppose this is called assimilation."







Installation view: D. Dominick Lombardi


 D. Dominick Lombardi
CCWS-53, 2020, mixed media, 18.25 x 25 x 5.25 inches



CCWS-25, 2018, mixed media, 21 x 14 x 12 inches; CCWS 53; CCWS 26, mixed media, 22 x 12 x 12 inches

"Like his father, my father was also a master carpenter with tremendous skills. Both taught me the correct way to use a variety of tools . . . skills that are at the core of my sculptural practice to this day. In addition, my grandfather's and father's obsession with salvaging materials made a great impression on me."



Installation view: D. Dominick Lombardi, Joanne Mattera






Joanne Mattera
From left: Silk Road 201, Silk Road 207, Silk Road 205, all 2014, encaustic on panel, 18 x 18 inches

"My maternal  bisnonne in Italy wove household linens on looms in their homes. My maternal grandfather, who immigrated here, was a tailor, and his daughter, Lena, was a dressmaker. Lena and her sister Antonette, my beloved aunts, taught me to sew, embroider, knit, and crochet. I learned to weave on my own. I make color field paintings that have an unmistakable visual relationship to fabric. It's in my DNA."

Below: Closer view of Silk Road 2014



Installation view: Chris Costan, Patricia Miranda



Chris Costan
Watermelon Sugar, 2016, textile and mixed media, inframed view: 6 x 20 inches



Patricia Miranda
Lamentation for a Reasoned History, 2022, donated vintage lace,  hand dyed with cochineal, ex-votos in plaster and paper clay, thread 

"The immigrant experience for us, the descendants, holds commonalities shared by many. The homeland is a complex mix of familiarity and strangeness, of longing and connection, and of loss. The art, the land, the buildings, the bells of Italy speak deeply to my artistic heart."

Detail view



Patricia Miranda, Mary Schiliro






Mary Schiliro
Slice, Punch, Dip 1, 2018, acrylic paint on paper, 12 x 8 inches, as are the following two

"I finally made it to Sicily. I had been dreaming of going for many years. I wanted to feel totally immersed in the culture and spent three weeks traveling there. I had a feeling of coming full circle, imagining my grandparents, what their life was like there, and how they made the decision to leave for America."



Above: Slice, Punch, Dip 2
Below: Slice, Punch, Dip 3 






Gianluca Bianchino
Installation: An Attempt to Communicate with Two Worlds at Once, 2024, video projectors, lights, light stands, tripods, photo umbrellas, electrical cord, acrylic paint

Above: the artist in the environment he created
Below:  Immerse yourself in the space



"My oldest memory is of a powerful earthquake that devastated my native province of Avellino in November 1980. I was 3 years old. My family and I lived close to the epicenter. We survived and shortly moved to Paterson, New Jersey. I was a spectator in the early part of this journey, which often kept our small family divided on separate continents for long periods. I struggled to find continuity in the process of relocating several times between Italy and here."

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Photos: Timothy McDowell, Joanne Mattera
Deepest gratitude to Marcia Wood for her invaluable assistance with the installation, and to Timothy McDowell, a fine arts professor at the college, who was instrumental in bringing the exhibition there and who worked with me on all aspects of exhibition preparation.


Exhibition Essay:

Everybody Around the Table

With its mix of narrative and abstraction, textile and sculpture, A Legacy of Making: 26 Contemporary Artists Inspired by Their Italian Heritage might have you wondering, “What exactly is the common aesthetic thread here?” If you are Italian, or Italian American—or indeed, a member of any ethnic group that has its roots in another country—you understand that, like any big gathering with the relatives, it brings an entire famiglia to the table, each with different ideas and ways of expressing them.   

The artists whose work is included in this exhibition are aligned, generally, into two groups: those whose art is manifestly connected to the work or traditions of their immigrant forebears, and those whose art does not appear to have an aesthetic association. While our creative expressions are varied, our Italianità—our sense of Italianness--informs the work in this exhibition, whether it is apparent or not.

Drawing from Our Heritage
We start with the artists whose contemporary expression has a connection to the past—to the generations, the journey over, the language, the traditions. We see how artists translate these ideas from the original Italian.   

The Journey
Through a long career, B. Amore has researched and documented seven generations of her Italian family, maternal and paternal, a journey that culminated in 2000 in the brilliant installation of photographs, objects, and papers contained on tables and in vitrines exhibited at the Ellis Island Immigration Museum in New York City. Lifeline, Filo Della Vita: An Italian American Odyssey then traveled to museums in San Francisco and Boston, then Rome, and finally to Napoli, where her family’s journey began. A framed assemblage from that show is included here.

Angelica Bergamini is deeply rooted in Etruscan culture yet very much a citizen of her adopted  New York City. Born into a family of Tuscan ship captains, she draws imagery from the ocean that unites both places she calls home. On a more symbolic level, “the immense blue,” as she describes it, is a place with no borders. The ships she places into her ultramarine fields symbolize life’s passage, but for many viewers they are emblematic of our ancestors’ long voyage over on a steamship, often in steerage.

Diana González Gandolfi's early experiences as a foreigner in many countries and then an immigrant to the United States left her feeling caught between worlds. "Moving with my family from Buenos Aires, where I was born, to Colombia, Indonesia, and then New York, I absorbed diverse cultural environments without feeling deeply rooted in any one of them," says the artist, for whom maps are prominent in her iconography. The thread of Italianità is one constant, beginning with her paternal great grandfather, Gaetano Gandolfi, who fought side by side with Garibaldi in Italy's Wars of Independence, to the Italian traditions her family maintained in Buenos Aires. 

Italian and Italian American References
John Avelluto draws from Southern Italian and Sicilian tropes to create art that depicts the food and expressions we know so well. His trompe l’oeil relief paintings of pasta and cannoli look tempting enough to taste. But don’t. They are fashioned with acrylic paint. His kinetic sculpture, with thumb and fingers brought together in a gesture Italians call mano a borsa (hand purse), is an outsize and familiar gesture whose meaning ranges from “What do you mean?” to “WTF!” depending on the force with which the gesture is made. As children we were discouraged from talking with our hands lest we look too ethnic. Avelluto has embraced the very symbols that signify ethnicity and made them larger than life.

Claudia DeMonte taps into Italian folklore with her Corno sculpture. The corno, or horn, is typically rendered in gold, silver, or coral as a small talisman worn on a chain around the neck. It is meant to ward off the mal’occhio, or Evil Eye, a curse leveled at you by someone who is angry with you or jealous of what you have. In the 21st-century this may seem laughable, but Southern Italians—those from Naples and farther south—hold fast to their beliefs. Hey, a little protection can’t hurt, right?

Despite his Scottish surname, Timothy McDowell has had a lifetime of extended periods in Italy among the members of his mother’s family, the Macellari. His history is not one of Southern Italians fleeing poverty but of educated Northerners remaining on their ancestral land. His is a lineage of accomplished musicians, designers, architects, publishers, and painters. McDowell’s images, while often drawing from art history, also depict our contemporary culture with humor or irony. His Spaghetti Western folds together food and film tropes with politics.

The Textile Tradition
Let Jennifer Cecere describe it: “Until a generation ago, almost everyone practiced handwork. Women, especially, knitted, crocheted, and embroidered, and girls learned by example. All of us then had a connection to these traditions. Not so much anymore, but what does endure from my own experience, in addition to a love of needlework, is how intent my Italian grandparents were in weaving their traditions into the experience of their children and grandchildren in this new country.”  Cecere makes public art: large-scale renditions of lace in materials as diverse as ripstop nylon and brushed aluminum, which she has laser cut, bringing together the modesty of handwork with the ambition of a professional artist. She is represented here with three outsize paintings of doilies.

Patricia Miranda takes conventional lace, dyes it red, and pieces it into room-size installations—“shrouds,” she calls them—that pay homage to her grandmothers, Ermenegilda and Rebecca—the red suggestive of birth and blood and the pricks of so many fingers by so many needles in the making of handwork. A contemporary artist, Miranda nevertheless mines ancient materials, like red cochineal dye from insect hulls for the compelling color in her work.

In a series of embroideries on linen handkerchiefs, Milisa Galazzi recalls a conversation with her grandmother in which she was exhorted to keep embroidering. “Good girls should always be sewing,” says Grammy. “Ugh” responds the young artist. But Grammy prevailed. Much of Galazzi’s work as a mature artist involves sewing, whether in the embroideries shown here or in the sculptural paper  “lace” for which she is also known.

Chris Costan, whose day job for some years was as the color designer for a ready-to-wear fashion company, brings a number of material influences to her work, among them the threads and notions of dressmaking. Her work is witty, and even when small has a large-scale presence. It is the antithesis of passive domesticity. Perhaps that is a family tradition. She tells the story of an aunt who, finding a thief in her home, chased him down the street with a broom—an urban Befana* doing her own kind of housecleaning.
* the Italian Christmas witch who rides a broom

My own work is suggestive of fabric. The paintings are first and foremost color fields, reductive in composition, but the textile influence is apparent in the edge-to-edge swipe of the paint and the visually tactile surfaces. I am the great granddaughter of weavers, the granddaughter of a tailor, and the niece of two women—one a dressmaker, the other an embroiderer and lacemaker—whose handwork has left an undeniable imprint on my creative expression.


Sculpture
Elisa D’Arrigo cites as influences the wooden forms used by her Sicilian grandfather, a shoemaker, and the beehive hairdos of the Bronx in the Fifties. There’s more, of course: “Everyone made things, repaired things, jerry-rigged things. That atmosphere had a powerful effect on my sensibility and is with me still.” D’Arrigo’s wall sculptures, constructed of repurposed and handstitched canvas, and her hand-built ceramic sculptures, which she may fire multiple times, are a testament to the legacy of making.

Don Porcaro stacks stone into anthropomorphic sculptures—some quirky and playful, others like sentinels with a looming, but most often reassuring, presence. Installations of multiple sculptures may suggest family groupings. Cutting stone “felt right,” says Porcaro. “It fed a driving need to work with a material that speaks to tradition, and I knew that the tradition belonged to my culture.”

Lisa Zukowski’s sculptures are borne of secrets, the legacy of a grandfather who hid the past and was suspicious of the present. Her clay or fabric sculptures are wrapped in rope or string, some containing  texts and objects that are intended to remain unseen. Not all of Zukowski’s work is as mysterious, but much of it is made from discarded materials, a legacy of making do. In that regard it is aligned with Arte Povera, that mid-Century Italian movement which employed quotidian materials to powerful effect. 

D. Dominick Lombardi learned to use the hammer, saw, and chisel as a boy at the elbow of his grandfather and father, both of whom were master carpenters. Lombardi employs those tools while going  in a different direction, but the Old Country skills remain. Lombardi cites "high and low" aesthetic influences, from Picasso at one end to comic books at the other. 

Laura Moriarty’s chunky sculptures, constructed from wax, suggest miniature excavations from a richly chromatic land. While Moriarty’s interest in geology is amply evident, she has said that the “kitchen culture” of her grandmother, Anna Policella, with its process and improvisation, is an inspiration as well. (As a child she was, like many of us, an enthusiastic cranker of the pasta machine.)

After an earthquake reduced Avellino to rubble in 1980, Gianluca Bianchino relocated to New Jersey with his parents and older sibling. Then they went back to Italy and subsequently returned to the United States. The saving grace of what Bianchino calls a "rutted journey" were the flights that allowed him to see an aerial landscape without borders. His installations, such as the one in Gallery 66, allow visitors to navigate a space free of conventional boundaries.


The Natural World
Spending time in Brooklyn’s Green-Wood Cemetery as a child, Denise Sfraga came to understand—remarkably, for a young person—the cycle of life and death, or as she describes it, “the balance between quiet moments for the dead and vibrant flowers adorning those graves.” The life cycle holds her interest as a painter and a gardener. Her botanical abstractions, some in otherworldly hues, burst with germination and growth and the passage back to the earth.

Although best known as a wood carver, a career that was almost inconceivable for an Italian American woman growing up in the 1940s, Nancy Azara is here represented by three lyrical scrolls comprised of collaged rubbings of leaves and plants. Azara divides her time between a plant-filled New York City loft and a residence in Woodstock that is surrounded by vegetation. The scroll format lends itself to forays into the landscape and has offered creative flexibility during her numerous art residencies in Italy.

John Monti has come to see the connection between his Italian American identity and the emotion of Italian Baroque, which is laden with floral motifs. One need only think of the gorgeous excess of Neapolitan churches to understand the aesthetic. Monti considers himself a “cultural Catholic,” drawing inspiration from ornamentation rather than religion or ritual. As he sees it, each intertwined vine or bouquet is a “psychodrama” reflecting the complexities of the sacred and the mundane, particularly as played out in our culture.


Abstraction and Ethnicity
Of course ideas come from outside the immigrant culture as well. Even so, informed as we are by our Italian immigrant culture, something of that culture finds its way into the work

Lloyd Martin
 typically makes large-scale works that consist of horizontal color bands punctuated by vertical demarcations. It’s an architectural sensibility rife with rhythm, even musicality. There’s nothing necessarily “Italian” about the work (well, maybe the intensity of the color) but it was the force of a strong-willed Italian grandmother and generous artist uncle who guided Martin to his career choice. They might not have used the word mentor, but that’s what they were for him.

The granddaughter of immigrants and the daughter of artists, Karen Schifano is a painter who has exhibited internationally. Of her work she says, “Shape is the major motivation behind my impulse to paint. The shapes that catch my eye are usually openings: mouths, theater stages, circus arenas. These openings are bounded by edges, like lips or curtains, that reveal or partially conceal the void at the center."

As a professor of painting, Paul Fabozzi had led groups of students every summer to Italy, introducing them to the country’s history, language, and culture. “I dug deep into Rome’s seemingly endless strata to educate my students on the history of this enduring urban center,” he says. “At the same time, I continue to develop my painting and drawing practices as a vehicle for exploring the relationship between experiencing place and making images.”

Carolanna Parlato’s poured paintings are buoyant in color and improvisational in composition. A marvel of fluidity and control, they are built up layer upon layer of acrylic paint applied and then directed into contours and rivulets. There is nothing particularly Italian or Italian American about them. But allow me to read something into the work without ascribing it specifically to Parlato or her family: When light hits the surface of her paintings just so, you see each one’s history in relief—the ridges, drips, and outlined edges of hidden color. Isn’t that just like our culture? Put on your best face and keep the rest hidden.

Applying color to strips of Mylar and hanging them in a formal arrangement away from the wall, Mary Schiliro makes paintings that exist dimensionally in space. Works hung parallel to the wall, but at a slight distance, such as the Slice, Punch, Drip trio in this exhibition, create shadows that are integral to the perception of the work. Among many elements in Italian art and architecture that have inspired her, Schiliro says that the circle is one she has returned to again and again.

As an artist who is fully bilingual in Italian and English, Anna Patalano has chosen gesture in paint to say in her work what she cannot express in any other language or medium. “The material itself is seductive in a primal way,” she says. “There is an elegance, rawness, and directness to the material that allows a certain freedom for me. How an image emerges from that is a mystery.”

In Somma, In Conclusion
John Avelluto sums up nicely the identity of so many artists of Italian American descent: "I draw from the culture, I embrace the mishmash, but I am not an 'Italian American artist.’ I may be painting pasta and pastries now, but one day I may want to make blue abstract paintings."  So we are Italian American and we are artists, embracing both identities, but separately. Even those of us whose work is informed by our ethnicity see it filtered through our art training and through our immersion in the contemporary mainstream.

     – Joanne Mattera