Friday, February 21, 2025

"A Legacy of Making, Part 2 " at Regis College

Iteration 1, 2023-2024: Calandra Institute, New York City, A Legacy of Making: 21 Contemporary Italian American Artists

Iteration 2, 2024: Connecticut College, New London, A Legacy of Making: 26 Contemporary Artists Inspired by Their Italian Heritage

Iteration 3, 2024: Regis College, Weston, Massachusetts, A Legacy of Making, Part 1: Contemporary Artists Inspired by Their Italian Heritage
 


A Legacy of Making, Part 2 in the Carney Gallery of Regis College in Weston, Mass., through May 10
Here, Lloyd Martin, left, and two by Mark Wethli

The artists in this exhibition, in addition to Martin and Wethli, are Joe Cultrera, Grace DeGennaro, Michaelangelo Giaquinto, Aldo Longo, Robert Maloney, Thomas MIcchelli, Wayne Montecalvo, Hugo Rizzoli, Grace Roselli, Roberta Tucci, and Carleen Zimbalatti


Thirteen artists, most of whom live, work, or grew up in New England, are featured in the fourth iteration of A Legacy of Making, my curatorial project inspired by Italianità, which I published in 2023 to acknowledge the heritage that informed us as artists. At a time when ethnicity and cultural legacy are topics of discussion in the art world as well as society at large, both A Legacy of Making and Italianità contribute to the conversation with art that expresses the immigrant experience as expressed through Italian American lives. 

As you glance around a gallery that features a good deal of abstraction, you may wonder about the Italian connection, so let me share some of the underpinnings of the show. Grace Roselli is represented by photographs of four Italian American women, including herself, who have made contributions to the larger art world; in her drawing, Nonna's Thread, Carleen Zimbalatti remembers the handwork she learned from her Italian grandmother; Grace DeGennaro draws her iconography from the rose windows of the church, as does Aldo Longo, who went on to explore mandala imagery as well; Thomas Micchelli draws his inspiration from a panoply of Italian sculptors and painters from Michelangelo to Morandi; Wayne Montecalvo taps into cinematic history with an image in his mixed-media work of Napoli's most famous figlia, Sophia Loren; and filmmaker Joe Cultrera, tells the story of how an Italian family, his own, recovered from improprieties committed by a priest at St. Mary's Italian Church in Salem, Massachusetts. Read on. There's more.



Joe Cultrera, poster for Hand of God

Cultrera's 2007 full-length film, Hand of God, plays on a loop in the gallery. The story of his brother's molestation at the hands of a parish priest, and his family's triumph over the betrayal, is deeply personal while acknowledging the broader scope of a problem that took years to come to light. Hand of God was featured on PBS's Frontline and is still viewable there. We are planning an evening screening of the director's cut followed by a Q&A with Cultrera at a date to be announced. I'll post specifics when they are confirmed


Behind Cultrera's poster and  along the first wall, we see work by Michaelangelo Giaquinto, Aldo Longo, and Wayne Montecalvo




Michaelangelo Giaquinto, Blue Moon, 2020, mixed media on wood panel, 10 x 8 inches

The intimate collages on view here contain imagined worlds of history, science, and religion with a sense of the mysterious. “My experience in Italian culture began the day I was born,” says the artist. “Giaquinto translates to already fifth, and I was the fifth male child in the family, born on the fifth of May.” 




Aldo Longo, Gnostic Vision #1, 2016, oil and collage on canvas, 30 x 24 inches

Longo grew up in an Italian community in New Haven, Connecticut, where the stained-glass windows of the church made a profound visual impact on him. When the Navy sent him to Japan, a new and different culture opened up to him. As an artist, he found himself integrating the two cultures. Among the many bodies of work he has produced in seven decades is a series of mandalas that reflect, he says, the rose windows of churches he attended as a youth and the Japanese temples that affected him so deeply as an adult.



Wayne Montecalvo,  Marie Antoinette, 2022, mixed media, insulation foam, digital images, charcoal, cardboard, 36 x 23 x 2.5 inches; Frito, 2023, mixed media, digital images, insulation foam, wax, encaustic paint, Foamcoat, cardboard, powdered graphite, 40 x 36 x 2.5 inches; Sophia, 2024, mixed media, digital images, wax, powdered graphite, India ink, insulation foam, cardboard, Foamcoat, caulk, 30 x 22 x 2 inches



A closer view of Sophia

Montecalvo's images are drawn from a variety of sources, but the processes with which he works them are typically of his own invention. In the series on view here, he gives us three familiar women: the queen of excess, Marie Antoinette; the painter Frida Kahlo as a girl; and the glorious Sophia Loren, in an image from her heyday, on what look to be artifact walls replete with ethnic icons and decorative tiles. Look closer. These “artifacts” are in fact thoroughly modern—digital images mounted on Styrofoam with a mix of other materials, like cardboard and wax.




Continuing along the wall with Carleen Zimbalatti's Nonna’s Thread, 2022, acrylic and ink on paper, 16 x 16 inches (plus frame)

Below: A closer view of Nonna's Thread


From a family of stone carvers—her great grandfather worked on Mount Rushmore—and strivers, many of whom worked in creative industries, Zimbalatti brings together craft and fine art in her work. Line is her means of growing geometric shapes: grids or networks that offer a sense of deep space, or chromatic squares with a symmetry that invites contemplative viewing. “Forms emerge slowly and hypnotically from its use,” says Zimbalatti of the line. Nonna’s Thread refers to the handwork practiced by her grandmother.



As we continue around the gallery, you see the screen where Cultrera's film is playing. To the right of that is the work of Grace DeGennaro, below



Grace DeGennaro, Dawn, Dusk, Night, all 2022, oil and cold wax on linen, 55 x 34 inches

DeGennaro draws inspiration from her attendance at church, specifically the glowing light of stained-glass windows and the kinesthetic experience of fingering rosary beads in prayer. “From an early age, Catholicism gave me a sense of the existence of both the visible and the invisible,” she says. DeGennaro makes meditative geometric paintings composed of orderly configurations of dots, which she refers to as “beads.” Here, three paintings from the Rosette series transcend a specific religion. “Each of my paintings is offered as both an antidote to the distractions of our everyday world, and as an entrance to the collective unconscious,” she says.


DeGennaro, Hugo Rizzoli





A selection of mixed-media collages by Hugo Rizzoli

Lower Pedestal: Red Temple, 2023, 16 x 12 inches; higher pedestal: Mission Flowers, 2024, 16 x 12 inches; on wall, clockwise from lower left: Flower Diamonds, 2025, 12 x 9 inches; Joyance,  2024, 12 x 12 inches; Untitled (Spirit Points), 2024, 12 x 12; Cardinal North, 2023, 16 x 12; Untitled (Ovals), 2024, 12 x 12; A Flower and a Color and Away!, 2024, 12 x 15 inches; center: Tamburello, 2024, 12 x 16 inches


After almost two decades as the owner of a bookstore, Rizzoli now makes art with a visual narrative suggestive of architecture—buildings, walls, intimate spaces. His small-scale collages and paintings feature a pared-down geometric style, playful yet serious, in which he employs papers and fabrics, most with the soft patina of age. Rizzoli describes his aesthetic as “melding remnants of past time with present sensibility.” A new element in the work on exhibition here is Venetian plaster, a material that has been used on walls since Roman times, which enhances the architectural quality of the work. 


Joyance


Tamburello


Untitled (Ovals)



To the right of DeGennaro and Rizzoli is Roberta Tucci, with Thomas Micchelli on pedestal in foreground

Below: Micchelli's Two Heads, 22022, wax on painted wood base


 
Roberta Tucci, Chance of Storms: Likely, 2021, acrylic on three panels, overall dimension 58 x 31 inches

 “I paint images that express how I perceive organic forms and the world of nature,” says Tucci. Her work bursts with energy, whether in the release of exploding shapes, or the contained dynamism of meandering lines, or here in a tripartite painting, Chance of Storms: Likely, which suggests a powerful meteorological event about to take place. A first visit to Italy as a young adult allowed her to connect with her Italian culture and family, absorbing, she says, “the essence of a living ancestry.”





Roberta Tucci, Lloyd Martin, Mark Wethli



Lloyd Martin, Grey Dyad,2024, oil on canvas, 90.5 x 90.5 (two horizontal panels)

Martin makes large-scale paintings consisting of horizontal color bands punctuated by vertical demarcations. It is an architectural sensibility rife with rhythm, even musicality. You could say there is nothing necessarily “Italian” about the work, but looking at the shallow geometric space articulated in Sienese paintings, made in the 14th century at the dawn of the Renaissance, you might reconsider. In any case, it was a strong-willed maternal 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. “Much of what I am today I credit to my grandmother, Filomena Maccarone,” says the artist. 




Mark Wethli

Above: Ca Plane Pour Moi, 2022, flashe on wood, 12 x 9 x 2 inches
Below: Kindness, I Suppose, 2017, flashe on canvas, 48 x 36 inches


Formerly a realist painter of exquisitely serene interiors, Wethli turned his attention to geometric abstraction some 25 years ago. It was a big change, but he carried with him the same compositional sense of balance and harmony. “I try to paint geometry the way that Giorgio Morandi painted bottles—using something as humble as the rectangle,” he says. Wethli is represented in this exhibition by two works: a small constructed piece that could be seen as a flat sculpture or a bas relief painting, and a painting, shown together below. The conversation between the two works is lively. To listen in you need only to spend some time looking.



Left wall: Mark Wethli; far wall: Robert Maloney, Grace Roselli; pedestal: Thomas Micchelli


Thomas Micchelli, Four Heads, 2022, wax on painted wood base, 10.5 x 12 x 12 inches

“Italian art and culture form the double helix defining my life and work,”  says Micchelli, who is represented in this exhibition by two multi-element sculptures. Working in wax, clay, or other malleable materials, he carves or builds figures—here, heads—that speak to the human condition. Micchelli depicts a range of human emotion, from consternation to surprise, serenity to anger. While not conventionally handsome, the figures are compelling—present and powerful despite their relatively small size.           



Robert Maloney, Innerstate Gold, 2021, relief print on Masa paper with black and metallic inks, 44 x 36 inches


Maloney is taken with the structure of the urban landscape. Italian on his mother’s side (Steriti), he was deeply affected by “the passage of time and layers of history” he encountered throughout his travels in Italy. Reflecting those layers, the distinctly American work included in this exhibition is a woodblock print comprised of multiple inkings that results in an impossibly dense metropolitan vision. The work, printed from a 44-by-36-inch plywood plate, carries the marks of the carving process. 



Grace Roselli

Above: Claudia DeMonte
Below: Nancy Azara

Both are archival ink prints, 20 x 24 inches, part of the Pandora's BoxX Project that chronicles the intersectional identities and cultural impact of women artists and art practitioners active since the 1960s. 
Read more here





Grace Roselli

Above: Joanne Mattera
Below: Self-Portrait
Both are archival ink prints, 20 x 24 inches, part of the Pandora's BoxX Project



Roselli is a painter and photographer. Here we focus on her work as a photographer with four images from her ongoing project, Pandora’s Boxx. In this ambitious undertaking, Roselli is photographing 360 influential art world women, as well as non-binary and transwomen—artists, writers, curators, critics—for what will soon be a book. The four images here depict Italian American women, including the late sculptor Nancy Azara, mixed-media artist Claudia DeMonte, your curator, and  Roselli herself behind the lens. All of us have been part of the Italianità project that has served as inspiration for this and other exhibitions. Roselli's Pandora's BoxX chronicles the intersectional identities and cultural impact of women artists and art practitioners active since the 1960s. 

Read more here

Acknowledgements
Big thanks to all the participating artists for your great work. A shout out to Kelly Blasberg, gallery director, for her bravura installation abilities. Her measurement skills are spot on, and she is fearless on the 15-foot ladder.  And a special thanks to professor Julia Lisella who, back in June, surmised that A Legacy of Making would be a good fit for the college.

Information about the exhibition
. The exhibition is on view through May 10
. Gallery hours: 10:00 to 5:00 Monday-Friday; 12:00-4:00 Saturday; closed Sunday
. The Carney Gallery is located in the Fine Arts Center. See it in the lower right quadrant of the map below
. There is plenty of parking. You may park on the college access road opposite the entrance to the Fine Arts Center or in the visitor lot behind the building




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