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Beniamino Bufano

Beniamino "Bene" Bufano (October 15, 1890 – August 18, 1970) was an Italian American sculptor, best known for his large-scale monuments representing peace and his modernist work often featured smoothly rounded animals and relatively simple shapes. He worked in ceramics, stone, stainless steel, and mosaic, and sometimes combined two or more of these media, and some of his works are cast stone replicas. He had a variety of names used and sometimes went by the name Benvenuto Bufano because he admired Benvenuto Cellini. His youthful nickname was "Bene", which was often anglicized into "Benny". He lived in Northern California for much of his career.

Beniamino Bufano
Bufano in San Francisco, 1923
Born
Beniamino Benevento Bufano

(1890-10-15)October 15, 1890
DiedAugust 18, 1970(1970-08-18) (aged 79)
Resting placeHoly Cross Cemetery, Colma, California, U.S.
Other namesBene Bufano, Benny Bufano, Ben Bufano, Benvenuto Bufano
Occupation(s)Artist, Sculptor
Spouses
  • Marie Jones Linder,
  • Virginia Howard Lewin
Children2

Early life edit

Bufano was born in San Fele, Italy.[1] He came to the United States in 1901,[1] with his mother and siblings. The family eventually settled down in New York, when Bufano was at a young age.[1] One source states that Bufano's eleven siblings also came to the U.S.,[2] another gives the figure as sixteen,[3] and Bufano was quoted as saying that he was one of fifteen children.[4]

The date of Bufano's birth is also uncertain. The year 1890, attributed here, appears on Bufano's death certificate and grave. Yet his birth year is variously cited between 1886 and 1898.[5] It is equally difficult to determine the accuracy of many of the stories Bufano told about his life. Although a 1972 biography by Howard Wilkening and Sonia Brown is based on interviews with the artist and extensive research, it is not conclusive. As the artist admitted, "I just told each person not only what I thought he wanted to hear, but I related it in the way I thought appropriate for him."[6] Another biography, published ten years after Bufano's death by his ex-wife Virginia Howard Lewin, includes many stories she would have heard from him.[7] As she wrote, "Benny revived lying, made it an art and a way of life, a way to get along in a cockeyed world. Yet lying is a misleading word to explain the thought processes of the little artist. If he lied, he was not aware of being dishonest—he was nonmoral, like a child."[8] The only biography with footnotes is the limited-edition volume by Lois Rather published in 1975 and focusing on Bufano's dealings with the federal government.[9]

He studied at the Art Students League of New York during 1913–1915[10] with sculptors Herbert Adams, Paul Manship, and James Earle Fraser and assisted them with their work;[11] he also assisted Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney (Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney) at her home studio in Roslyn, New York in about 1913.[12][13] The relationship ended abruptly as Bufano, charged with making maquettes from Mrs. Whitney's sketches, consistently altered them to his own design. After he ignored several requests to reproduce the sketches as they were, Mrs. Whitney lost patience and smashed Bufano's versions of her sculptures on the floor. He resigned on the spot.[14]

Career edit

In the fall of 1914, Paul Manship invited Bufano to work with Robert Treat Paine on a commission Manship had received for the 1915 Panama-Pacific International Exposition.[15][16][circular reference][17] Bufano rented a room in San Francisco's Chinatown, made some friends there, and became fascinated with Chinese art.[18][19] He was given additional sculpture projects at the exposition, panels for the Arches of Triumph and a festoon over the main door of the Palace of Fine Arts.[6]

After returning to New York in 1915, Bufano entered a nationwide art competition and exhibit on the theme "The Immigrant in America". Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney funded the contest, and the exhibit was held in the Whitney Studio Club at 8 West 8th Street in Greenwich Village, which Whitney established to exhibit the work of young artists. The Immigrants in America Review administered the contest. Frances Kellor, who had been top committeewoman in former President Theodore Roosevelt's Progressive Party, headed the Review.[20] Roosevelt visited the exhibit of the 100 works entered in the contest, which added to its prestige and the acclaim of its prize winners. Bufano, then a virtual unknown in the art world (although known to Mrs. Whitney), won the first prize of $500 with a sculpture, titled The Group, depicting more than a dozen bowed figures, headed by a child.[21][22] The New York Times reported on Roosevelt's visit to the exhibit. Roosevelt used the occasion to inveigh against cubist art, but singled out "Bennie" Bufano's prize-winning sculpture for praise. "Wonderful work", he exclaimed to the Times, "I should like to meet the sculptor."[23]

Shortly after the United States entered World War I in 1917, Bufano accidentally cut off half of his right index finger. He decided to mail the "trigger finger" to President Woodrow Wilson as a protest against the war. He allowed a legend to develop that he had intentionally severed the finger for this purpose.[5][24]

Later in 1917 he returned to California and rented a studio in Pasadena, where he sculpted portrait heads and took philosophy classes.[25] But he decided San Francisco was where he most wanted to live, and it became his home base for the rest of his life, although he would travel extensively.[26]

In 1918 he met Sara Bard Field and Charles Erskine Scott Wood, who became important patrons of his work. They provided him with a studio, commissioned sculptures, and funded a trip to China for the artist to study glazes.[27] Albert M. Bender was another early patron who helped Bufano financially and acquired works by the artist that he donated to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. A portrait head of Bender by Bufano is also in the museum collection.

Bufano traveled to China in 1920, encountering the poet Witter Bynner and working on a portrait head of Bynner en route. He apprenticed himself to a master potter to learn about glazes, as planned, but he extended his stay and traveled around the country, meeting Sun Yat-sen and John Dewey. Although he said he spent much of the journey living in poverty, he returned after about two years with a valuable collection of Chinese art.[28]

In 1923, he was hired to teach at the California School of Fine Arts (now known as San Francisco Art Institute)[29] but had too many disagreements with the administration about how art should be taught and was dismissed at the end of the semester. He proceeded to open his art school, the Da Vinci Art School, in the Hawaiian Building on the 1915 exposition grounds, but it closed within months.[6] One of Bufano's students was Raymond Puccinelli.[30] Around this time he created some site-specific art for the country home of Wood and Field in Los Gatos, California.

In 1925, Bufano had a solo show at the Arden Galleries in New York City, he was featured in International Studio magazine, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art acquired his ceramic sculpture Honeymoon Couple. That year he also met Virginia Howard in San Francisco, fell in love, followed her when she went to Louisiana and married her in Texas. They spent a few weeks in Pasadena and then embarked on a trip around the world, visiting Japan, China, Southeast Asia, and India, then Italy and France. By the time they arrived in France the marriage was failing, and when she became pregnant, he sent her home to California.[7] The baby was born on August 16, 1928, and Virginia named him Erskine Scott Bufano after their benefactor Charles Erskine Scott Wood.[31] She learned that her husband had earlier had a common-law wife named Marie Jones (née Linder) and a daughter named Aloha M. Jones-Bufano.[31] She divorced him in 1931.[32]

 
Plaques above Bufano's grave in Holy Cross Cemetery in Colma, California.

Bufano spent close to four years in France, where he bought a large block of stone and carved a statue of St. Francis of Assisi,[33] which he intended as a gift to the city of San Francisco[34][35] Once it was finished, the Depression was underway, aesthetic objections were raised by San Franciscans who saw photographs of the work, and more than two decades were to pass before enough money was raised to ship it to California.[36]

He became a naturalized U.S. citizen in November 1938.[9]

Back in San Francisco during the 1930s, he received studio space, a salary, and assistants through the Federal Art Project.[37][38][39][40] He created several animal sculptures for the new Aquatic Park. He also made drawings and models for a 156-foot-tall St. Francis to sit on top of a high hill.[41] It was approved by the city art commission, but it became an object of controversy and ridicule and was never erected. He was commissioned to design a block-long sculptural frieze of athletes for George Washington High School in San Francisco, but then was accused of including likenesses of Joseph Stalin and Harry Bridges. He denied this charge but lost the commission, ostensibly because he was taking too long and kept changing the design.[42] He received another federal job in 1940, head of the art division of the National Youth Administration for San Francisco.[43]

Bufano served on the San Francisco Art Commission from 1944 to 1948.[44] A long-term friendship with author and painter Henry Miller began during this time; Miller would advocate on Bufano's behalf and wrote an introduction to a 1968 book on the artist.[45] It was published for the Bufano Society of the Arts, San Francisco, with 115 color and 8 black-and-white illustrations.

In 1950 Bufano created a large mural for Moar's Cafeteria[46][47] in San Francisco (however it was removed in the 1970s for BART construction). As shown below, examples of his distinctive and large-scale work are found throughout the San Francisco Bay Area. Some of his best-known works are bullet-shaped monuments, including the first sculpture in stainless steel.[48]

Bufano worked in North Beach, and later, South of Market, his rent covered by Trader Vic's owner Victor Bergeron, while living at the Press Club in downtown San Francisco.[49]

Death and legacy edit

Bufano continued to create art and to be seen locally as a colorful character until his death from heart disease in 1970.[50] In his will he disinherited his daughter Aloha M. Bufano-Jones (1918–1991) and did not mention his son, Erskine Scott Bufano, leaving everything to an entity he and patron friends had established called the Bufano Society of the Arts.[51] Erskine successfully contested the will and became the head of the society.[31] Erskine died in 2010.[52][53]

Beniamino Bufano is buried at Holy Cross Cemetery in Colma, California.[54][55]

Works edit

 
Louis Pasteur statue at San Rafael High School, San Rafael, California (1940)

Northern California and San Francisco Bay Area public spaces edit

San Francisco public spaces edit

The numbers on the map and below suggest the shortest route by which a driver (or intrepid cyclist) may visit all of the Bufano sculptures in public spaces of San Francisco.

  • 01) Elephant (n.d.): 3-foot (1 m) bronze statue is located at the Museo ItaloAmericano,[74] 2 Marina Blvd., Building C
  • 02) Hand of Peace (n.d.): bronze with enamel statue, also at the Museo ItaloAmericano,[74] 2 Marina Blvd., Building C
  • 03) Madonna (begun in 1962):[75] almost 14-feet (4 m.) high, with a mosaic of young faces, pink, yellow and black. In a film portrait which contains a lengthy segment on creating this mosaic, Bufano states,"The figure of a child. It's a composite figure of all the races."[76] The monument is located in the Great Meadow, Upper Fort Mason; 150 yards north of 1325 Bay Street
  • 04) Frog (1942): 16" (.5 m) high, this work is located on the balcony of the Maritime Museum, 900 Beach Street.
  • 05) Seal (1942): 42" (1 m) high, also located at the Maritime Museum, 900 Beach Street
  • 06) St. Francis de la Varenne (1928):[77] this 18-foot [5.5 m.] monument is located on the south-east corner of Beach and Taylor Streets, Fisherman's Wharf.
  • 07) The Penguin: Golden Gateway Center, 480 Davis Court, near the south-east corner of Davis and Jackson Streets. The work is displayed across the street diagonally from Sydney Walton Square, a sculpture park.
  • 08) Sun Yat-sen (1937): Saint Mary's Square, corner of Quincy and California Street. This 12-foot [3.5 m] statue is said to be among Bufano's most famous works.
  • 09) The Penguins: entrance to the Stanford Court Hotel,[78] 905 California Street
  • 10) St. Francis (1970): Grace Cathedral, 1100 California Street. The black and bronze, 5-foot [1.5 m) tall sculpture was originally located at the St. Francis Hotel but was moved to its current location in 1993.[79]
  • 11) St. Francis on Horseback (1935):[80] 8-feet (2.5 m) tall; Westside Courts Housing Project, across from 2550 Sutter, in the courtyard behind the basketball court
  • 12) Bear (1930s): University of California, San Francisco, 608 Parnassus Street
  • 13) Bear and Cubs (1968): University of California, San Francisco, 530 Parnassus Street
  • 14) Female Torso: Eureka Valley/Harvey Milk Memorial Branch Library,[81] 1 Jose Sarria Court; in the front lobby
  • 15) Rabbit, Seals, Fish, Bear and Cubs, Cat and Mouse:[82] Valencia Gardens Housing (1930s):[83] in the courtyard next to 33 Maxwell Court.
  • 16) The Madonna:[84] San Francisco General Hospital, courtyard at the north-east corner of Potrero Avenue and 22nd Street
  • 17) Saint Francis of the Guns (1968); City College of San Francisco, Ocean Campus, between Phelan Avenue and the front entrance to the Science Building. Constructed of melted guns from a voluntary weapons amnesty program in San Francisco, this work was inspired by the 1968 assassinations of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Robert F. Kennedy. On the robe of St Francis is a mosaic tile mural of four of America's assassinated leaders: Abraham Lincoln, Martin Luther King Jr., Robert Kennedy and John F. Kennedy.[85]
  • 18) Granite Nude Torso [male] (1934): San Francisco State University, courtyard between HSS and the Business Buildings, 1600 Holloway Avenue
  • 19) Head of St. Francis (1938): San Francisco State University, main quadrangle, between the Business Building and the Student Center, 1600 Holloway Avenue
  • 20) Penguin’s Prayer (1939):[86] 11 Lake Merced Boulevard, west side of the road between Brotherhood Way and John Muir Drive
  • 21) Peace (1939): opposite the Calvary Armenian Congregational Church,[87] 725 Brotherhood Way. This 30-foot (9 m) monument was relocated to Brotherhood Way in 1996 after nearly four decades at the San Francisco International Airport.
  • 22) Bear and Head of Peace (ca. 1935–1940): Sunnydale Projects Community Center,[88] in Visitacion Valley, San Francisco, 1654 Sunnydale Avenue

San Francisco museums edit

Outside of California public spaces edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c TenEyck Gardner, Albert (1965). American Sculpture: A Catalogue of the Collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. New York, NY: Metropolitan Museum of Art. pp. 170–172 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ Archives of American Art. "Beniamino Bufano papers, 1930s-1970". Retrieved December 15, 2018.
  3. ^ L’Italo-Americano. "Bufano – The Art of Public Art". Retrieved December 15, 2018.
  4. ^ Whiting, Sam. San Francisco Chronicle, August 10, 2017 (August 10, 2017). "A brief history of Benny Bufano". Retrieved December 15, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ a b c Parkman, E. Breck (2007). "Missiles of Peace: Benny Bufano's Message to the World, California History, March 22, 2007". Thefreelibrary.com. California History and California Historical Society. Retrieved July 29, 2013.
  6. ^ a b c Wilkening, Howard and Sonia Brown (1972). Bufano: An Intimate Biography. Berkeley, California: Howell North Books. ISBN 0-8310-7089-7.
  7. ^ a b Lewin, Virginia B. (1980). One of Benny's Faces: A Study of Beniamino Bufano (1886–1970), the Man Behind the Artist. Hicksville, NY: Exposition Press. ISBN 0-682-49484-4.
  8. ^ Lewin (1980); p. 200
  9. ^ a b c Rather, Lois (1975). Bufano and the USA. Oakland California: Rather Press. OCLC 1638297.
  10. ^ "Americanization of Immigrants". The Outlook (New York City). New York. December 15, 1915. p. 881. ProQuest 136983757.
  11. ^ California Art Research Archive, Bancroft Library. "Beniamino Bufano's biography" (PDF). Retrieved December 15, 2018.
  12. ^ Lewin 1980; pp. 22-4
  13. ^ Wilkening and Brown (1972); pp. 29-32, 37
  14. ^ Lewin 1980; p. 24
  15. ^ Galland, Amy Lynn (2001). Immigrant in America, page 127, note 25. Ann Arbor, MI.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  16. ^ Robert Paine, (sculptor), 2018, Retrieved November 17, 2018
  17. ^ Van Niekerken, Bill (April 18, 2017). "An ode to Benny Bufano, a San Francisco sculptor who broke the mold". The San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved November 17, 2018.
  18. ^ Ackerman, Phyllis (February 1925). "'The East Meets the West': In the Sculpture of Beniamino Bufano the forms of the Orient express Western ideas". International Studio 80(33). pp. 375–79. Retrieved November 17, 2018.
  19. ^ Wilkening and Brown(1972); pp. 51–66
  20. ^ Berman, Avis (1990). Rebels on Eighth Street: Juliana Force and the Whitney Museum of American Art. New York: Atheneum. p. 118. ISBN 978-0-689-12086-2.
  21. ^ "Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney and The Soul of the Immigrant". The Omaha Sunday Bee Magazine [includes a photograph of the work]. December 12, 1915. Retrieved December 16, 2018.
  22. ^ "East Side Sculptor Wins Exhibit Prize" (PDF). The New York Times. November 13, 1915.
  23. ^ "Colonel's Big Stick Batters Cubist Art" (PDF). The New York Times. December 3, 1915. p. 11.
  24. ^ Wilkening (1972); p. 24.
  25. ^ Wilkening (1972); pp. 45–48.
  26. ^ "Beniamino Bufano on Public Art - FoundSF". www.foundsf.org. Retrieved February 5, 2024.
  27. ^ . Regional Oral History Office, Bancroft Library, University of California oac.cdlib.org. Archived from the original on December 3, 2013. Retrieved July 29, 2013.
  28. ^ Wilkening and Brown (1972); pp. 51–66
  29. ^ "Beniamino Bufano on Public Art - FoundSF". www.foundsf.org. Retrieved February 5, 2024.
  30. ^ Hughes, Edan Milton (2002). Artists in California, 1786-1940: L-Z. Crocker Art Museum. p. 901. ISBN 978-1-884038-08-2.
  31. ^ a b c Parkman (2007); p. 47
  32. ^ Wilkening and Brown (1972); p. 120
  33. ^ "Beniamino Bufano on Public Art - FoundSF". www.foundsf.org. Retrieved February 5, 2024.
  34. ^ United States History. "Beniamino Benvenuto Bufano". Retrieved December 15, 2018.
  35. ^ Gallery444 (2018). "Beniamino Bufano". Retrieved November 17, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  36. ^ Van Niekerken (2017)
  37. ^ Lampert, Nicolas (2013). A People's Art History of the United States: 250 Years of Activist Art and Artists Working in Social Justice Movements. New York, NY: The New Press. p. 148.
  38. ^ Lott, Tommy L. Excerpted from "Black Consciousness in the Art of Sargent Johnson", in Reclaiming San Francisco: History, Politics, Culture (San Francisco: City Lights Books 1998). "Sargent Johnson and Bufano". Retrieved December 15, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  39. ^ The Living New Deal. "Artist: Beniamino Bufano". Retrieved December 15, 2018.
  40. ^ Rathmell, George. Nob Hill Gazette, July, 2009. "Beniamino Bufano". Archived from the original on January 30, 2013. Retrieved December 16, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  41. ^ "Beniamino Bufano on Public Art - FoundSF". www.foundsf.org. Retrieved February 5, 2024.
  42. ^ Poletti, Therese (2008). Art Deco San Francisco: The Architecture of Timothy Pflueger. New York: Princeton Architectural Press. p. 148. ISBN 978-1-56898-756-9. Retrieved March 29, 2016.
  43. ^ Rather (1975); p. 72
  44. ^ Wilkening and Brown (1972); pp. 163–182
  45. ^ Bufano, Beniamino and Henry Miller (1968). Bufano: Sculpture, Mosaics, Drawings. Tokyo: John Weatherhill, Inc. OCLC 316602.
  46. ^ CBS5 and KPIX (1953). "Discovery: Benny Bufano - San Francisco Bay Area Television Archive - minute 5:09". Retrieved March 29, 2016.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  47. ^ "Beniamino Bufano mural in Moars Cafeteria". Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  48. ^ CBS5 and KPIX (1953); minute 7:18
  49. ^ Patricia Yollin, Chronicle Staff Writer (November 21, 2005). "SAN FRANCISCO / Kids have a ball with Bufano / Museum re-creates beloved sculptor's studio". SFGate. Retrieved March 29, 2016.
  50. ^ . August 19, 2023. Archived from the original on August 19, 2023. Retrieved February 5, 2024.
  51. ^ Parkman (2007); p. 58
  52. ^ Tributes.com. "Erskine Scott Bufano". Retrieved December 15, 2018.
  53. ^ . August 19, 2023. Archived from the original on August 19, 2023. Retrieved February 5, 2024.
  54. ^ Parkman (2007); p. 49
  55. ^ . August 19, 2023. Archived from the original on August 19, 2023. Retrieved February 5, 2024.
  56. ^ "OMCA Collections Bear Nursing Cubs".
  57. ^ "Louis Pasteur - 1940". New Deal Art Registry. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  58. ^ Richard Flower (2014). "Beniamino Bufano & The Mystry Of The Beheaded Bach". Stories of Old Carmel: A Centennial Tribute From The Carmel Residents Association. Carmel-by-the-Sea, California: Carmel Residents Association. pp. 166–167.
  59. ^ "Statue of Bach by Beniamino Bufano". Calisphere. 1943. Retrieved August 17, 2023.
  60. ^ "Fremont Medical Center". Kaiser Permanente. 2018. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  61. ^ Levy, Joan (April 16, 2007). "We had our own dream house in Hillsdale". San Mateo Daily Journal. Retrieved November 15, 2018.
  62. ^ Kelly, George H. (1957). "Shopping Can Be Fun: A New Concept in Merchandising (film: for a scene in which Bufano works on sculptures for the shopping center, see minute 10:21)". Retrieved November 15, 2018.
  63. ^ "Hillsdale Shopping Center". Hillsdale Shopping Center. 2018. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  64. ^ "ILWU Mosaic". 2018. Retrieved November 15, 2018.
  65. ^ "Claycord News & Talk". 2014. Retrieved November 15, 2018.
  66. ^ "Art & Statues, Universal Child". 2018. Retrieved November 15, 2018.
  67. ^ Waymarking.com for Smithsonian Art Inventory sculptures (2009). "California Bear, San Jose, CA". Retrieved November 15, 2018.
  68. ^ "Pages from the Past". Los Altos Town Crier. August 26, 1970. Retrieved September 3, 2016.
  69. ^ Sonoma County Tourism. "Timber Cove Resort: Bufano's Obelisk". Retrieved September 3, 2016.
  70. ^ . Timber Cove Inn. Archived from the original on June 17, 2012. Retrieved July 29, 2013.
  71. ^ Weinstein, Dave. "Painting the Town, When mosaic master Alfonso Pardiñas lit up the Bay Area with his colored glass and lively personality". EichlerNetwork. p. 5. from the original on April 4, 2017. Retrieved March 30, 2021.
  72. ^ Kempton, Rosemary (April 11, 2012). "Robert Mondavi Winery: A showcase for the arts". Napa Valley Register. Napa Valley Publishing. Retrieved September 3, 2016.
  73. ^ Wright Hession, Stephanie (January 26, 2021). "Ross Common, Ross". SF Gate. Retrieved April 21, 2021.
  74. ^ a b "Museo Italo Americano". Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  75. ^ "(Madonna) – San Francisco, CA – Smithsonian Art Inventory Sculptures". Waymarking.com. Retrieved July 29, 2013.
  76. ^ CBS5 and KPIX (1953); minute 11:33
  77. ^ "Bufano at Fisherman's Wharf". artandarchitecture-sf.com. Retrieved July 29, 2013.
  78. ^ "Stanford Court". Stanford Court. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  79. ^ "Notorious San Francisco: Benny Bufano". MISTERSF. 2001. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  80. ^ "Bufano at Westside Courts". Art and Architecture. 2012. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  81. ^ "Eurika Valley/Harvey Milk Memorial". San Francisco Public Library. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  82. ^ "Bufano in Valencia Gardens". Art and Architecture. 2012. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  83. ^ "Valencia Gardens". ECB Equity Community Builders. 2012. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  84. ^ "Madonna by Benjamin Bufano at SF General". Art and Architecture. Retrieved November 27, 2013.
  85. ^ "St. Francis Made of Melted Guns". Roadside America. Retrieved September 26, 2014.
  86. ^ "Penguin's Prayer". Art and Architecture. 2012. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  87. ^ "Calvary Armenian Congregational Church". CACC. 2018. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  88. ^ "Sunnydale". Hope SF. 2018. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  89. ^ "About the Randall Museum". Randall Museum. 2018. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  90. ^ "Female Torso". Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. 2018. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  91. ^ "George W.P.Hunt". Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. 2018. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  92. ^ "Beniamino Bufano". San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. 2018. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  93. ^ "Notorious San Francisco: Benny Bufano". Hank Donat, misters.com. 2001. Retrieved November 16, 2018.
  94. ^ "Urban Art On The Map » The Owl". urbanartonthemap.com. Retrieved January 11, 2016.
  95. ^ Urban Art on the Map (2018). "Urban Art On The Map: A Project of Our Aberdeen's Art Promotion Group". urbanartonthemap.com. Retrieved March 29, 2016.
  96. ^ "JHU's sculptures see a renaissance". Baltimore Sun. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
  97. ^ "Red Owl". Philadelphia Public Art @philart.net.

Bibliography edit

  • DiGirolamo, Vincent, “Bach’s Beheading: Carmel’s Great Unsolved Art Crime,” Monterey Herald Weekend Magazine, Aug. 2, 1987, 10–13; reprinted This World Magazine, San Francisco Sunday Examiner-Chronicle, Dec. 22, 1987, 12–14.
  • Lewin, Virginia B. (1980). One of Benny's Faces: A Study of Beniamino Bufano (1886–1970), the Man Behind the Artist. Hicksville, NY: Exposition Press. ISBN 0-682-49484-4.[better source needed]
  • Rather, Lois (1975). Bufano and the USA. Oakland California: Rather Press. OCLC 1638297.
  • Wilkening, H and Sonia Brown (1972). Bufano: An Intimate Biography. Berkeley, California: Howell North Books. ISBN 0-8310-7089-7.

External links edit

  • Shopping Can Be Fun - A 1957 promotional film for Hillsdale shopping center, featuring several of Bufano's works as well as a short segment (beginning at minute 10:21) showing him at work on a large redwood owl.
  • George Rathnell, "Beniamino Bufano," Nob Hill Gazette, July 2009. A survey of Bufano's life and his sculptures in the San Francisco Bay Area
  • Photographs of Bufano's work in San Francisco
  • The Art of Bufano, a group at Flickr
  • The Mosaics of Benny Bufano February 7, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  • SFO's Peace at its current location
  • "An ode to Benny Bufano, a San Francisco sculptor who broke the mold", by Bill Van Niekerken, with photographs from San Francisco Chronicle archives

beniamino, bufano, beniamino, bene, bufano, october, 1890, august, 1970, italian, american, sculptor, best, known, large, scale, monuments, representing, peace, modernist, work, often, featured, smoothly, rounded, animals, relatively, simple, shapes, worked, c. Beniamino Bene Bufano October 15 1890 August 18 1970 was an Italian American sculptor best known for his large scale monuments representing peace and his modernist work often featured smoothly rounded animals and relatively simple shapes He worked in ceramics stone stainless steel and mosaic and sometimes combined two or more of these media and some of his works are cast stone replicas He had a variety of names used and sometimes went by the name Benvenuto Bufano because he admired Benvenuto Cellini His youthful nickname was Bene which was often anglicized into Benny He lived in Northern California for much of his career Beniamino BufanoBufano in San Francisco 1923BornBeniamino Benevento Bufano 1890 10 15 October 15 1890San Fele ItalyDiedAugust 18 1970 1970 08 18 aged 79 San Francisco California U S Resting placeHoly Cross Cemetery Colma California U S Other namesBene Bufano Benny Bufano Ben Bufano Benvenuto BufanoOccupation s Artist SculptorSpousesMarie Jones Linder Virginia Howard LewinChildren2 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Death and legacy 4 Works 4 1 Northern California and San Francisco Bay Area public spaces 4 1 1 San Francisco public spaces 4 1 2 San Francisco museums 4 2 Outside of California public spaces 5 References 5 1 Bibliography 6 External linksEarly life editBufano was born in San Fele Italy 1 He came to the United States in 1901 1 with his mother and siblings The family eventually settled down in New York when Bufano was at a young age 1 One source states that Bufano s eleven siblings also came to the U S 2 another gives the figure as sixteen 3 and Bufano was quoted as saying that he was one of fifteen children 4 The date of Bufano s birth is also uncertain The year 1890 attributed here appears on Bufano s death certificate and grave Yet his birth year is variously cited between 1886 and 1898 5 It is equally difficult to determine the accuracy of many of the stories Bufano told about his life Although a 1972 biography by Howard Wilkening and Sonia Brown is based on interviews with the artist and extensive research it is not conclusive As the artist admitted I just told each person not only what I thought he wanted to hear but I related it in the way I thought appropriate for him 6 Another biography published ten years after Bufano s death by his ex wife Virginia Howard Lewin includes many stories she would have heard from him 7 As she wrote Benny revived lying made it an art and a way of life a way to get along in a cockeyed world Yet lying is a misleading word to explain the thought processes of the little artist If he lied he was not aware of being dishonest he was nonmoral like a child 8 The only biography with footnotes is the limited edition volume by Lois Rather published in 1975 and focusing on Bufano s dealings with the federal government 9 He studied at the Art Students League of New York during 1913 1915 10 with sculptors Herbert Adams Paul Manship and James Earle Fraser and assisted them with their work 11 he also assisted Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney Mrs Harry Payne Whitney at her home studio in Roslyn New York in about 1913 12 13 The relationship ended abruptly as Bufano charged with making maquettes from Mrs Whitney s sketches consistently altered them to his own design After he ignored several requests to reproduce the sketches as they were Mrs Whitney lost patience and smashed Bufano s versions of her sculptures on the floor He resigned on the spot 14 Career editIn the fall of 1914 Paul Manship invited Bufano to work with Robert Treat Paine on a commission Manship had received for the 1915 Panama Pacific International Exposition 15 16 circular reference 17 Bufano rented a room in San Francisco s Chinatown made some friends there and became fascinated with Chinese art 18 19 He was given additional sculpture projects at the exposition panels for the Arches of Triumph and a festoon over the main door of the Palace of Fine Arts 6 After returning to New York in 1915 Bufano entered a nationwide art competition and exhibit on the theme The Immigrant in America Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney funded the contest and the exhibit was held in the Whitney Studio Club at 8 West 8th Street in Greenwich Village which Whitney established to exhibit the work of young artists The Immigrants in America Review administered the contest Frances Kellor who had been top committeewoman in former President Theodore Roosevelt s Progressive Party headed the Review 20 Roosevelt visited the exhibit of the 100 works entered in the contest which added to its prestige and the acclaim of its prize winners Bufano then a virtual unknown in the art world although known to Mrs Whitney won the first prize of 500 with a sculpture titled The Group depicting more than a dozen bowed figures headed by a child 21 22 The New York Times reported on Roosevelt s visit to the exhibit Roosevelt used the occasion to inveigh against cubist art but singled out Bennie Bufano s prize winning sculpture for praise Wonderful work he exclaimed to the Times I should like to meet the sculptor 23 Shortly after the United States entered World War I in 1917 Bufano accidentally cut off half of his right index finger He decided to mail the trigger finger to President Woodrow Wilson as a protest against the war He allowed a legend to develop that he had intentionally severed the finger for this purpose 5 24 Later in 1917 he returned to California and rented a studio in Pasadena where he sculpted portrait heads and took philosophy classes 25 But he decided San Francisco was where he most wanted to live and it became his home base for the rest of his life although he would travel extensively 26 In 1918 he met Sara Bard Field and Charles Erskine Scott Wood who became important patrons of his work They provided him with a studio commissioned sculptures and funded a trip to China for the artist to study glazes 27 Albert M Bender was another early patron who helped Bufano financially and acquired works by the artist that he donated to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art A portrait head of Bender by Bufano is also in the museum collection Bufano traveled to China in 1920 encountering the poet Witter Bynner and working on a portrait head of Bynner en route He apprenticed himself to a master potter to learn about glazes as planned but he extended his stay and traveled around the country meeting Sun Yat sen and John Dewey Although he said he spent much of the journey living in poverty he returned after about two years with a valuable collection of Chinese art 28 In 1923 he was hired to teach at the California School of Fine Arts now known as San Francisco Art Institute 29 but had too many disagreements with the administration about how art should be taught and was dismissed at the end of the semester He proceeded to open his art school the Da Vinci Art School in the Hawaiian Building on the 1915 exposition grounds but it closed within months 6 One of Bufano s students was Raymond Puccinelli 30 Around this time he created some site specific art for the country home of Wood and Field in Los Gatos California In 1925 Bufano had a solo show at the Arden Galleries in New York City he was featured in International Studio magazine and the Metropolitan Museum of Art acquired his ceramic sculpture Honeymoon Couple That year he also met Virginia Howard in San Francisco fell in love followed her when she went to Louisiana and married her in Texas They spent a few weeks in Pasadena and then embarked on a trip around the world visiting Japan China Southeast Asia and India then Italy and France By the time they arrived in France the marriage was failing and when she became pregnant he sent her home to California 7 The baby was born on August 16 1928 and Virginia named him Erskine Scott Bufano after their benefactor Charles Erskine Scott Wood 31 She learned that her husband had earlier had a common law wife named Marie Jones nee Linder and a daughter named Aloha M Jones Bufano 31 She divorced him in 1931 32 nbsp Plaques above Bufano s grave in Holy Cross Cemetery in Colma California Bufano spent close to four years in France where he bought a large block of stone and carved a statue of St Francis of Assisi 33 which he intended as a gift to the city of San Francisco 34 35 Once it was finished the Depression was underway aesthetic objections were raised by San Franciscans who saw photographs of the work and more than two decades were to pass before enough money was raised to ship it to California 36 He became a naturalized U S citizen in November 1938 9 Back in San Francisco during the 1930s he received studio space a salary and assistants through the Federal Art Project 37 38 39 40 He created several animal sculptures for the new Aquatic Park He also made drawings and models for a 156 foot tall St Francis to sit on top of a high hill 41 It was approved by the city art commission but it became an object of controversy and ridicule and was never erected He was commissioned to design a block long sculptural frieze of athletes for George Washington High School in San Francisco but then was accused of including likenesses of Joseph Stalin and Harry Bridges He denied this charge but lost the commission ostensibly because he was taking too long and kept changing the design 42 He received another federal job in 1940 head of the art division of the National Youth Administration for San Francisco 43 Bufano served on the San Francisco Art Commission from 1944 to 1948 44 A long term friendship with author and painter Henry Miller began during this time Miller would advocate on Bufano s behalf and wrote an introduction to a 1968 book on the artist 45 It was published for the Bufano Society of the Arts San Francisco with 115 color and 8 black and white illustrations In 1950 Bufano created a large mural for Moar s Cafeteria 46 47 in San Francisco however it was removed in the 1970s for BART construction As shown below examples of his distinctive and large scale work are found throughout the San Francisco Bay Area Some of his best known works are bullet shaped monuments including the first sculpture in stainless steel 48 Bufano worked in North Beach and later South of Market his rent covered by Trader Vic s owner Victor Bergeron while living at the Press Club in downtown San Francisco 49 Death and legacy editBufano continued to create art and to be seen locally as a colorful character until his death from heart disease in 1970 50 In his will he disinherited his daughter Aloha M Bufano Jones 1918 1991 and did not mention his son Erskine Scott Bufano leaving everything to an entity he and patron friends had established called the Bufano Society of the Arts 51 Erskine successfully contested the will and became the head of the society 31 Erskine died in 2010 52 53 Beniamino Bufano is buried at Holy Cross Cemetery in Colma California 54 55 Works edit nbsp Louis Pasteur statue at San Rafael High School San Rafael California 1940 Northern California and San Francisco Bay Area public spaces edit Bear Nursing Cubs outside the Oakland Museum of California 1000 Oak Street at 10th Street in Oakland California 56 Louis Pasteur 1940 57 6 foot 2 m work located in the auditorium grove of San Rafael High School 310 Nova Albion Way San Rafael California The sculpture was the original meeting spot for the individuals who created the 420 cannabis culture meme Johann Sebastian Bach 1942 The sculpture has been exhibited at the Philadelphia Museum of Art the United Nations and the Robert Mondavi Winery Photographer Johan Hagemeyer photographed it in 1943 58 59 Penguin s Prayer 60 located at 39400 Paseo Padre Parkway Fremont California Owl Penguin s Prayer and other works 61 62 Hillsdale Shopping Center 60 31st Avenue San Mateo California 63 Dollarocracy 1967 5 9 64 probably Bufano s largest extant mosaic ensemble located outside the headquarters of the ILWU the International Longshore and Warehouse Union 99 Hegenberger Road Oakland Hands of Peace 1967 65 Civic Park 1375 Civic Dr Walnut Creek California Universal Child 66 An 85 foot 30 m monument near City Hall Santa Clara California Brown Bear a white bear sculpture 67 San Jose Center for the Performing Arts San Jose California The Bear 1963 A 10 foot 3 m statue located at the Gardner Bullis Elementary School part of the Los Altos School District 25890 W Fremont Rd Los Altos Hills California 68 Elephant A 3 foot 1 m red granite sculpture located in the Hearst Art Gallery Saint Mary s College of California 1928 Saint Mary s Road Moraga California Peace or The Expanding Universe 69 70 co created with Alfonso Pardinas of Byzantine Mosaics 71 This 93 foot 28 m monument overlooks the Pacific coast at Timber Cove Lodge 21780 California State Route 1 14 miles north of Jenner California Bufano sculpture collection 72 part of the permanent art collection Robert Mondavi Winery Oakville California Bear 73 Ross Town Hall A gift of Mr and Mrs Jerome Flax 1971 31 Sir Francis Drake Blvd Ross California San Francisco public spaces edit The numbers on the map and below suggest the shortest route by which a driver or intrepid cyclist may visit all of the Bufano sculptures in public spaces of San Francisco 01 Elephant n d 3 foot 1 m bronze statue is located at the Museo ItaloAmericano 74 2 Marina Blvd Building C 02 Hand of Peace n d bronze with enamel statue also at the Museo ItaloAmericano 74 2 Marina Blvd Building C 03 Madonna begun in 1962 75 almost 14 feet 4 m high with a mosaic of young faces pink yellow and black In a film portrait which contains a lengthy segment on creating this mosaic Bufano states The figure of a child It s a composite figure of all the races 76 The monument is located in the Great Meadow Upper Fort Mason 150 yards north of 1325 Bay Street 04 Frog 1942 16 5 m high this work is located on the balcony of the Maritime Museum 900 Beach Street 05 Seal 1942 42 1 m high also located at the Maritime Museum 900 Beach Street 06 St Francis de la Varenne 1928 77 this 18 foot 5 5 m monument is located on the south east corner of Beach and Taylor Streets Fisherman s Wharf 07 The Penguin Golden Gateway Center 480 Davis Court near the south east corner of Davis and Jackson Streets The work is displayed across the street diagonally from Sydney Walton Square a sculpture park 08 Sun Yat sen 1937 Saint Mary s Square corner of Quincy and California Street This 12 foot 3 5 m statue is said to be among Bufano s most famous works 09 The Penguins entrance to the Stanford Court Hotel 78 905 California Street 10 St Francis 1970 Grace Cathedral 1100 California Street The black and bronze 5 foot 1 5 m tall sculpture was originally located at the St Francis Hotel but was moved to its current location in 1993 79 11 St Francis on Horseback 1935 80 8 feet 2 5 m tall Westside Courts Housing Project across from 2550 Sutter in the courtyard behind the basketball court 12 Bear 1930s University of California San Francisco 608 Parnassus Street 13 Bear and Cubs 1968 University of California San Francisco 530 Parnassus Street 14 Female Torso Eureka Valley Harvey Milk Memorial Branch Library 81 1 Jose Sarria Court in the front lobby 15 Rabbit Seals Fish Bear and Cubs Cat and Mouse 82 Valencia Gardens Housing 1930s 83 in the courtyard next to 33 Maxwell Court 16 The Madonna 84 San Francisco General Hospital courtyard at the north east corner of Potrero Avenue and 22nd Street 17 Saint Francis of the Guns 1968 City College of San Francisco Ocean Campus between Phelan Avenue and the front entrance to the Science Building Constructed of melted guns from a voluntary weapons amnesty program in San Francisco this work was inspired by the 1968 assassinations of Martin Luther King Jr and Robert F Kennedy On the robe of St Francis is a mosaic tile mural of four of America s assassinated leaders Abraham Lincoln Martin Luther King Jr Robert Kennedy and John F Kennedy 85 18 Granite Nude Torso male 1934 San Francisco State University courtyard between HSS and the Business Buildings 1600 Holloway Avenue 19 Head of St Francis 1938 San Francisco State University main quadrangle between the Business Building and the Student Center 1600 Holloway Avenue 20 Penguin s Prayer 1939 86 11 Lake Merced Boulevard west side of the road between Brotherhood Way and John Muir Drive 21 Peace 1939 opposite the Calvary Armenian Congregational Church 87 725 Brotherhood Way This 30 foot 9 m monument was relocated to Brotherhood Way in 1996 after nearly four decades at the San Francisco International Airport 22 Bear and Head of Peace ca 1935 1940 Sunnydale Projects Community Center 88 in Visitacion Valley San Francisco 1654 Sunnydale Avenue San Francisco museums edit Animal sculptures Randall Museum 89 199 Museum Way Female Torso and Head of George W P Hunt 90 91 de Young Museum 50 Hagiwara Tea Garden Dr Golden Gate Park Animal sculptures California Academy of Sciences sculpture garden 55 Music Concourse Dr Golden Gate Park Fourteen works 92 San Francisco Museum of Modern Art 151 3rd St St Francis of Assisi Museum of Mission San Francisco de Asis familiarly known as Mission Dolores Museum 3750 18th St Small Madonna 1968 93 private collection gifted to the Alioto family during the wedding of Angela Alioto and Adolpho Veronese in San Francisco Outside of California public spaces edit Bear and Cubs Kauikeaouli Hale district courthouse in Honolulu Hawaii The Owl Timberland Regional Library of Aberdeen Washington 94 95 Bufano Sculpture Garden at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore Maryland 96 Red Owl Temple University in Philadelphia Pennsylvania 97 References edit a b c TenEyck Gardner Albert 1965 American Sculpture A Catalogue of the Collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art New York NY Metropolitan Museum of Art pp 170 172 via Google Books Archives of American Art Beniamino Bufano papers 1930s 1970 Retrieved December 15 2018 L Italo Americano Bufano The Art of Public Art Retrieved December 15 2018 Whiting Sam San Francisco Chronicle August 10 2017 August 10 2017 A brief history of Benny Bufano Retrieved December 15 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link a b c Parkman E Breck 2007 Missiles of Peace Benny Bufano s Message to the World California History March 22 2007 Thefreelibrary com California History and California Historical Society Retrieved July 29 2013 a b c Wilkening Howard and Sonia Brown 1972 Bufano An Intimate Biography Berkeley California Howell North Books ISBN 0 8310 7089 7 a b Lewin Virginia B 1980 One of Benny s Faces A Study of Beniamino Bufano 1886 1970 the Man Behind the Artist Hicksville NY Exposition Press ISBN 0 682 49484 4 Lewin 1980 p 200 a b c Rather Lois 1975 Bufano and the USA Oakland California Rather Press OCLC 1638297 Americanization of Immigrants The Outlook New York City New York December 15 1915 p 881 ProQuest 136983757 California Art Research Archive Bancroft Library Beniamino Bufano s biography PDF Retrieved December 15 2018 Lewin 1980 pp 22 4 Wilkening and Brown 1972 pp 29 32 37 Lewin 1980 p 24 Galland Amy Lynn 2001 Immigrant in America page 127 note 25 Ann Arbor MI a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Robert Paine sculptor 2018 Retrieved November 17 2018 Van Niekerken Bill April 18 2017 An ode to Benny Bufano a San Francisco sculptor who broke the mold The San Francisco Chronicle Retrieved November 17 2018 Ackerman Phyllis February 1925 The East Meets the West In the Sculpture of Beniamino Bufano the forms of the Orient express Western ideas International Studio 80 33 pp 375 79 Retrieved November 17 2018 Wilkening and Brown 1972 pp 51 66 Berman Avis 1990 Rebels on Eighth Street Juliana Force and the Whitney Museum of American Art New York Atheneum p 118 ISBN 978 0 689 12086 2 Mrs Harry Payne Whitney and The Soul of the Immigrant The Omaha Sunday Bee Magazine includes a photograph of the work December 12 1915 Retrieved December 16 2018 East Side Sculptor Wins Exhibit Prize PDF The New York Times November 13 1915 Colonel s Big Stick Batters Cubist Art PDF The New York Times December 3 1915 p 11 Wilkening 1972 p 24 Wilkening 1972 pp 45 48 Beniamino Bufano on Public Art FoundSF www foundsf org Retrieved February 5 2024 Sara Bard Field Poet and Suffragist Regional Oral History Office Bancroft Library University of California oac cdlib org Archived from the original on December 3 2013 Retrieved July 29 2013 Wilkening and Brown 1972 pp 51 66 Beniamino Bufano on Public Art FoundSF www foundsf org Retrieved February 5 2024 Hughes Edan Milton 2002 Artists in California 1786 1940 L Z Crocker Art Museum p 901 ISBN 978 1 884038 08 2 a b c Parkman 2007 p 47 Wilkening and Brown 1972 p 120 Beniamino Bufano on Public Art FoundSF www foundsf org Retrieved February 5 2024 United States History Beniamino Benvenuto Bufano Retrieved December 15 2018 Gallery444 2018 Beniamino Bufano Retrieved November 17 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Van Niekerken 2017 Lampert Nicolas 2013 A People s Art History of the United States 250 Years of Activist Art and Artists Working in Social Justice Movements New York NY The New Press p 148 Lott Tommy L Excerpted from Black Consciousness in the Art of Sargent Johnson in Reclaiming San Francisco History Politics Culture San Francisco City Lights Books 1998 Sargent Johnson and Bufano Retrieved December 15 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link The Living New Deal Artist Beniamino Bufano Retrieved December 15 2018 Rathmell George Nob Hill Gazette July 2009 Beniamino Bufano Archived from the original on January 30 2013 Retrieved December 16 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Beniamino Bufano on Public Art FoundSF www foundsf org Retrieved February 5 2024 Poletti Therese 2008 Art Deco San Francisco The Architecture of Timothy Pflueger New York Princeton Architectural Press p 148 ISBN 978 1 56898 756 9 Retrieved March 29 2016 Rather 1975 p 72 Wilkening and Brown 1972 pp 163 182 Bufano Beniamino and Henry Miller 1968 Bufano Sculpture Mosaics Drawings Tokyo John Weatherhill Inc OCLC 316602 CBS5 and KPIX 1953 Discovery Benny Bufano San Francisco Bay Area Television Archive minute 5 09 Retrieved March 29 2016 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Beniamino Bufano mural in Moars Cafeteria Retrieved November 16 2018 CBS5 and KPIX 1953 minute 7 18 Patricia Yollin Chronicle Staff Writer November 21 2005 SAN FRANCISCO Kids have a ball with Bufano Museum re creates beloved sculptor s studio SFGate Retrieved March 29 2016 A brief history of Benny Bufano August 19 2023 Archived from the original on August 19 2023 Retrieved February 5 2024 Parkman 2007 p 58 Tributes com Erskine Scott Bufano Retrieved December 15 2018 A brief history of Benny Bufano August 19 2023 Archived from the original on August 19 2023 Retrieved February 5 2024 Parkman 2007 p 49 A brief history of Benny Bufano August 19 2023 Archived from the original on August 19 2023 Retrieved February 5 2024 OMCA Collections Bear Nursing Cubs Louis Pasteur 1940 New Deal Art Registry Retrieved November 16 2018 Richard Flower 2014 Beniamino Bufano amp The Mystry Of The Beheaded Bach Stories of Old Carmel A Centennial Tribute From The Carmel Residents Association Carmel by the Sea California Carmel Residents Association pp 166 167 Statue of Bach by Beniamino Bufano Calisphere 1943 Retrieved August 17 2023 Fremont Medical Center Kaiser Permanente 2018 Retrieved November 16 2018 Levy Joan April 16 2007 We had our own dream house in Hillsdale San Mateo Daily Journal Retrieved November 15 2018 Kelly George H 1957 Shopping Can Be Fun A New Concept in Merchandising film for a scene in which Bufano works on sculptures for the shopping center see minute 10 21 Retrieved November 15 2018 Hillsdale Shopping Center Hillsdale Shopping Center 2018 Retrieved November 16 2018 ILWU Mosaic 2018 Retrieved November 15 2018 Claycord News amp Talk 2014 Retrieved November 15 2018 Art amp Statues Universal Child 2018 Retrieved November 15 2018 Waymarking com for Smithsonian Art Inventory sculptures 2009 California Bear San Jose CA Retrieved November 15 2018 Pages from the Past Los Altos Town Crier August 26 1970 Retrieved September 3 2016 Sonoma County Tourism Timber Cove Resort Bufano s Obelisk Retrieved September 3 2016 Bufano s Obelisk Timber Cove Inn Archived from the original on June 17 2012 Retrieved July 29 2013 Weinstein Dave Painting the Town When mosaic master Alfonso Pardinas lit up the Bay Area with his colored glass and lively personality EichlerNetwork p 5 Archived from the original on April 4 2017 Retrieved March 30 2021 Kempton Rosemary April 11 2012 Robert Mondavi Winery A showcase for the arts Napa Valley Register Napa Valley Publishing Retrieved September 3 2016 Wright Hession Stephanie January 26 2021 Ross Common Ross SF Gate Retrieved April 21 2021 a b Museo Italo Americano Retrieved November 16 2018 Madonna San Francisco CA Smithsonian Art Inventory Sculptures Waymarking com Retrieved July 29 2013 CBS5 and KPIX 1953 minute 11 33 Bufano at Fisherman s Wharf artandarchitecture sf com Retrieved July 29 2013 Stanford Court Stanford Court Retrieved November 16 2018 Notorious San Francisco Benny Bufano MISTERSF 2001 Retrieved November 16 2018 Bufano at Westside Courts Art and Architecture 2012 Retrieved November 16 2018 Eurika Valley Harvey Milk Memorial San Francisco Public Library Retrieved November 16 2018 Bufano in Valencia Gardens Art and Architecture 2012 Retrieved November 16 2018 Valencia Gardens ECB Equity Community Builders 2012 Retrieved November 16 2018 Madonna by Benjamin Bufano at SF General Art and Architecture Retrieved November 27 2013 St Francis Made of Melted Guns Roadside America Retrieved September 26 2014 Penguin s Prayer Art and Architecture 2012 Retrieved November 16 2018 Calvary Armenian Congregational Church CACC 2018 Retrieved November 16 2018 Sunnydale Hope SF 2018 Retrieved November 16 2018 About the Randall Museum Randall Museum 2018 Retrieved November 16 2018 Female Torso Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco 2018 Retrieved November 16 2018 George W P Hunt Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco 2018 Retrieved November 16 2018 Beniamino Bufano San Francisco Museum of Modern Art 2018 Retrieved November 16 2018 Notorious San Francisco Benny Bufano Hank Donat misters com 2001 Retrieved November 16 2018 Urban Art On The Map The Owl urbanartonthemap com Retrieved January 11 2016 Urban Art on the Map 2018 Urban Art On The Map A Project of Our Aberdeen s Art Promotion Group urbanartonthemap com Retrieved March 29 2016 JHU s sculptures see a renaissance Baltimore Sun Retrieved January 10 2016 Red Owl Philadelphia Public Art philart net Bibliography edit DiGirolamo Vincent Bach s Beheading Carmel s Great Unsolved Art Crime Monterey Herald Weekend Magazine Aug 2 1987 10 13 reprinted This World Magazine San Francisco Sunday Examiner Chronicle Dec 22 1987 12 14 Lewin Virginia B 1980 One of Benny s Faces A Study of Beniamino Bufano 1886 1970 the Man Behind the Artist Hicksville NY Exposition Press ISBN 0 682 49484 4 better source needed Rather Lois 1975 Bufano and the USA Oakland California Rather Press OCLC 1638297 Wilkening H and Sonia Brown 1972 Bufano An Intimate Biography Berkeley California Howell North Books ISBN 0 8310 7089 7 External links edit nbsp Arts portal nbsp Biography portal nbsp Italy portal nbsp Japan portal nbsp New York City portal nbsp San Francisco Bay Area portal nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Benny Bufano UC Berkeley Living New Deal Bufano page Shopping Can Be Fun A 1957 promotional film for Hillsdale shopping center featuring several of Bufano s works as well as a short segment beginning at minute 10 21 showing him at work on a large redwood owl George Rathnell Beniamino Bufano Nob Hill Gazette July 2009 A survey of Bufano s life and his sculptures in the San Francisco Bay Area Photographs of Bufano s work in San Francisco The Art of Bufano a group at Flickr The Mosaics of Benny Bufano Archived February 7 2012 at the Wayback Machine SFO s Peace at its current location An ode to Benny Bufano a San Francisco sculptor who broke the mold by Bill Van Niekerken with photographs from San Francisco Chronicle archives Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Beniamino Bufano amp oldid 1219946955, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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