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Italo Scanga

Italo Scanga (June 6, 1932 - July 27, 2001), an Italian-born American artist, was known for his sculptures, prints and, paintings, mostly created from found objects.

Career edit

Italo Scanga was an innovative neo-Dadaist, neo-Expressionist, and neo-Cubist multimedia artist who made sculptures of ordinary objects and created prints, glass, and ceramic works.

Scanga's materials included natural objects like branches and seashells, as well as kitsch figurines, castoff musical instruments and decorative trinkets salvaged from flea markets and thrift shops. He combined these ingredients into free-standing assemblages, which he then painted. Although visually ebullient, the results sometimes referred to gruesome episodes from Greek mythology or the lives and deaths of martyred saints.

He considered his artistic influences to be sweepingly pan-cultural, from African sculpture to Giorgio de Chirico. He often collaborated with the sculptor Dale Chihuly, who was a close friend.

Myths had always fascinated Italo Scanga. Many of his sculptures translate written or oral narratives into the realm of visual objects. Constructed of wood and glass, found objects or fabric, his ensembles reflect a trio of activities—working, eating, and praying. These activities dominate the lives of those who live close to the land, but they are also activities that are idealized by many who contemplate, romantically, a simpler, bucolic life.

Scanga—through a vocabulary of basic tools, icons, and foodstuffs, reworked in a very personal way—attempts to restore the original sense of the peasant world: the realities of hard work or religious devotion, often ameliorated by civilized sentimentality. He invokes myths to give us the essentials of such a cultural experience.

While there is no single source for Scanga's work, many of the stories, traditions, and superstitions retold in through adumbrated saints and basketed scythes are native to the folk-life of southern Italy. This culture, inhabiting the time-worn Calabrian countryside of Scanga's native land, provides the artist with his most consistent and powerful source material.

Whether religious or secular in content, Scanga's works of the past decade[clarification needed] are the artist's reflections on the immutable, universal aspects of peasant life. Some, like the series of Italian photographs, are intensely personal, while others use a more generally recognized set of images—old farm tools, wooden bowls or large plaster statues of Saint Joseph and the Madonna. They are all, however, Scanga's own reinterpretation of those universals, his personal memories and thoughts commingled and then frozen for his audience to contemplate.

Potato Famine sculptures edit

Scanga's series of works, the "Potato Famine" sculptures, are logical extensions of his earlier efforts. He begins with the familiars of saints and tools, but here they are supporting armatures not focal points. If his earlier offerings of herbs, peppers, and the like were presented in blown glass peasant ware or hung as dried provisions domesticating an exhibition space, these potato supplications are affixed directly to the accompanying icons—not unlike the devotions pinned directly to the images of saints and Madonnas as they are paraded before the faithful in street processions. Other spuds rest in huge ladles and bowls just as they are—a simple, raw food—uncooked but potentially nourishing.

Far from being an attempt at humour or funk, Scanga's choice of the white (sometimes called Irish) potato is in fact a perfect conflation of symbols for the peasant life he intends to evoke. The dusty tubers, extracted from the ground, retain much of their earthy character. Beneath their dry brown exterior is a moist, crisp flesh—a humble organic metaphor for the meager existence of the rural working class.

Employing real potatoes enables Scanga to extend such parallels even further. His spuds eventually sprout greenery and if left in place long enough return in a desiccated state to an earth-like dust. Natural cycles of birth, life, death, and rebirth, at the core of so many myths, are encapsulated here in a single, ever changing symbol.


The politics that concern Scanga here are not specific to Italy, in fact this particular source of inspiration is derived from a different peasant culture, the rural class of Ireland. Soon after his move to the West Coast in 1978, Scanga read detailed information on the infamous Irish Potato Famines of the late 1840s. As he almost always does, he began to research this sociopolitical tragedy and quickly realized the enormity of the facts and figures. Close to one million Irish dead, over a million emigrated caused by successive failures of the staple food crop the white potato. Waves of economic and social upheaval raced through the poor rural class as did epidemics of cholera, typhus, dysentery and scurvy. The population of a nation was decimated in a few decades from 7 million to well under 3 million.

Scanga's research revealed that it was not simply the blight and natural forces that caused so enormous a loss, but the presence in Ireland of a domineering political force—Great Britain. The failure of Great Britain to aid the Irish during the crucial years of 1846 through the 1850s, the almost inhuman absence of aid for a country that was almost totally dependent on the British, was the injustice that moved Scanga to create his sculptures.

Thus Scanga attempts to reinvigorate this century-old conflict and restore some of the feelings lost on us today. These events have, as have many, long ago been embroidered by myth, homogenized by history. In a very real sense, Scanga's work is anti-historical, as he tries to undo what the selectivity of history made palatable—he searches for the primal impact, the distilled significance of what really happened—not just facts and figures but sensibility.

As part icon and part offering, Scanga's newest works encompass both contemplation and action. These two polarities—thinking and doing—are part of the political process as well. These "Potato Famine" works rekindle our own abilities to be politically conscious, as they are both a reminder and a reinterpretation of universal political injustices wherever they occur.

Timeline edit

Childhood edit

1932: Born in Lago, Calabria, to Giuseppe and Serafina Ziccarelli, the youngest of four children, the others being Carolina, Mafalda and Nicolino.

1939-1945: Prepares to leave with his mother for America to meet his father and brother. American troops invade Italy on the day of departure and they are unable to leave. Spends the war years in Lago with his mother and very few resources. Works as a cabinetmaker's apprentice and studies sculpture with a man who carves statues of saints.

Immigration, Family and Education edit

1947: Emigrates to America with his mother, to Point Marion, Pennsylvania, where his father works as a laborer for the railroad.

1950: Moves to Garden City, Michigan, with his family and works at General Motors lifting transmissions on an assembly line.

1951-1953: Studies at the Society of Arts and Crafts in Detroit, MI.

1953: Due to his language barrier, graduates from Garden City High School at the age of 21 while continuing to work evenings at General Motors.

1953-1955: Serves in the US Army, stationed in Austria in an armored tank division.

1956: Marries Mary Louise Ashley, a librarian at the Garden City Public Library. Moves to East Lansing, MI where he enrolls at Michigan State University.

1956: First son, Italo Antonio Amadeo (Tony) born.

1958: Father, Giuseppe dies in Garden City, MI.

1959: Daughter, Katherine Elizabeth (Cici) born. Look Magazine commissions him to do a photographic "human story" about his mother, a widow immigrant, returning with her to Calabria (where she remains until the end of her life). Publishes a book of these photographs in 1979.

1960: Graduates from Michigan State University with a BA. Meets Richard Merkin and David Pease, fellow students who remain friends throughout his life. Studies under Lindsey Decker who introduces him to welding and sculpture after his initial interest in photography. Also studies with Charles Pollock, brother of Jackson Pollock.

1961: Receives an MA degree from Michigan State University. First teaching job at University of Wisconsin (through 1964). Meets Harvey Littleton, a fellow instructor. Lives in faculty housing.

1962: Daughter Serafina Annaliese (Sarah) born.

1963: Son Giuseppe Edward (Joe) born.

1969: Son William Frankel (Bill) born.

Teaching edit

1964: Moves to Providence, Rhode Island,I to teach at Rhode Island School of Design (RISD). Is colleagues with artists Richard Merkin and Hardu Keck. Starts a correspondence with HC Westermann. Spends summers teaching at Brown University; colleague of Hugh Townley.

1966: Moves to State College, PA, and teaches at Pennsylvania State University for one year. Meets artists Juris Ubans, Harry Anderson, Richard Frankel, and Richard Calabro, who remain friends throughout his career.

1967: David Pease helps him get a tenure track position at Tyler School of Art in Philadelphia, PA, and the family moves to Glenside, PA. Artists he works closely with include Ernest Silva, Lee Jaffe, Donald Gill, and William Schwedler. Meets graduate student Dale Chihuly while lecturing at RISD and develops a lifelong friendship.

1978: Moves to La Jolla California to teach at University of California, San Diego. Ree Morton was teaching there at the time and recommended Italo as a faculty.

Exhibitions 1970's edit

1969: One person exhibition, Baylor Art Gallery, Baylor University, Waco, TX. Buys his first home in Glenside, PA, at 2225 Menlo Avenue. Works in his basement studio, creates installations with farm implements, herbs, glass containers and saint iconography. Works very closely with students Larry Becker and Heidi Nivling (who later run a gallery in Philadelphia, PA), and Harry Anderson. Welcomes many artists into his home including Donald Judd, Dan Flavin, Bruce Nauman (a former student), Vito Acconci, Ree Morton and Rafael Ferrer.

1970: Exhibits "Saints, Glass, Tools, and Romances" at Atelier Chapman Kelly, Dallas, TX, one of his first one-person installations. Included in the sculpture annual at the Whitney Museum of American Art, NYC. Receives Howard Foundation grant from Brown University.

1971: Collaborates with Dale Chihuly and Jamie Carpenter pouring molten glass into bamboo at RISD. Exhibits the work at Museum of Art, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, NY. Teaches summer school at University of Rhode Island, Kingston, RI (through 1973) and has a show, "Christ & Pythagoras." Shows an installation at Henri Gallery, Washington, DC.

1972: Solo exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art, NYC. Installations at the Clocktower, NYC, and Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA. Teaches in Rome, Italy. for Tyler School of Art.

1973: "Saints Glass" at 112 Greene Street Gallery, NYC. Installation at the Institute of Contemporary Art at University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA. Meets Gordon Matta Clark and contributes to an artist cookbook. Goes to Pilchuck Glass School, Stanwood, WA, founded by Dale Chihuly, as a visiting artist. He continues to work there annually through 2001. Works over the years with Pilchuck artists Richard Royal, Seaver Leslie, Jamie Carpenter, Joey Kirkpatrick, Flora Mace, Robbie Miller, Billy Morris, Buster Simpson, Toots Zynsky, Howard Ben Tre, and Therman Statom. Separates from his wife Mary and leaves Glenside, PA to live in Philadelphia at 1359 71st Ave. Receives an NEA grant.

California edit

1976: Moves to La Jolla, CA to take a one-year job teaching at the University of California, San Diego as a visiting professor. Hired by David and Eleanor Antin at the suggestion of Ree Morton.

1977: Moves back to Philadelphia, PA, and returns to Tyler School of Art. Exhibits "Saints, Lamentations, Limitations" at Alessandro Gallery.

1978: Moves permanently to La Jolla to teach at UCSD with Newton and Helen Harrison, David and Eleanor Antin, Manny Farber, Patricia Patterson, and Alan Kaprow. The University supplies him with his first real studio in an old water tank on campus. Creates "Fear" series while visiting Dale Chihuly that summer in Providence, RI. Begins the first of several trips to Italy to make pilgrimages, to visit his family, and to look at art and architecture.

1987: Meets Pasquale Verdicchio, writer and professor in UCSD's Department of Literature, with whom he begins a number of collaborations: including a series on Giambattista Vico, entitled Tropes, Monsters, and Poetic Aberrations; and another on Tommaso Campanella's City of the Sun.

Exhibitions 1979-2001 edit

1979: Creates the "Potato Famine" series, his first work at UCSD. Exhibits them at the Boehm Gallery, Palomar College, San Marcos, CA and at Gallery One, San Jose State University, San Jose, CA. Meets art dealer Barry Rosen.

1980: Exhibits "Fear" and "Potato Famine" pieces at the Frank Kolbert Gallery, NYC. Receives NEA grant.

1981: Two week residency at Crown Point Press, San Francisco, CA. Long time friend Dale Chihuly calls asking what the Italian word for "spots" is, after creating a design using all the available colors in the hot shop. The Dale Chihuly "Macchia" series was named by Italo Scanga, only after Dale Chihuly's mother Viola Chihuly called the series of glass the "Uglies".

1982: Exhibits at Charles Cowles Gallery, NYC. Creates woodcuts with Chip Elwell. After 9 years of separation, he and Mary Louise Ashley divorce.

1983: Included in the Whitney Biennial, Whitney Museum of American Art, NYC. Exhibits "Archimedes Troubles: Sculptures and Drawings" at the La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art, "Italo Scanga Heads" at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and "Italo Scanga: Sculptures" as titled at the Delahunty Gallery, NYC. "Animal in Danger" and "Montecassino" series made. Working with studio assistants Ryk Williams and Dan Britton. Marries Stephanie Smedley.

1984: Constructs "Figure Holding Fire", with his son Joe, at Santa Barbara Museo, Mammola, Italy, his first public commission. Joe and he continue doing the public commissions together through the years. Included in "Primitivism in 20th Century Art" at the Museum of Modern Art, NYC. Has his first one-person show in Florida at the Bruce Helander Gallery.

1985: "Italo Scanga New Works" at Arte Contemporaneo, Mexico City, Mexico. Travels to Leggia, Switzerland and creates work for dealer Reto a Marca, with assistant Chuck Collings. Toru Nakatani begins working with him at UCSD, and continues this working relationship for the remainder of his life. Begins the "Metaphysical" series with Ryk Williams in the water tank, UCSD.

1986: His first retrospective, "Italo Scanga: Recent Sculpture and Drawings" at the Oakland Museum, Oakland, CA. Shows at John Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco, CA; the Fabric Workshop, Philadelphia, PA; and Bette Stoler, NYC.

1987: Exhibits "Troubled World" series at Amalfi Arte, Amalfi, Italy.

1988: Exhibits at Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice, Italy; Anders Tornberg Gallery, Lund, Sweden; Dorothy Goldeen Gallery, Santa Monica, CA; Larry Becker Gallery, Philadelphia, PA; and Germans Van Eck Gallery, NYC. Commission for the City of San Jose, CA, "Figure Holding the Sun." Purchases 961 Turquoise Street studio, San Diego, CA.

1989: Amalfi Arte publishes "Italo Scanga" with an essay by Michele Buonomo. Separates from Stephanie Smedley and moves into Turquoise Street studio. Receives Distinguished Alumni Award from Michigan State University.

1990: Exhibits at Betsy Rosenfield Gallery in Chicago, IL. Artist in Residence at Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, Skowhegan, ME. Builds sculptures with son, Bill. Divorces Stephanie Smedley. Starts spending a majority of his time working on paintings.

1991: Travels to Vietri Sul Mare, Italy, with son Bill, to work at Deruta ceramics factory. Meets welder David Grindle and initiates a series of metal sculptures with glass, trees, & cones, and several large welded "Trees" at Turquoise Studio.

1992: Exhibits in solo shows at the Athenaeum Music and Arts Library, La Jolla, CA, and the Susanne Hillberry Gallery, Birmingham, MI. Meets David and Leisa Austin, and becomes a featured artist at Imago Galleries, Palm Desert, CA. Meets Su-Mei Yu, a chef and restaurateur, his companion through the end of his life.

1993: Has one person shows at the Tacoma Art Museum, Tacoma, WA and the Fay Gold Gallery, Atlanta, GA.

1994: Meets Nando Randi, visiting from Ravenna for the America's Cup. Over the next years establishes friendships with many Italians visiting San Diego and living in Italy, including Chiara Fuschini, Felice Nittolo, Diego Esposito, Ubaldo Grazia, and Giuseppe Padula.

1995: Exhibition at Galleria Il Patio, Ravenna, Italy. Travels to Deruta, Italy, with son Bill, and works at Deruta ceramic factory; also in 1996, 1997, and 1999. Travels to Thailand with Su-Mei Yu. Receives Chancellor's Award, University of California, San Diego.

1996: Exhibition at Barry Rosen & Jaap van Lier Modern & Contemporary Art, NYC.

1997: Exhibitions at Bayley Art Museum, Charlottesville, VA; Bryan Ohno Gallery, Seattle, WA; and Comune di Ravenna, Ravenna, Italy. Artist-in-residence for two weeks at University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA. Makes frescoes with Megan Marlatt.

1998: Exhibits at Grossmont College Hyde Gallery, San Diego, CA and Cuesta College Art Gallery, San Luis Obispo, CA

1999: Shows at Flanders Contemporary Art, Minneapolis, MN. and The Lillian Berkley Collection, Escondido, CA. Purchases a second studio at 4130 Napier Street, San Diego, CA.

2000: Exhibition at Larry Becker Gallery, Philadelphia, PA. Begins work on an exciting new series of work, after several years of primarily painting, called the "Candlestick" series with Mike Patterson and Neal Bociek.

2001: Major commission, "Continents", at the San Diego International Airport. Ready to travel to Italy for several months for scheduled exhibitions in Lago, Calabria and Ravenna, Italy. Also working on creating a museum of his work in his hometown of Lago, Calabria and preparing for an exhibition in San Diego, at the FLUX Gallery, with John Drury and Robbie Miller (CUD). The three artists met at the Pilchuck Glass School, and the collaborative team of Drury and Miller, consider Scanga a mentor.

Death edit

Italo died of heart failure on July 27 at Turquoise Street studio at age 69.[1]

2001: He is survived by his five children; Anthony Scanga of Pennsylvania, Katherine Scanga of Rhode Island, Sarah Swanlund of Virginia, Joseph Scanga of California and William Scanga of New York; and by five grandchildren; Jonna Ashley of Colorado, Lilah Anderson of Iowa, Seaver Anderson of Rhode Island, Ella Scanga of California and Olive Scanga of New York.

References edit

  1. ^ Cotter, Holland (3 August 2001). "Italo Scanga, 69, an Artist Inspired by Found Objects". The New York Times. Retrieved November 25, 2014.

External links edit

  • Italo Scanga Foundation
  • Italo Scanga on Artnet

italo, scanga, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, . This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Italo Scanga news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this article if appropriate Editing help is available June 2019 This article relies largely or entirely on a single source Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please help improve this article by introducing citations to additional sources Find sources Italo Scanga news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Italo Scanga June 6 1932 July 27 2001 an Italian born American artist was known for his sculptures prints and paintings mostly created from found objects Contents 1 Career 1 1 Potato Famine sculptures 2 Timeline 2 1 Childhood 2 2 Immigration Family and Education 2 3 Teaching 2 4 Exhibitions 1970 s 2 5 California 2 6 Exhibitions 1979 2001 2 7 Death 3 References 4 External linksCareer editItalo Scanga was an innovative neo Dadaist neo Expressionist and neo Cubist multimedia artist who made sculptures of ordinary objects and created prints glass and ceramic works Scanga s materials included natural objects like branches and seashells as well as kitsch figurines castoff musical instruments and decorative trinkets salvaged from flea markets and thrift shops He combined these ingredients into free standing assemblages which he then painted Although visually ebullient the results sometimes referred to gruesome episodes from Greek mythology or the lives and deaths of martyred saints He considered his artistic influences to be sweepingly pan cultural from African sculpture to Giorgio de Chirico He often collaborated with the sculptor Dale Chihuly who was a close friend Myths had always fascinated Italo Scanga Many of his sculptures translate written or oral narratives into the realm of visual objects Constructed of wood and glass found objects or fabric his ensembles reflect a trio of activities working eating and praying These activities dominate the lives of those who live close to the land but they are also activities that are idealized by many who contemplate romantically a simpler bucolic life Scanga through a vocabulary of basic tools icons and foodstuffs reworked in a very personal way attempts to restore the original sense of the peasant world the realities of hard work or religious devotion often ameliorated by civilized sentimentality He invokes myths to give us the essentials of such a cultural experience While there is no single source for Scanga s work many of the stories traditions and superstitions retold in through adumbrated saints and basketed scythes are native to the folk life of southern Italy This culture inhabiting the time worn Calabrian countryside of Scanga s native land provides the artist with his most consistent and powerful source material Whether religious or secular in content Scanga s works of the past decade clarification needed are the artist s reflections on the immutable universal aspects of peasant life Some like the series of Italian photographs are intensely personal while others use a more generally recognized set of images old farm tools wooden bowls or large plaster statues of Saint Joseph and the Madonna They are all however Scanga s own reinterpretation of those universals his personal memories and thoughts commingled and then frozen for his audience to contemplate Potato Famine sculptures edit Scanga s series of works the Potato Famine sculptures are logical extensions of his earlier efforts He begins with the familiars of saints and tools but here they are supporting armatures not focal points If his earlier offerings of herbs peppers and the like were presented in blown glass peasant ware or hung as dried provisions domesticating an exhibition space these potato supplications are affixed directly to the accompanying icons not unlike the devotions pinned directly to the images of saints and Madonnas as they are paraded before the faithful in street processions Other spuds rest in huge ladles and bowls just as they are a simple raw food uncooked but potentially nourishing Far from being an attempt at humour or funk Scanga s choice of the white sometimes called Irish potato is in fact a perfect conflation of symbols for the peasant life he intends to evoke The dusty tubers extracted from the ground retain much of their earthy character Beneath their dry brown exterior is a moist crisp flesh a humble organic metaphor for the meager existence of the rural working class Employing real potatoes enables Scanga to extend such parallels even further His spuds eventually sprout greenery and if left in place long enough return in a desiccated state to an earth like dust Natural cycles of birth life death and rebirth at the core of so many myths are encapsulated here in a single ever changing symbol The politics that concern Scanga here are not specific to Italy in fact this particular source of inspiration is derived from a different peasant culture the rural class of Ireland Soon after his move to the West Coast in 1978 Scanga read detailed information on the infamous Irish Potato Famines of the late 1840s As he almost always does he began to research this sociopolitical tragedy and quickly realized the enormity of the facts and figures Close to one million Irish dead over a million emigrated caused by successive failures of the staple food crop the white potato Waves of economic and social upheaval raced through the poor rural class as did epidemics of cholera typhus dysentery and scurvy The population of a nation was decimated in a few decades from 7 million to well under 3 million Scanga s research revealed that it was not simply the blight and natural forces that caused so enormous a loss but the presence in Ireland of a domineering political force Great Britain The failure of Great Britain to aid the Irish during the crucial years of 1846 through the 1850s the almost inhuman absence of aid for a country that was almost totally dependent on the British was the injustice that moved Scanga to create his sculptures Thus Scanga attempts to reinvigorate this century old conflict and restore some of the feelings lost on us today These events have as have many long ago been embroidered by myth homogenized by history In a very real sense Scanga s work is anti historical as he tries to undo what the selectivity of history made palatable he searches for the primal impact the distilled significance of what really happened not just facts and figures but sensibility As part icon and part offering Scanga s newest works encompass both contemplation and action These two polarities thinking and doing are part of the political process as well These Potato Famine works rekindle our own abilities to be politically conscious as they are both a reminder and a reinterpretation of universal political injustices wherever they occur Timeline editChildhood edit 1932 Born in Lago Calabria to Giuseppe and Serafina Ziccarelli the youngest of four children the others being Carolina Mafalda and Nicolino 1939 1945 Prepares to leave with his mother for America to meet his father and brother American troops invade Italy on the day of departure and they are unable to leave Spends the war years in Lago with his mother and very few resources Works as a cabinetmaker s apprentice and studies sculpture with a man who carves statues of saints Immigration Family and Education edit 1947 Emigrates to America with his mother to Point Marion Pennsylvania where his father works as a laborer for the railroad 1950 Moves to Garden City Michigan with his family and works at General Motors lifting transmissions on an assembly line 1951 1953 Studies at the Society of Arts and Crafts in Detroit MI 1953 Due to his language barrier graduates from Garden City High School at the age of 21 while continuing to work evenings at General Motors 1953 1955 Serves in the US Army stationed in Austria in an armored tank division 1956 Marries Mary Louise Ashley a librarian at the Garden City Public Library Moves to East Lansing MI where he enrolls at Michigan State University 1956 First son Italo Antonio Amadeo Tony born 1958 Father Giuseppe dies in Garden City MI 1959 Daughter Katherine Elizabeth Cici born Look Magazine commissions him to do a photographic human story about his mother a widow immigrant returning with her to Calabria where she remains until the end of her life Publishes a book of these photographs in 1979 1960 Graduates from Michigan State University with a BA Meets Richard Merkin and David Pease fellow students who remain friends throughout his life Studies under Lindsey Decker who introduces him to welding and sculpture after his initial interest in photography Also studies with Charles Pollock brother of Jackson Pollock 1961 Receives an MA degree from Michigan State University First teaching job at University of Wisconsin through 1964 Meets Harvey Littleton a fellow instructor Lives in faculty housing 1962 Daughter Serafina Annaliese Sarah born 1963 Son Giuseppe Edward Joe born 1969 Son William Frankel Bill born Teaching edit 1964 Moves to Providence Rhode Island I to teach at Rhode Island School of Design RISD Is colleagues with artists Richard Merkin and Hardu Keck Starts a correspondence with HC Westermann Spends summers teaching at Brown University colleague of Hugh Townley 1966 Moves to State College PA and teaches at Pennsylvania State University for one year Meets artists Juris Ubans Harry Anderson Richard Frankel and Richard Calabro who remain friends throughout his career 1967 David Pease helps him get a tenure track position at Tyler School of Art in Philadelphia PA and the family moves to Glenside PA Artists he works closely with include Ernest Silva Lee Jaffe Donald Gill and William Schwedler Meets graduate student Dale Chihuly while lecturing at RISD and develops a lifelong friendship 1978 Moves to La Jolla California to teach at University of California San Diego Ree Morton was teaching there at the time and recommended Italo as a faculty Exhibitions 1970 s edit 1969 One person exhibition Baylor Art Gallery Baylor University Waco TX Buys his first home in Glenside PA at 2225 Menlo Avenue Works in his basement studio creates installations with farm implements herbs glass containers and saint iconography Works very closely with students Larry Becker and Heidi Nivling who later run a gallery in Philadelphia PA and Harry Anderson Welcomes many artists into his home including Donald Judd Dan Flavin Bruce Nauman a former student Vito Acconci Ree Morton and Rafael Ferrer 1970 Exhibits Saints Glass Tools and Romances at Atelier Chapman Kelly Dallas TX one of his first one person installations Included in the sculpture annual at the Whitney Museum of American Art NYC Receives Howard Foundation grant from Brown University 1971 Collaborates with Dale Chihuly and Jamie Carpenter pouring molten glass into bamboo at RISD Exhibits the work at Museum of Art Vassar College Poughkeepsie NY Teaches summer school at University of Rhode Island Kingston RI through 1973 and has a show Christ amp Pythagoras Shows an installation at Henri Gallery Washington DC 1972 Solo exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art NYC Installations at the Clocktower NYC and Virginia Commonwealth University Richmond VA Teaches in Rome Italy for Tyler School of Art 1973 Saints Glass at 112 Greene Street Gallery NYC Installation at the Institute of Contemporary Art at University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA Meets Gordon Matta Clark and contributes to an artist cookbook Goes to Pilchuck Glass School Stanwood WA founded by Dale Chihuly as a visiting artist He continues to work there annually through 2001 Works over the years with Pilchuck artists Richard Royal Seaver Leslie Jamie Carpenter Joey Kirkpatrick Flora Mace Robbie Miller Billy Morris Buster Simpson Toots Zynsky Howard Ben Tre and Therman Statom Separates from his wife Mary and leaves Glenside PA to live in Philadelphia at 1359 71st Ave Receives an NEA grant California edit 1976 Moves to La Jolla CA to take a one year job teaching at the University of California San Diego as a visiting professor Hired by David and Eleanor Antin at the suggestion of Ree Morton 1977 Moves back to Philadelphia PA and returns to Tyler School of Art Exhibits Saints Lamentations Limitations at Alessandro Gallery 1978 Moves permanently to La Jolla to teach at UCSD with Newton and Helen Harrison David and Eleanor Antin Manny Farber Patricia Patterson and Alan Kaprow The University supplies him with his first real studio in an old water tank on campus Creates Fear series while visiting Dale Chihuly that summer in Providence RI Begins the first of several trips to Italy to make pilgrimages to visit his family and to look at art and architecture 1987 Meets Pasquale Verdicchio writer and professor in UCSD s Department of Literature with whom he begins a number of collaborations including a series on Giambattista Vico entitled Tropes Monsters and Poetic Aberrations and another on Tommaso Campanella s City of the Sun Exhibitions 1979 2001 edit 1979 Creates the Potato Famine series his first work at UCSD Exhibits them at the Boehm Gallery Palomar College San Marcos CA and at Gallery One San Jose State University San Jose CA Meets art dealer Barry Rosen 1980 Exhibits Fear and Potato Famine pieces at the Frank Kolbert Gallery NYC Receives NEA grant 1981 Two week residency at Crown Point Press San Francisco CA Long time friend Dale Chihuly calls asking what the Italian word for spots is after creating a design using all the available colors in the hot shop The Dale Chihuly Macchia series was named by Italo Scanga only after Dale Chihuly s mother Viola Chihuly called the series of glass the Uglies 1982 Exhibits at Charles Cowles Gallery NYC Creates woodcuts with Chip Elwell After 9 years of separation he and Mary Louise Ashley divorce 1983 Included in the Whitney Biennial Whitney Museum of American Art NYC Exhibits Archimedes Troubles Sculptures and Drawings at the La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art Italo Scanga Heads at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and Italo Scanga Sculptures as titled at the Delahunty Gallery NYC Animal in Danger and Montecassino series made Working with studio assistants Ryk Williams and Dan Britton Marries Stephanie Smedley 1984 Constructs Figure Holding Fire with his son Joe at Santa Barbara Museo Mammola Italy his first public commission Joe and he continue doing the public commissions together through the years Included in Primitivism in 20th Century Art at the Museum of Modern Art NYC Has his first one person show in Florida at the Bruce Helander Gallery 1985 Italo Scanga New Works at Arte Contemporaneo Mexico City Mexico Travels to Leggia Switzerland and creates work for dealer Reto a Marca with assistant Chuck Collings Toru Nakatani begins working with him at UCSD and continues this working relationship for the remainder of his life Begins the Metaphysical series with Ryk Williams in the water tank UCSD 1986 His first retrospective Italo Scanga Recent Sculpture and Drawings at the Oakland Museum Oakland CA Shows at John Berggruen Gallery San Francisco CA the Fabric Workshop Philadelphia PA and Bette Stoler NYC 1987 Exhibits Troubled World series at Amalfi Arte Amalfi Italy 1988 Exhibits at Peggy Guggenheim Collection Venice Italy Anders Tornberg Gallery Lund Sweden Dorothy Goldeen Gallery Santa Monica CA Larry Becker Gallery Philadelphia PA and Germans Van Eck Gallery NYC Commission for the City of San Jose CA Figure Holding the Sun Purchases 961 Turquoise Street studio San Diego CA 1989 Amalfi Arte publishes Italo Scanga with an essay by Michele Buonomo Separates from Stephanie Smedley and moves into Turquoise Street studio Receives Distinguished Alumni Award from Michigan State University 1990 Exhibits at Betsy Rosenfield Gallery in Chicago IL Artist in Residence at Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture Skowhegan ME Builds sculptures with son Bill Divorces Stephanie Smedley Starts spending a majority of his time working on paintings 1991 Travels to Vietri Sul Mare Italy with son Bill to work at Deruta ceramics factory Meets welder David Grindle and initiates a series of metal sculptures with glass trees amp cones and several large welded Trees at Turquoise Studio 1992 Exhibits in solo shows at the Athenaeum Music and Arts Library La Jolla CA and the Susanne Hillberry Gallery Birmingham MI Meets David and Leisa Austin and becomes a featured artist at Imago Galleries Palm Desert CA Meets Su Mei Yu a chef and restaurateur his companion through the end of his life 1993 Has one person shows at the Tacoma Art Museum Tacoma WA and the Fay Gold Gallery Atlanta GA 1994 Meets Nando Randi visiting from Ravenna for the America s Cup Over the next years establishes friendships with many Italians visiting San Diego and living in Italy including Chiara Fuschini Felice Nittolo Diego Esposito Ubaldo Grazia and Giuseppe Padula 1995 Exhibition at Galleria Il Patio Ravenna Italy Travels to Deruta Italy with son Bill and works at Deruta ceramic factory also in 1996 1997 and 1999 Travels to Thailand with Su Mei Yu Receives Chancellor s Award University of California San Diego 1996 Exhibition at Barry Rosen amp Jaap van Lier Modern amp Contemporary Art NYC 1997 Exhibitions at Bayley Art Museum Charlottesville VA Bryan Ohno Gallery Seattle WA and Comune di Ravenna Ravenna Italy Artist in residence for two weeks at University of Virginia Charlottesville VA Makes frescoes with Megan Marlatt 1998 Exhibits at Grossmont College Hyde Gallery San Diego CA and Cuesta College Art Gallery San Luis Obispo CA1999 Shows at Flanders Contemporary Art Minneapolis MN and The Lillian Berkley Collection Escondido CA Purchases a second studio at 4130 Napier Street San Diego CA 2000 Exhibition at Larry Becker Gallery Philadelphia PA Begins work on an exciting new series of work after several years of primarily painting called the Candlestick series with Mike Patterson and Neal Bociek 2001 Major commission Continents at the San Diego International Airport Ready to travel to Italy for several months for scheduled exhibitions in Lago Calabria and Ravenna Italy Also working on creating a museum of his work in his hometown of Lago Calabria and preparing for an exhibition in San Diego at the FLUX Gallery with John Drury and Robbie Miller CUD The three artists met at the Pilchuck Glass School and the collaborative team of Drury and Miller consider Scanga a mentor Death edit Italo died of heart failure on July 27 at Turquoise Street studio at age 69 1 2001 He is survived by his five children Anthony Scanga of Pennsylvania Katherine Scanga of Rhode Island Sarah Swanlund of Virginia Joseph Scanga of California and William Scanga of New York and by five grandchildren Jonna Ashley of Colorado Lilah Anderson of Iowa Seaver Anderson of Rhode Island Ella Scanga of California and Olive Scanga of New York References edit Cotter Holland 3 August 2001 Italo Scanga 69 an Artist Inspired by Found Objects The New York Times Retrieved November 25 2014 External links editItalo Scanga Foundation Italo Scanga on Artnet Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Italo Scanga amp oldid 1140999792, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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