Antonino Gandolfo
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Antonino Gandolfo (28 October 1841– 21 March 1910) was an
Italian painter Following is a list of Italian painters (in alphabetical order) who are notable for their art. A *Niccolò dell'Abbate (1509/12–1571) *Giuseppe Abbati (1836–1868) *Angiolo Achini (1850–1930) *Pietro Adami (c. 1730) *Livio Agresti (1508 ...
.


Biography


Early years

Antonino Gandolfo was born in
Catania Catania (, , Sicilian and ) is the second largest municipality in Sicily, after Palermo. Despite its reputation as the second city of the island, Catania is the largest Sicilian conurbation, among the largest in Italy, as evidenced also by ...
on 28 October 1841. He was
Giovanni Verga Giovanni Carmelo Verga di Fontanabianca (; 2 September 1840 – 27 January 1922) was an Italian realist ('' verista'') writer, best known for his depictions of life in his native Sicily, especially the short story and later play ''Cavalleria ...
’s cousin and would become a friend of
Mario Rapisardi Mario Rapisardi (25 February 1844, in Catania – 4 January 1912, in Catania) was an Italian poet, supporter of Risorgimento and member of the Scapigliatura (definition but refused). Life As a boy, he was taught "grammar, rhetoric and the Latin la ...
,
Luigi Capuana Luigi Capuana (May 28, 1839 – November 29, 1915) was an Italian author and journalist and one of the most important members of the ''verist'' movement (see also ''verismo'' (literature)). He was a contemporary of Giovanni Verga, both having ...
and
Federico De Roberto Federico De Roberto (16 January 1861 – 26 July 1927) was an Italian writer, who became well known for his historical novel (1894), translated as ''The Viceroys''. Biography De Roberto was born in Naples and began his writing career as a jou ...
. Together with the engraver
Francesco Di Bartolo Francesco Di Bartolo (Catania, Sicily, 1826 – 1913) was an Italian engraver and painter. He resided in Catania for most of his adult life, and became Director of the Civic Museum in his native city. He was honorary professor at the Insti ...
and the painters
Natale Attanasio Natale Attanasio (1845 – 1923) was an Italian painter. He painted diverse subjects from period pieces, Oriental fantasies, altarpieces, portraits, and genre works, and worked both in fresco and oil. Biography In 1874, Attanasio won a stipend fr ...
, Calcedonio Reina and
Giuseppe Sciuti Giuseppe Sciuti (Zafferana Etnea, Sicily, 26 February 1834 - Rome, 13 March 1911) was an Italian painter. Biography His father, a pharmacist, insisted his son follow his trade. But he relented and allowed Giuseppe to study locally at age 15, and ...
, he would contribute to the development of art in Catania in the second half of 19th century. The young Antonino came from a family that already had some prominent personalities. His uncle Giuseppe Gandolfo, in the first half of the century, was the most important portrait painter of Eastern Sicily and served to inspire new artists. Another uncle, Francesco, had studied medicine in Florence and Paris and was a friend of the historian Carlo Giuseppe Guglielmo Botta and the dramatist
Giovanni Battista Niccolini Giovanni Battista Niccolini (29 October 1782 – 20 September 1861) was an Italian poet and playwright of the Italian unification movement or Risorgimento. Life In 1782, Niccolini was born in Bagni San Giuliano to a family of limited means. He ...
. His cousin
Antonino Gandolfo Brancaleone Antonino Gandolfo Brancaleone (24 April 1820, in Catania – 6 June 1888, in Catania) was an Italian composer. His masterpiece was '' Il Sultano'' (1851). Biography He began his studies in Palermo with Pietro Raimondi. Afterward Antonino moved ...
was a well known and esteemed composer in the
Kingdom of the Two Sicilies The Kingdom of the Two Sicilies ( it, Regno delle Due Sicilie) was a kingdom in Southern Italy from 1816 to 1860. The kingdom was the largest sovereign state by population and size in Italy before Italian unification, comprising Sicily and a ...
, and was the author of several successful music dramas. Antonino spent his childhood among the olive trees and prickly pears of his father’s countryside and the paintbrushes of his uncle Giuseppe who influenced his artistic nature and who was his first teacher.


In Florence (1860-61)

In 1855, when Antonino was only 14 years old, his uncle died, but that early artistic relationship had made him fall so much in love with painting that Antonino decided to continue his studies in Florence, which was overflowing with ancient and modern arts and was also where his uncle had educated himself. He went there in 1860, at the age of 19. In Florence, there was not only painting but also literature and here Antonino got to know and struck up a friendship with
Giosuè Carducci Giosuè Alessandro Giuseppe Carducci (; 27 July 1835 – 16 February 1907) was an Italian poet, writer, literary critic and teacher. He was very noticeably influential, and was regarded as the official national poet of modern Italy. In 1906, h ...
. In Florence, he attended mainly the studio of
Stefano Ussi Stefano Ussi (3 September 1822 - 1901) was an Italian painter, known first for his history paintings, and later for depicting Orientalist, mostly Arabian and Moroccan subjects. Biography He was born in Florence and studied there at the Academy o ...
, creator of the famous painting ''The Expulsion of the Duke of Athens'', whose paintings were still connected to the
academism Academic art, or academicism or academism, is a style of painting and sculpture produced under the influence of European academies of art. Specifically, academic art is the art and artists influenced by the standards of the French Académie d ...
of that period and had not been by the new artistic movement of that time: the
Macchiaioli The Macchiaioli () were a group of Italian painters active in Tuscany in the second half of the nineteenth century. They strayed from antiquated conventions taught by the Italian art academies, and did much of their painting outdoors in order to ...
. However, in 1861, the young Antonino participated in an exhibition where "The Thirteen" protested against the strictures of the academic rules. Also in 1861, Gandolfo did a painting, now lost, titled the ''Triumph of Italy'' that was inspired by country's recent independence. It resulted in his discovery as an artist. The picture was seen and appreciated by King
Vittorio Emanuele II Victor Emmanuel II ( it, Vittorio Emanuele II; full name: ''Vittorio Emanuele Maria Alberto Eugenio Ferdinando Tommaso di House of Savoy, Savoia''; 14 March 1820 – 9 January 1878) was Kingdom of Sardinia, King of Sardinia from 1849 until 17 Marc ...
who, impressed with the talent of the young artist, wanted to pose for him, receiving a portrait painted extemporaneously in pen and ink. The king also offered him a government pension that Gandolfo refused. Giosuè Carducci also noticed the artistic qualities of Gandolfo and became an important friend. Thus, at the end of 1861 when the young artist returned to Catania, Carducci wrote to him: “If you go in the new season to Florence for studies and you remain there, I will easily have the pleasure to see you again next summer: a pleasure that I eagerly hasten with my thought. Meanwhile, remember me, and if I can help you with something, please do take advantage ".


Return to Catania

Towards the end of the 1860s Antonino fell in love with Giovanna (Vannina) Mangione, a poetry enthusiast. The engagement was stormy due to his almost morbid attachment to Vannina. On the first of July 1870, Antonino married her but the marriage did not last. The year after, their first son Luigi was born. By tradition he was given the name of his grandfather on his father's side. The child rendered the marriage more problematic, because Vannina was showing the same sort of attachment towards the child that Antonino showed towards her. Obviously unstable, she committed suicide by swallowing sulphuric acid, after a quarrel with her husband, in January 1874. Luigi died the year after, age four, from
diphtheria Diphtheria is an infection caused by the bacterium '' Corynebacterium diphtheriae''. Most infections are asymptomatic or have a mild clinical course, but in some outbreaks more than 10% of those diagnosed with the disease may die. Signs and s ...
. It isn't known if Gandolfo painted in the period between the death of his wife and 1879–80. The first painting after this period which has survived is ''Temptation'' (La tentazione), a large canvas depicting a poor woman who is forced to accept the money offered to her by a young man for nefarious purposes; below, on the right-hand side, her mother watches impassively, with resignation. The three figures are clearly recognizable: Maria Grancagnolo, who would become Antonino's second wife, her brother, Salvatore and Anna Consoli, their mother. ''Temptation'' marks the beginning of Gandolfo's works of “Social Realism”; a series that he would continue into the 1890s. (Maria, together with her elder sister, Agata, came to live in his house at Rocca del Vento street 22 in Catania around 1874–75, originally to care for Gandolfo's little son and do the housework. Maria immediately started to appear on the canvases of the artist as his principle female model and would subsequently be the subject of many portraits and sketches). This style of painting was certainly not originated by Gandolfo, as romantic and realist painters like
Corot CoRoT (French: ; English: Convection, Rotation and planetary Transits) was a space telescope mission which operated from 2006 to 2013. The mission's two objectives were to search for extrasolar planets with short orbital periods, particularly th ...
and
Courbet Jean Désiré Gustave Courbet ( , , ; 10 June 1819 – 31 December 1877) was a French painter who led the Realism movement in 19th-century French painting. Committed to painting only what he could see, he rejected academic convention and t ...
, also had an eye for painting humble workers and peasants. Gandolfo was also influenced by the novels of
Victor Hugo Victor-Marie Hugo (; 26 February 1802 – 22 May 1885) was a French Romantic writer and politician. During a literary career that spanned more than sixty years, he wrote in a variety of genres and forms. He is considered to be one of the great ...
and
Eugène Sue Marie-Joseph "Eugène" Sue (; 26 January 18043 August 1857) was a French novelist. He was one of several authors who popularized the genre of the serial novel in France with his very popular and widely imitated ''The Mysteries of Paris'', which ...
. It is very possible that the new Verist literature, using local themes, events of common life and stories of the everyday misery of the most humble classes, had offered to the painter new unexplored themes. Thus, while Gandolfo (between 1880 and 1885) was painting ''The expelled woman'' (L’Espulsa), ''The last coin'' (L’Ultima moneta), ''The woman usurer'' (L’Usuraia), ''Forced Music'' (Musica Forzata), ''Proletarians'' (I proletari), ''On the way'' (Per Via) and ''The blind woman'' (La cieca), the literary world produced Rapisardi's ''Job'' (Giobbe), Verga's ''The House by the Medlar Tree'' (I Malavoglia) and Capuana's ''Giacinta''. His friendship with Rapisardi was rich in meetings and conversations, that took place in the house of the latter, at Etnea street, where literature and artistic projects were discussed, as well as many other topics. Early in the 1880s, Verga started an affair with Rapisardi's wife, Giselda Fojanesi. Gandolfo, on that occasion, was very critical towards the “cousin Giovanni” – as Verga was referred to in Gandolfo's family – preferring not to meet him, even when he came looking for him at home. In March 1886 he gave his friend Rapisardi a canvas entitled ''The crying girl'' (La ragazza piangente), that the poet liked very much and thus thanked him: :“To the work that you, with completely royal generosity, wanted to give me as a gift, I have assigned the place of honor in the small living room and on the easel that you know. You can not imagine how happy I am. It is really a masterpiece, both for the delicate and passionate figure and for the strange and powerful originality of the painting. One of these days I will come to thank you personally. Meanwhile, you should know that my gratitude is equal to my admiration.” In 1888 his second son, also named Luigi, was born. He and Maria married in 1891 and their marriage was long-lasting and happy.


Portraits

Gandolfo became a prolific portraitist. Among his subjects were the painter Filippo Liardo, to whom he would dedicate various portraits, Rapisardi, and professors such as Giuseppe Zurria and Salvatore Tomaselli, but also the poor, the peasants, and the natural beauties of the local villages. In those years the friendship between the painter and his literary friends intensified: often Antonino would get them together in his country house in
Cannizzaro Stanislao Cannizzaro ( , also , ; 13 July 1826 – 10 May 1910) was an Italian chemist. He is famous for the Cannizzaro reaction and for his influential role in the atomic-weight deliberations of the Karlsruhe Congress in 1860. Biography ...
, where he possessed a large piece of land inherited from his father. His distinguished guests came by the train that left at 10 a.m. from nearby Catania and would arrive in time to have lunch together. We know for certain that
Nino Martoglio Nino Martoglio (Belpasso, Paternò, 3 December 1870 — Catania, 15 September 1921) was an Italy, Italian writer, publisher, journalist and producer of theatrical works. He wrote mostly in Sicilian language, Sicilian and likewise, his theatrical w ...
participated in those meetings and kept the company cheerful, to the point that the tenor
Giulio Crimi Giulio Crimi (May 10, 1885 – October 29, 1939) was an Italian operatic tenor. Biography Crimi was born in Paternò, kingdom of Italy, Italy. He studied in Catania with Adernò and made his debut in Palermo, as Manrico in ''Il trovatore'' ...
laughed so hard he popped the buttons off his collar. Regular visitors included Liardo, Rapisardi, Capuana, Verga and
Federico De Roberto Federico De Roberto (16 January 1861 – 26 July 1927) was an Italian writer, who became well known for his historical novel (1894), translated as ''The Viceroys''. Biography De Roberto was born in Naples and began his writing career as a jou ...
who, according to photographic evidence, continued to visit Gandolfo's son long after the death of the painter. In 1901, the municipality of Catania, commissioned portraits of King
Vittorio Emanuele III Victor Emmanuel III (Vittorio Emanuele Ferdinando Maria Gennaro di Savoia; 11 November 1869 – 28 December 1947) was King of Italy from 29 July 1900 until his abdication on 9 May 1946. He also reigned as Emperor of Ethiopia (1936–1941) and ...
and Queen Elena, for the amount of one thousand and four hundred liras. However, a year later, when Gandolfo delivered the paintings to Mayor Giuseppe De Felice Giuffrida, known for his anti-monarchic opinions, they were set aside. When Gandolfo asked him why, De Felice answered: “I appreciate the art of Master Gandolfo in the museum !!” In 1894, Francesco, his second son, was born. In 1902 another son, Antonino, was born. Antonino Junior was a prominent writer in Catania in the 1930s.


The Second Agricultural Exposition of Catania

In 1904, officials in Catania began preparing for a major agricultural exhibition, an important part of which was to be dedicated to art. For the occasion, an extensive excavations of lava stone began in the place where the Exposition square would later be located. The work took longer than expected and the event was postponed until 1907. Gandolfo was appointed to the Organizing Commission for the exhibition of fine arts and photography for Sicily, of which he became the Vice President. The exhibition had a great success and the critics were particularly enthusiastic towards Gandolfo. Capuana wrote:“The works of Antonino Gandolfo, from picture to portrait, from half-length portraits to drawing exercises, show the persistence of attempts, of research, the great variety of inspiration that contributed to the development of his artistic talent”; and De Roberto went even further: :“To this noble anxiety, to this painful vibration in front of the sight of poverty and pain, and to the mastery of the technique in reproducing the human form in what it has as most expressive, in the face, Gandolfo often adds another quality of his own: a style, a teaching ability, a mystery by virtue of which some of his pictorial episodes of ambiguous significance, suggestive as music, seem detached from some ancient canvases by old glorious masters”.De Roberto (1908):69 Gandolfo died suddenly of a heart ailment on 21 March 1910.


Gallery


Social Realism

Image:La tentazione quadro di antonino gandolfo.jpg, ''Temptation (La tentazione),1880'' Image:Antonino gandolfo espulsa.jpg, ''The expelled woman (L'espulsa), 1880'' Image:A gandolfo musica forzata.jpg, ''Forced music (Musica forzata), 1880'' Image:Antonino gandolfo usuraia 1880.jpg, ''The usurer woman (L'Usuraia). 1880'' Image:Antonino gandolfo il compenso.jpg, ''Remuneration (Il compenso), 1880-1883'' Image:Antonino gandolfo ultima moneta.jpg, ''The last coin (L'ultima moneta). Ca. 1880-83'' Image: Antonino gandolfo proletari bozzetto.jpg, Sketch for ''Proletarians'' (Bozzetto per ''I Proletari''). ''Ca. 1880-85'' Image:Antonino gandolfo per via.jpg, ''On the way (Per Via). Ca. 1885'' Image:Antonino gandolfo la cieca.jpg, ''The blind woman (La Cieca). Ca.1885''


Portraits

Image:Felice Bisleri.jpg, ''
Felice Bisleri Felice Bisleri (30 November 1851 – 17 September 1921) was an Italian businessman, inventor and chemist. He was born in Verolanuova near Brescia and established the Felice Bisleri & Co. chemical laboratory in Milan, developing the successful "Fe ...
'' Image:Antonino gandolfo salvatore tomaselli.jpg, ''Salvatore Tomaselli'' Image:Mario rapisardi quadro di antonino gandolfo.jpg, ''
Mario Rapisardi Mario Rapisardi (25 February 1844, in Catania – 4 January 1912, in Catania) was an Italian poet, supporter of Risorgimento and member of the Scapigliatura (definition but refused). Life As a boy, he was taught "grammar, rhetoric and the Latin la ...
'' Image:A gandolfo ritratto di bimba.jpg, ''Baby's portrait (Ritratto di bimba)'' Image:Ritratto penna e acq. verga.jpg, ''
Giovanni Verga Giovanni Carmelo Verga di Fontanabianca (; 2 September 1840 – 27 January 1922) was an Italian realist ('' verista'') writer, best known for his depictions of life in his native Sicily, especially the short story and later play ''Cavalleria ...
'' Image:Luigi capuana disegno di antonino gandolfo.jpg, ''
Luigi Capuana Luigi Capuana (May 28, 1839 – November 29, 1915) was an Italian author and journalist and one of the most important members of the ''verist'' movement (see also ''verismo'' (literature)). He was a contemporary of Giovanni Verga, both having ...
'' Image:Nino martoglio disegno di antonino gandolfo.jpg, ''
Nino Martoglio Nino Martoglio (Belpasso, Paternò, 3 December 1870 — Catania, 15 September 1921) was an Italy, Italian writer, publisher, journalist and producer of theatrical works. He wrote mostly in Sicilian language, Sicilian and likewise, his theatrical w ...
'' Image:Giuseppe Zurria, quadro di Antonino Gandolfo.jpg, ''Giuseppe Zurria


Notes


Sources

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External links


L'Arte nella Famiglia Gandolfo
{{DEFAULTSORT:Gandolfo, Antonino 1841 births 1910 deaths Artists from Catania 19th-century Italian painters Italian male painters 20th-century Italian painters Italian portrait painters Italian genre painters Painters from Sicily 19th-century Italian male artists 20th-century Italian male artists