Another Costantino Proietto Painting of the Amalfi Coast is Revealed.
We recently discovered that the signature on our oil painting of the Amalfi Coast
 is “C.Proietto”. Since then, I have been on a quest to find out more 
about, “The Man from Amalfi”, Signore Costantino Proietto (1910 - 1979). 
Soon after posting my original article
 on that subject, Ms. Marion Grayson of Belton, Texas sent me an image 
of her own C.Proietto. It is yet another Amalfi Coast masterpiece. 
 Although
 foreground objects differ, and the field of view varies, each painting 
was of the same place, by the same artist. On the terrace of the hotel 
from which he often painted, only the potted plants had changed. Even 
before seeing his signature, my heart leapt. Here was yet another window
 in time, created by the master in residence, Costantino Proietto.
Although
 foreground objects differ, and the field of view varies, each painting 
was of the same place, by the same artist. On the terrace of the hotel 
from which he often painted, only the potted plants had changed. Even 
before seeing his signature, my heart leapt. Here was yet another window
 in time, created by the master in residence, Costantino Proietto.Soon after we published images of the Grayson C.Proietto painting,
 Mr. Darold Bennett of Las Vegas, Nevada emailed three images of his own
 C.Proietto. Displayed by his in-laws in their home of sixty years, the 
family treasure hangs now in Bennett’s home. Remarkably, the Bennett 
CProietto depicts the same Amalfi Coast location as the previous two. As
 usual, the artist depicts the Amalfi Coast, with a view to the sea. Of 
his own Costantino Proietto painting, Darold wrote, “I had a hard time 
trying figuring out the name too, but it finally came to me that it is 
‘C.Proietto’, not ‘C.Preietto’. My in-laws had this painting about 60 
years. Are [C.Proietto’s] paintings worth anything?”
In most cases, C.Proietto provenance is hard find. 
Current owners often know who first owned the painting, yet few details 
of purchase remain. Although an artist of note could counterfeit his 
works, recent auctions value an original C.Proietto at or below $1000. 
 Short of forensic analysis, C.Proietto’s unique signature is the best test of authenticity. I cannot imagine anyone copying that multifaceted signature
 and making it look right. In an effort to strengthen their provenance, 
some later C.Proietto paintings had wax seals and other documentation 
attached. 
At least one letter in each of the artist’s 
signatures will be enigmatic, if not indiscernible. Over time, each 
owner of a C.Proietto painting shall decipher the signature code, 
conduct a Google search and find that he or she is among friends. If 
each who discovers their own C.Proietto masterpiece provides us with 
information on their painting, I shall publish it here.
On what date Costantino Proietto lifted his final 
canvas from its easel and sold it to a tourist for a few hundred 
dollars, we do not know. All we know is that sometime in the second half
 of the twentieth century, C.Proietto painted his final masterpiece. 
Each unrecognized painting waits for its owner to decipher to its 
signature. Like the mask of an ancient Pharaoh looking back at us 
through time, each locked Costantino Proietto signature awaits its key. 
In fact, human consciousness is the key to All that Is.
By James McGillis at 07:12 PM | Fine Art | Comments (4) | Link

 
 
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