 
Two Scenes of Venice by Mid 20th Century Master Costantino Proietto
Recently, Ms. Jennifer Malloy sent me two images of her family’s  Costantino  Proietto original oil painting. With help from Google Maps and  Google Images, I  have determined that the main subject of the painting is the  Basilica di Santa Maria della  Salute, in Venice, Italy. The view of the basilica is from across Tronchetto -  Lido di Venezia.
 In the foreground, a gondolier plies a covered craft across the  
ripples of the lagoon. In the middle ground, sailboats hover in the 
dying  light. Some distance behind the sailboats is the grand basilica, 
bathed in  reflected pink light.
 According
 to Ms. Malloy, “From 1964 - 1966, my father worked for the  Department 
 of National Defence for Canada. During that time, he was stationed at  
Fort  Chambly, Germany. After returning from an Italian holiday, my 
father  attended a base exhibition, where he fall in love with the 
C.Proietto Venice scene. Ever since, it has hung  in my parents’ living 
room, in a small town in Ontario, Canada. The painting’s  dimensions are
 32” X 24” (81-cm. X 61-cm). I hope this little bit of info helps  and I
 look forward to reading more about the artist.”
According
 to Ms. Malloy, “From 1964 - 1966, my father worked for the  Department 
 of National Defence for Canada. During that time, he was stationed at  
Fort  Chambly, Germany. After returning from an Italian holiday, my 
father  attended a base exhibition, where he fall in love with the 
C.Proietto Venice scene. Ever since, it has hung  in my parents’ living 
room, in a small town in Ontario, Canada. The painting’s  dimensions are
 32” X 24” (81-cm. X 61-cm). I hope this little bit of info helps  and I
 look forward to reading more about the artist.”
Originally, both Jennifer Malloy’s father and I believed that his painting was  of  St. Mark’s Basilica in Venice. However, using aerial views from Google Maps,  I could not reconcile the painted image with  photos of St. Mark’s Basilica.
 As  viewed from across the water, the domes in the painting did not 
match those of  St. Mark’s. Unless hidden behind the painting's 
sailboats, the  skyline-dominating Campanile was missing. 
 Broadening my photo search of Venice, I soon found a match with the  Basilica di  Santa Maria della Salute. For an aerial view of the basilica, click this link. As viewed from the Chiesa del  Redentore,
 across the  “trunk” to the southwest, Santa Maria della Salute matches 
well with this  C.Proietto painting. Even the lighthouse, to the right 
in this painting, is in  proper perspective. With such conclusive 
photographic evidence, I believe that  this painting features Santa 
Maria della Salute.
Broadening my photo search of Venice, I soon found a match with the  Basilica di  Santa Maria della Salute. For an aerial view of the basilica, click this link. As viewed from the Chiesa del  Redentore,
 across the  “trunk” to the southwest, Santa Maria della Salute matches 
well with this  C.Proietto painting. Even the lighthouse, to the right 
in this painting, is in  proper perspective. With such conclusive 
photographic evidence, I believe that  this painting features Santa 
Maria della Salute. 
According to artist’s cousin,  Nunzio LoCastro, pastel paintings by  Costantino  Proietto
 are rare. In the artist’s early days in Germany, during World War II,  
brightly colored oil paints were rare. After the war, when new paint  
formulas became available, the artist’s paintings included lighter and  
brighter colors.
Together,
 St. Mark’s Basilica, its plaza and bell tower make up the iconic scene 
 of Venice, Italy. Even so,  Claude Monet selected Basilica di Santa 
Maria della  Salute for a series of early-twentieth-century paintings. 
The  Monet series  depicts the basilica as viewed from across the Grand 
Canal, looking south. Since  Tino Proietto painted from his own 
photographs, we can imagine him on the water  at sundown, taking 
pictures of the basilica with his  vintage Leica camera.
 To some, C.Proietto's  Venice scene may seem fantastic and surreal. I 
believe that it is an accurate  impression of what the artist saw and 
photographed one evening in Venice.
After
 researching and writing this article on the Malloy Family C.Proietto 
painting, I went back to my photographic archives and made a worthwhile 
discovery. There, among many other paintings in the LoCastro collection,
 I discovered another C.Proietto painting of Venice. The final painting 
on this page is a Costantino Proietto painting of St. Mark’s Basilica, 
the plaza and Campanile. In contrast to the pastel sunset at Basilica di
 Santa Maria della Salute, the St. Mark’s painting shows a rising sun.
Undoubtedly, the Malloy Family C.Proietto is another of Tino Proietto’s 
 masterworks. With notable humility, Costantino Proietto’s 1960 era 
business card represents him as a “Kunstmaler”. Translated from German 
to English,  the word means “production painter”. Over his five decade 
career, Tino Proietto’s  output  was indeed prodigious. Despite the 
large number of C.Proietto paintings
  in existence, I expect the international art community to recognize 
him  as the grand master of “spaddle work” and a great 
mid-twentieth-century artist.
By James McGillis at 03:08 PM | Fine Art | Comments (0) | Link
