An Energy Bridge to the 1930's Opens at Gandria Village, Lake Lugano, Switzerland
Accompanying a recent email from Julia and Lowel Wise of Huntsville, Alabama were images of their Costantino Proietto original oil painting. While stationed as a service member in Stuttgart, Germany during the 1950’s, Lowel’s parents had purchased the painting. Lowel went on to write, “I was excited to see this on the Internet. We had searched back in 2006, but could not locate the artist by name”.
We live in Huntsville, Alabama. The Space & Rocket Center
are located here, along with NASA, at the government military
installation Redstone Arsenal. It is there where my father was last
stationed, and then retired here.
The painting has traveled to many locations with us; from Germany where
it's acquisition took place to Ft. Polk, Louisiana (my birth place) and
back to Germany, and then back to Ft. Rucker, Alabama, and then to Ft.
Wainwright, Alaska for five years, and finally here to Huntsville,
Alabama. The painting was purchased on my father’s first tour to
Germany, before I was born in 1956 and my older sister’s birth in 1955.
She was born in Stuttgart, Germany where my father served two tours in
the Army. My father (David J. Wise) served
in the Korean War and then the Vietnam Conflict/War where he was an
Explosive Ordinance Disposal instructor. After returning from Vietnam
at the end of 1972, he retired. My father and mother (Gwinda A. Wise)
are deceased. We acquired the painting after my mother’s departure in
2001, and my father’s passing was in 1988.
Since I was a child, the painting has been of particular interest to me.
Sometimes, I would sit and stare at it and then wonder… What it would
have been like to live in that location and what life would have been
like there… Just a simple way of dreaming as any child would do. My
father and mother would tell all four of their siblings how they
struggled to save and buy one of C. Proietto's paintings while he was
on his first tour to Germany. Again THANKS for the information.
In 2006, little if any information about the artist Costantino Proietto (1910–1979) existed on the internet. Not until 2011, when I began writing a series of eleven articles and founded a website about the artist did C.Proietto become widely known. I also met Mr. Nunzio LoCastro,
first cousin to the artist, now living in New Jersey. With Nunzio’s
help, I compiled an accurate biography of the artist, now published on AskART.com.
Since then, several owners
of C. Proietto original oil paintings have sent images to me. Via
internet searches, I discovered other examples of the artist’s work for
sale in Europe and the United States. Since the Wise family C.Proietto
represents the fourth known painting of the same village, I am now
publishing images of all four paintings.
In July 2012, I purchased a Costantino Proietto painting identified only as “Villa di Lago”.
Although my new painting bore strong resemblance to two C.Proietto
paintings of “Lago di Lugano Gandria”, which I had found on the
internet, I could not be sure. The artist’s Italian and Swiss lake
scenes often contain ancient villas, snowcapped mountains and villages
on far shores.
Using the Wise family C.Proietto painting as a guide, I can confirm that both their and my paintings are of Gandria Village, Lake Lugano, Switzerland.
By comparing landscape and architectural details with those from the
internet images, we now have four confirmed C.Proietto paintings of
Gandria Village.
The Wise Family C.Proietto displays the 4:3 width-to-height ratios (27" X
18.75") typical of the artist’s early works. Yet, both it and one
later example of the artist’s work depict the same stairs and doorway on
the right side of the image. Other old photos show letters above that
archway reading, “Ristorante
Crivelli, Lago di Lugano-Gandria, Switzerland, 19”. The later
C.Proietto painting, probably from the 1960’s, displays a wide-angle
format, similar to a Cinemascope movie screen. Even so, because of a
near-identical point of view, both paintings likely used the same
1930’s photo as their model.
From Nunzio LoCastro we know that the artist painted in his Stuttgart
studio, using photographic prints to model his scenes. During the late
1930’s, the artist traveled extensively in northern Italy and
Switzerland. During World War II, Costantino Proietto emigrated to his
future lifelong home in Stuttgart, Germany. Using his German-made Leica
camera, Costantino Proietto documented a soon to be bygone era. Having
seen and photographed the major peaks and lakes of Italy and
Switzerland, Tino Proietto was later able to depict with accuracy a
simpler, more tranquil time and place. Although the simplicity of the
artist’s work appears fanciful to some, I have yet to see evidence that
Tino Proietto painted from anything other than real life, or his own
photography.
With
its lack of markings on the back, the Wise Family “Lugano Gandria”
painting (top) is clearly the oldest of the four paintings pictured
here, probably dating to the early 1950’s. In the late 1950’s, the
artist affixed paper tags to the backs of his paintings. By then, he
would often write the subject matter on the frame, in pencil. Later
still, he affixed wax seals to the tags, indicating their authenticity.
By the late 1960’s, the artist also wrote descriptive captions on the
frames, often using a red felt-tipped pen.
With the publication of each new painting, we expand the body of work
attributed to twentieth century master impressionist, Costantino
Proietto. To keep this expansion going, I invite owners of Costantino
Proietto original oil paintings to forward images (front, back,
signature and details) to me via email. Please identify purchase
location, past and current ownership, plus any details that might help
to tell the story. Over time, I will be happy to authenticate and
publish images of any newly found C.Proietto impasto oil painting.
By James McGillis at 12:46 PM | Fine Art | Comments (1) | Link