Sailing Away to Paint the Sea:
An Art Exhibition
by Vittoria Chierici
part
of the
Library Lecture Series
Navigate Your Course @Your Library
Exhibit
will be on display in the Library through November 4th
“Who in the rainbow can
draw the line where the violet tint ends
and the orange tint
begins?” –
Herman Melville
During her journey aboard the Polish tramp steamer, Isolda, Italian artist Vittoria
Chierici captured the movement and rage of the sea creating over 40 small
paintings. Ms. Chierici was inspired by the sometimes rough waters of the
British Channel, Atlantic Ocean, and the St. Lawrence River. On sunny
days during the crossing she attempted to imitate the colors of the sea,
capturing the many hues of cobalt blue that the sea possesses while seated at a
small fixed table at the stern thought of by the artist as, “il tavolo del
pirata.” It was these attempts at simultaneous imitation and expression
of feeling that were the main concept developed in Ms. Chierici’s New York
studio upon her return from sea.
About the Artist: Vittoria Chierici is a world renowned
international painter and filmmaker from Bologna, Italy. She currently works in
New York where she has a studio. In the late ‘90s, Chierici began to work
on a new mixed media project on the historical subject of The Battle of
Anghiari, based on a lost mural by Leonardo Da Vinci. A large painting of
the same subject, “Anghiari Verde”, is also permanently exhibited at New York
University’s Humanities Initiative. Paintings and video installations by
Vittoria Chierici have been shown in galleries and museums in Italy and abroad. She is represented by the art gallery Lucie
Fontaine, Milano. Further information about the artist can be found at www.vittoria-chierici.com and http://sailingawaytopaintthesea.wordpress.com.
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