Eduardo Paolozzi
Sir Eduardo Paolozzi | |
---|---|
Born | 7 March 1924 |
Died | 22 April 2005 London, England | (aged 81)
Education | Edinburgh College of Art, University of Edinburgh Slade School of Fine Art, UCL |
Known for | Sculpture, art |
Movement | Pop art |
Sir Eduardo Luigi Paolozzi CBE RA (/paʊˈlɒtsi/,[1][2] Italian: [paoˈlɔttsi]; 7 March 1924 – 22 April 2005) was a Scottish artist, known for his sculpture and graphic works. He is widely considered to be one of the pioneers of pop art.
Early years
[edit]Eduardo Paolozzi was born on 7 March 1924, in Leith in north Edinburgh, Scotland, and was the eldest son of Italian immigrants.[3] His family was from Viticuso, in the Lazio region. Paolozzi's parents, Rodolfo and Carmela, ran an ice cream shop. Paolozzi used to spend all his summers at his grandparents place in Monte Cassino and grew up bilingual.[4] In June 1940, when Italy declared war on the United Kingdom, Paolozzi was interned (along with most other Italian men in Britain). During his three-month internment at Saughton prison his father, grandfather and uncle, who had also been detained, were among the 446 Italians who drowned when the ship carrying them to Canada, the Arandora Star, was sunk by a German U-boat.[5]
Paolozzi studied at the Edinburgh College of Art in 1943, briefly at Saint Martin's School of Art in 1944, and then at the Slade School of Fine Art at University College London from 1944 to 1947, after which he worked in Paris. While in Paris from 1947 to 1949, Paolozzi became acquainted with Alberto Giacometti, Jean Arp, Constantin Brâncuși, Georges Braque and Fernand Léger. This period became an important influence for his later work.[6] For example, the influence of Giacometti and many of the original Surrealists he met in Paris can be felt in the group of lost-wax sculptures made by Paolozzi in the mid-1950s. Their surfaces, studded with found objects and machine parts, were to gain him recognition.[7]
Career
[edit]After Paris, he moved back to London eventually establishing his studio in Chelsea. The studio was a workshop filled with hundreds of found objects, models, sculptures, materials, tools, toys and stacks of books.[8] Paolozzi was interested in everything and would use a variety of objects and materials in his work, particularly his collages.[9] In 1955 he moved with his family to the village of Thorpe-le-Soken in Essex. Together with Nigel Henderson he established Hammer Prints Limited, a design company producing wallpapers, textiles and ceramics that were initially manufactured at Landermere Wharf, and when his evening course in printed textile design at the Central School of Art and Design attracted the Trinidadian graphics student Althea McNish, he was instrumental in pointing her towards her future career as a textile designer. Paolozzi came to public attention in the 1950s by producing a range of striking screenprints and Art brut sculpture. He was a founder of the Independent Group in 1952, which is regarded as the precursor to the mid-1950s British and late 1950s American Pop Art movements. His seminal 1947 collage I was a Rich Man's Plaything is considered the earliest standard bearer representing Pop Art.[10][11][12] He always described his work as surrealist art and, while working in a wide range of media though his career, became more closely associated with sculpture. Paolozzi is recognized for producing largely lifelike statuary works, but with rectilinear (often cubic) elements added or removed, or the human form deconstructed in a cubist manner.
He taught sculpture and ceramics at several institutions, including the Hochschule für bildende Künste Hamburg (1960–62),[13] University of California, Berkeley (in 1968) and at the Royal College of Art. Paolozzi had a long association with Germany, having worked in Berlin from 1974 as part of the Berlin Artist Programme of the German Academic Exchange Programme. He was a professor at the Fachhochschule in Cologne from 1977 to 1981, and later taught sculpture at the Akademie der Bildenden Künste in Munich. Paolozzi was fond of Munich and many of his works and concept plans were developed in a studio he kept there, including the mosaics of the Tottenham Court Road Station in London.[9] He took a stab at industrial design in the 1970s with a 500-piece run of the upscale Suomi tableware by Timo Sarpaneva that Paolozzi decorated for the German Rosenthal porcelain maker's Studio Linie.[14]
Paolozzi's graphic work of the 1960s was highly innovative. In a series of works he explored and extended the possibilities and limits of the silkscreen medium. The resulting prints are characterised by Pop culture references and technological imagery. These series are: As Is When (12 prints on the theme of Paolozzi's interest in the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein; published as a limited edition of 65 by Editions Alecto, 1965); Moonstrips Empire News (100 prints, eight signed, in an acrylic box; published as a limited edition of 500 by Editions Alecto, 1967); Universal Electronic Vacuu (10 prints, poster and text; published by Paolozzi as a limited edition of 75, 1967); General Dynamic Fun. (part 2 of Moonstrips Empire News; 50 sheets plus title sheet; boxed in five versions; published as a limited edition of 350 by Editions Alecto, 1970).
In the 1960s and 1970s, Paolozzi artistically processed man-machine images from popular science books by German doctor and author Fritz Kahn (1888–1968), such as in his screenprint "Wittgenstein in New York" (1965), the print series Secrets of Life – The Human Machine and How it Works (1970), or the cover design for John Barth's novel Lost in the Funhouse (Penguin, 1972). As recently as 2009, the reference to Kahn was discovered by Uta and Thilo von Debschitz during their research of work and life of Fritz Kahn.[15]
Later career
[edit]Paolozzi was appointed CBE in 1968[16] and in 1979 he was elected to the Royal Academy. During the late 1960s, he started contributing to literary magazine Ambit, which began a lifelong collaboration.
In 1980, the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW) commissioned a set of three tapestries from Paolozzi to represent 'present day and future societies in relation to the role played by ICAEW', as part of the institute's centenary celebrations. The three highly distinctive pieces - which Paolozzi wanted to "depict our world of today in a manner using the same bold pictorial style as the Bayeux tapestries in France" - currently hang in Chartered Accountants' Hall.[17]
He was promoted to the office of Her Majesty's Sculptor in Ordinary for Scotland in 1986, which he held until his death. He also received an Honorary Doctorate from Heriot-Watt University in 1987.[18]
Paolozzi was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 1989 as Knight Bachelor (Kt).[19]
In 1994, Paolozzi gave the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art a large body of his works, and much of the content of his studio. In 1999 the National Galleries of Scotland opened the Dean Gallery to display this collection. The gallery displays a recreation of Paolozzi's studio, with its contents evoking the original London and Munich locations and also houses a Scottish-Italian restaurant, Paolozzi's Kitchen, which was created by Heritage Portfolio in homage to the local artist.[8]
In 2001, Paolozzi suffered a near-fatal stroke, causing an incorrect magazine report that he had died. The illness made him a wheelchair user, and he died in a hospital in London in April 2005.[20]
In 2013, Pallant House Gallery in Chichester held a major retrospective Eduardo Paolozzi: Collaging Culture (6 July −13 October 2013), featuring more than 100 of the artist's works, including sculpture, drawings, textile, film, ceramics and paper collage. Pallant House Gallery has an extensive collection of Paolozzi's work given and loaned by the architect Colin St John Wilson, who commissioned Paolozzi's sculpture Newton After Blake for the British Library.
Notable public works
[edit]- Mosaic murals for the platforms, passages and escalator entrances of Tottenham Court Road tube station, London, and Paolozzi's most extensive work. Escalator entrance murals were removed as part of redevelopment, and were donated to the University of Edinburgh though most mosaics remain in situ and were restored in 2017.[21][22]
- Cover artwork for Paul McCartney's album Red Rose Speedway
- Ceiling panels and window tapestry at Cleish Castle
- Piscator sculpture, Euston Station concourse, London, until 2019, present location unknown
- Cast aluminium doors for the University of Glasgow's Hunterian Gallery, commissioned by William Whitfield
- Bronze sculpture Newton after Blake, 1995, in the forecourt of the British Library
- The Manuscript of Monte Cassino, an open palm, a section of limb and a human foot, located at Leith Walk, looking towards Paolozzi's birthplace Leith
- Head of Invention sculpture in front of the Design Museum in Kensington
- Sculpture A Maximis Ad Minima in Kew Gardens at the west end of the Princess of Wales Conservatory
- Mosaics in Redditch Town Centre
- Athena sculpture in the foyer of the John McIntosh Arts Centre at The London Oratory School
- Faraday sculpture at the University of Birmingham
- ‘Jahrenstellar '78m’, 1978 at Manchester Art Gallery
- The Artist as Hephaestus, on High Holborn from 1987, removed 2012 present location unknown
-
Scotland's Early People, National Museum of Scotland. The sculptures incorporate display cases for ancient artefacts
-
The Manuscript of Monte Cassino
-
For Leonardo, 1986
-
Faraday, at the University of Birmingham
-
Vulcan, 1998–9, Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art
Other work
[edit]- Eduardo Paolozzi played a deaf-mute in Lorenza Mazzetti's 1956 Free Cinema film Together, alongside the painter Michael Andrews.
- A photograph of Paolozzi's large, well-worn right hand was selected by Lord Snowdon as the cover image for his book Photographs by Snowdon: A Retrospective (August 2000).
Writings
[edit]- Metafisikal Translations by Eduardo Paolozzi, Lelpra, London, 1962
- Eduardo Paolozzi by Eduardo Paolozzi, Tate, London, 1971
- Junk and the New Arts and Crafts Movement by Eduardo Paolozzi, Talbot Rice Centre, Edinburgh, August 1979
- Recurring themes by Eduardo Paolozzi, Rizzoli (1984), ISBN 978-0-8478-0573-0
See also
[edit]Sources
[edit]- ^ "Paolozzi". Collins English Dictionary. HarperCollins. Retrieved 9 May 2019.
- ^ "Paolozzi, Eduardo". Oxford Dictionaries UK English Dictionary. Oxford University Press.[dead link ]
- ^ "Sir Eduardo Paolozzi". Daily Telegraph. 23 April 2005.
- ^ "Artists' Llives: Sir Eduardo Paolozzi Interviewed by Frank Whitford C466/17" (PDF). National Life Stories. British Library. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
- ^ "NAS gets behind bars", The National Archives of Scotland.
- ^ ″Paolozzi Arches Noah″, Exhibit Catalog, Münchner Stadtmuseum, 1990.
- ^ Jonathan Clark. "Eduardo Paolozzi (1924–2005) – Jonathan Clark Fine Art". Archived from the original on 3 November 2012.
- ^ a b "Paolozzi Studio" Archived 6 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine, National Galleries of Scotland.
- ^ a b ″Mythologies″, Exhibit Catalog, The Scottish Gallery, 2–26 May 1990.
- ^ Livingstone, M. (1990), Pop Art: A Continuing History, New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc.
- ^ "Eduardo Paolozzi", Exhibit Catalog, Hefte der Akademie der Bildenden Künste, 1977.
- ^ "'I was a Rich Man's Plaything', Sir Eduardo Paolozzi". Tate Etc.
- ^ Where he taught the 'fifth Beatle' Stuart Sutcliffe. "Report by Eduardo Paolozzi, 23 October 1961". liverpoolmuseums. Archived from the original on 4 January 2017. Retrieved 3 January 2017.
- ^ "Faenza-Goldmedaille für SUOMI". Artis. 29: 8. 1976. ISSN 0004-3842.
- ^ Uta and Thilo von Debschitz (2009). Man Machine / Maschine Mensch. Springer Wien New York. ISBN 978-3-211-99181-7. Archived from the original on 5 March 2011.
{{cite book}}
:|website=
ignored (help) - ^ "No. 44484". The London Gazette (Supplement). 29 December 1967. p. 11.
- ^ "Chartered Accountants' Hall: Inside a piece of history". Vital (46): 20–21. October 2010. Retrieved 23 May 2019.
- ^ "Heriot-Watt University Edinburgh: Honorary Graduates". www1.hw.ac.uk. Archived from the original on 18 April 2016. Retrieved 6 April 2016.
- ^ "No. 51578". The London Gazette (Supplement). 30 December 1988. p. 1.
- ^ "Pop artist Paolozzi dies aged 81". BBC News. 22 April 2005.
- ^ "Tube station mosaics to be seen in new light in artist's home city". Edinburgh College of Art. 28 July 2015. Archived from the original on 15 September 2015.
- ^ "Paolozzi mosaic restoration work starts in ECA Sculpture Court". Edinburgh College of Art. 26 October 2015. Archived from the original on 20 August 2016.
External links
[edit]- 1924 births
- 2005 deaths
- 20th-century British printmakers
- 20th-century British sculptors
- Academic staff of the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich
- Academics of Saint Martin's School of Art
- Academics of the Royal College of Art
- Alumni of Saint Martin's School of Art
- Alumni of the Edinburgh College of Art
- Alumni of the Slade School of Fine Art
- Artists from Edinburgh
- British pop artists
- British collage artists
- Commanders of the Order of the British Empire
- Geometry of Fear
- Knights Bachelor
- Scottish knights
- British modern sculptors
- People from Leith
- People from Thorpe-le-Soken
- Royal Academicians
- Scottish contemporary artists
- Scottish male sculptors
- Scottish people of Italian descent
- Scottish printmakers
- Scottish sculptors