Modern Art Giuseppe Spagnulo

Milena Olesinks
3 min readJun 15, 2017

“Giuseppe Spagnulo was born in Grottaglie (in the Province of Taranto, in Puglia) in 1936. This was already one of the most important centres for ceramics in Italy, and Spagnulo received his first training in terracotta and in using the potter’s wheel in his father’s studio there. After studying at a specialised art secondary school, he enrolled at the Faenza Ceramics Institute, where he studied from 1952 until 1958, and where he was a student of Angelo Biancini. This was one of the best places in Italy to study ceramics, and had significant international links, including one with the French ceramicist Albert Diato, who showed the students his techniques of working with materials at “high temperatures”. Spagnulo met Carlo Zauli and Nanni Valentini, with whom he had in common a deep sense of the use of “earths”, and made his first pieces in stoneware. Moreover, the possibility of frequent visits to the Faenza Ceramics Museum, where he saw first hand pieces by Picasso donated in the Fifties, greatly enriched his training. In 1959 Spagnulo moved to Milan where he enrolled at the Accademia di Brera, but he soon decided to work as an assistant in the studios of Fontana and of Pomodoro. He met Tancredi and Manzoni; through his contact with Fontana, Spagnulo came to know Albisola’s informal ceramics. After an initial dedication to works in ceramics, the artist began to work mainly on sculptures, executing works in terracotta, in stone and in wood, which he presented in his first personal exhibition in 1965 in Milan at the Salone Annunciata.
Three years later he finished his first great pieces in metal, which were to be installed in the open spaces in public squares, to stimulate communication between common people. These sculptures took on the identity of a provocative social gesture reflecting the artist’s participation in the students’ and workers’ protests of ’68; indeed these “big bits of metal” –modelled in the furnaces, workshops and foundries with the workers– seem to alter the space around them in a loud cry of protest. These are pieces which draw attention to the sculptor’s art, now turned to examine the physical nature of materials in order to create volumes which occupy space with a certain pregnant air. Noteworthy are his shows at the 1972 36th Venice International Biennale with the piece entitled The Game, the personal shows at the m Gallery in Bochum (Germany , 1974) and at the Carlo Grossetti Studio in Milan (1978).”…………..More

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