Title: |
Dove of Peace |
Artist: |
Avati, Mario (Monaco, 1921 - Paris) |
Date: |
1963 |
Medium: |
Original Mezzotint |
Printer: |
Mario Avati |
Note: |
Mario Avati: Not many masters of modern art
have dedicated most of their artistic talents to the hazardous medium of
the mezzotint. From the rocking of the plate to the scraping and burnishing
to bring light out of the darkness, the mezzotint has rightly been called
the most delicate and complex of all art methods. Yet no other art can give
birth to such magnificent areas of light and shade as this purely tonal
medium. The leading twentieth century artists of the mezzotint are D. E.
Galinis, Yozo Hamaguchi, Kiyoshi Hasagawa and Mario Avati. |
|
From an Italian background, Mario Avati was born in Monaco
and studied art in Paris. His first one man exhibitions were in Paris,
where he has resided for most of his career. By 1955, Mario Avati had achieved
an international reputation with major exhibitions of his art in New York,
Tokyo, London and Los Angeles. Avati's American connections are well known:
he has worked with the prestigious Tamarind Workshop and the Museum of
Modern Art in New York owns one of the most extensive collections of his
prints. |
|
Scholars have often written of Surrealist elements within
Avati's art. Jean Adhemar, in fact, wrote that Avati's mezzotints express,
"a strange and devastated universe." * Avati is famous for combining
seemingly incongruous forms to achieve strongly evocative imagery, and from
this standpoint his art is related to Surrealism. Even in his more realistic
animal studies and still lifes, the imagery is permeated by mystical elements
derived from the unique spacial relationships of the mezzotint medium. (Jean
Adhemar, Twentieth Century Graphics, London, Elek Books Limited,
1971, p. 240.) |
|
As well, Avati is an extremely meticulous artist. He rocks
his own mezzotint plates -- sometimes up to twenty-four hours -- in order
to achieve the most satisfactory, velvety tones. He is most particular about
papers (favouring a pure rag paper with light sizing) and takes complete
charge of the artistic process by printing his own plates. In a 1976 essay
upon the mezzotint, Avati even had words of warning to collectors: "The
fragility of the mezzotint is its only weak point. Collectors must be warned
to handle these prints even more carefully than any others, for the slightest
scratch damages the print beyond repair. Unfortunately, the deep velvety
surface easily attracts exploring fingers which inevitably leave a shiny
streak across the velvet." ** ( Fritz Eichenberg, The Art of the
Print, New York, Harry N. Abrams. 1976, pp. 358 - 360.) |
|
Mario Avati is represented in major collections in the U.
S. and abroad including the Bibliotheque National, Paris; Museum of Tokyo,
Japan; Victoria and Albert Museum, London; Museum of Modern Art and the
Metropolitan Museum of Art; The Library of Congress; the Princeton University
Collection; the Rockefeller Collection and many others. |
Edition: |
During the 1960's and 1970's Avati created original, miniature
mezzotints to commemorate the New Year and as gifts for his close circle
of friends. Dove of Peace is one of these annual works of art.
Although not numbered, these miniature masterpieces are known to exist in
editions of less than one hundred. |
Provenance: |
This original mezzotint entitled, Dove of Peace hails from the estate of Maurice Bloch.
Bloch was a major New York City art dealer and a personal friend of Mario
Avati. Avati's first New York exhibition was held at Bloch's gallery. |
Size: |
2 3/4 X 3 1/4 (Sizes in inches are approximate, height
preceding width of plate-mark or image.) |
|
Framed and Matted with 100% Archival Materials |
Condition: |
Printed upon hand-made, pure rag paper and with full margins
as created by Mario Avati at the above stated date. It is a beautifully
printed, velvety and in excellent condition throughout. Signed
in pencil by the artist under the image. |
Price: |
Sold - The price is no longer available. |
Important Information: |
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