Recently, we had an unusual art exhibition in Schio (click on the pictures for a bigger view).
It presented the works of a hidden artist, someone who had a passion for art, even while he worked in a wool factory and as a house-painter, white washing homes. And it was organised by his grand-daughter Alice who had promised her grandfather Romano Benazzi that one day she will organise an art exhibition for him.
The exhibition was called, Nonno Raccontami Un Quadro (Grandpa, tell me a picture).
Romano Benazzi's Life-Story
Romano was born in a village near Ferrara in 1941. During the second World War, his father died while fighting in Ukraine. Raised by a single mother, he started working in the fields at a young age. When he was sixteeen, under a Government programme, he came to spend some days with a family in Pieve Belvicino, a few kilometres north of Schio. A couple of years later, he came back in the same time, this time a guest of another set of families. Both these experiences created strong links of family and friendship, and he fell in love with the beauty of this mountainous area.
He found work with a local firm engaged in painting houses. It was also the period when he started sketching with pencil and charcoal. He found his wife Gina, who worked in a local bar and took on a second work, at the Lanerossi wool mills of Pieve, while they came to live in Magre area of Schio. They had two children, Guido and Daniela.
Over the years he continued with his passion for art, experimenting with different art mediums including oil paints. After his retirement, he devoted himself to his art, in spite of developing Parkinson disease.
Romano lives in a house of elderly persons and even if Parkinson disease limits his manual capabilities, in fact sometimes he doesn't like the results of his efforts, but he still continues to be an artist. The image below has one of his recent sketches with charcoal, where frustrated by his lack of control over his hand movements and unhappy with the result, he covered it with charcoal.
Conclusions
In these pictures you can see some of his works. I was deeply touched by the idea of his grand-daughter Alice, daughter of his son Guido, to honour her grand-father's works and to organise this exhibition in collaboration with the Municipality of Schio.
Though Romano Benazzi remains an unknown painter, his works remain confined to the homes of his family and friends, it is important that they were celebrated by his family and community.
***
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thanks for visiting Arre Kya Baat Hai and for your comment! I love interacting with my readers and I am happy to receive critical comments (as long as you use a civilised language).
All comments are moderated.