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Vincenzo Balsamo, the Modern Genius of Italy

"The first client who bought one of my paintings was my own teacher." said Balsamo

Balsamo: I used the money to buy my very first true set of colors. This made me feel a "true painter". Oh, your questions bring to me,  so much memories, beautiful memories...

WACM: How many paintings did you paint in your life? Did you keep any of your early work? 

Balsamo: I don't know the exact number. Maybe, something like 2,500 paintings of various periods . Did I keep any of my early work? Sure, I did.  And I must  also  tell you, I kept a good  number of paintings from each period. They are my life and my history.  They are like my children.. A true artist will always keep some of his artwork for himself. Money is not everything in life. Art is more noble, more human and more meaningful for all those who love art and beauty in the world. Selling all your paintings and not keeping some for yourself is like selling yourself along with your paintings. you will find a lot of my early work in my studio, study and at home.

"A true artist will always keep some of his artwork for himself.", said Maestro Balsamo

Photo: Painting "FIORE DELL’ANIMA", 1979

WACM: Now, since you have become an international celebrity, do you go back in time and look at your early years of your career and re-examine what  went wrong, what you should  have not done or should have done to make success easier? Any lesson you have learned from past experiences? 

 Balsamo: Thank you for the compliment. I do not consider myself as an international celebrity. Absolutely, I re-evaluate my previous work. I mean the painting techniques and compositions of various periods of my art such as Decomposizioni, Nebulose, Evocazioni, etc., I think,  that in those years I had perhaps not given sufficient importance to my work. Today,  I realize  how little I produced in those early stages of my life. Also, I realized and learned that I was marginal. Instead, I should have been more extensional.

Photo: Painting "Conversazione", 1974

WACM: Any regrets in life?

 Balsamo: I have a very large family; 7 between sisters and siblings and sure the greatest displeasures that I have had up to now have been the loss of 2 siblings and a sister. Later in 1980, I lost my brother. I became so sad and melancholic. I almost decided to quit painting. The pain killed me. I did not want to exhibit my paintings anymore, for many years...But, those very paintings re-energized me and forced me to go back to my studio and paint again. Pain should not invade us as a game. We learn a lot from pain. It is a learning experience. Sometimes, pain is a source of energy and productivity. It forces you to produce and create. In that sense, pain is productive and noble. But, still, I miss the beloved ones I lost...it is tough, you know...That's life, my friend...

 WACM: What was the question you have never asked yourself and you should have asked?

Photo: Painting "Romantic Atmosphere", 1989 

Balsamo: My answer to you will unfortunately take me to a world of controversy. It would be wise to bring this question to all those critics who for nearly 15 years  did not even consider me as an artist. For years, they would not acknowledge my "existence" and notice my work! Consequently, perhaps, logically, the "unasked question" becomes: "Why and how come,  they have  never recognized and  understood  my art?

WACM:You are close to 68 now. When are you going to stop painting and begin to relax? 

Balsamo: I am 69 now. I still feel that I can give a lot. You must understand,  painting is my whole life. I live for my art and breath through it. I live my art 10 hours a day, along with my books,  my music, my poetry, my fantasy, my thoughts... I had 8 art periods in my  "colorful" life and today I am on the verge of creating another period. I will never retire. On the contrary, I keep on experimenting, digging, inventing, re-inventing, searching, exploring new ideas, new colors, new visions, new concepts, new techniques, new themes, new philosophies...I will always try something new, every day. I might stop, only, when and if I begin to feel that I cannot produce meaningful art anymore. However, I will not change my esthetical philosophy and artistic style to please the market...this is another story. I will never do that.

WACM: If you could stop time, and re-think about your whole life, how would you paint it in a painting?

Balsamo: Beautiful question. Creed that cannot be enclosed (all my life) in a single picture, but every  period of my  work could be reassumed as part of  my existence step by step. My life is a sequence of feelings and visions. My life is there, all over my paintings. Let me guide you toward my life on my paintings. Autoritratto in 1961. Fiori, fire, lights  in a blue vase in 1973.Decomposizione in1976. Trauma and "warp" in 1977?. An inquisitive  painter in 1978.  Letters of my life in 1984. Ultimate moments...opera...visions, not one single vision. Sognando in1987.  Romance in 1993 well depicted in Atmosfere romantiche. My free thoughts  in 2000. Capriccio in 2003. I cannot stop for one single moment and I will paint for the rest of my  life. My life is all of the above...My life is "many things"...so is yours!

WACM: What advice you would give to new talented painters who are having hard time selling their paintings? What they should do to succeed? Tell me about the practical aspect of it?

Balsamo: Young painters of our times should accept sacrifices. They must spend enough time studying the great masters. Unfortunately, many of them are not patient enough. They want to succeed right away. This is impossible. Being an artist is not fun all the time. You got to be patient and willing to learn, to practice, to practice and practice again. You have to work out your art. Also illusion of grandeur is destructive. Some artists believe that they have made it already, because two galleries exhibited their work. They begin to tell themselves that they are on the top now. And when, they begin to feel that way, PROGRESS STOPS! If your art is stagnant pond, life dies in it and so YOU! Something else, young artists should be concerned about. A true artist should not follow "fashion" in art. There is no such thing as  the "painting du jour" or the "special of the season", or "trendy art". Art is immortal. Art outlives all of us. It is not the trend, the fashion which makes you a great artist but, the true, humble and sensitive artist who lives inside you who will immortalize your name and struggling art. Art is not a very fine "boutique shopping",  Art is not a product on "sale", the French and the Italians refer to it as "Occasion" and Occasione! Final advice: An artist becomes a true artist when he or she finds his or her "identity" that nobody can take away from the heart, soul, art and character of the artist. An artist should not paint to please the "shoppers" and the critics. Soon or later, shoppers and critics die and are forgotten. Only, truthful art with truthful identity will immortalize the name, the memory and the art of the artist.

WACM: What do you wish for your children to become one day  in life: Rich lawyers? doctors? Successful businessmen? Or talented painters?

Balsamo: I have 4 sons, two boys and two girls from my first marriage. Roberto, lives in Australia. He is an artist, a sculptor. Francisco works with me, he takes care of my art and exhibitions business. My two daughters, Antonella and Daniela live in Rome. From my second marriage, I have a 9 year old son: Adam. I do not impose my will on them, nor decide what they should do and should not do in life. I do not think about it. Each person in life sees life differently.

WACM: What is a masterpiece, Maestro?  

Balsamo: It is what endures in your mind and soul. From the classical art, don't go far, Michelangelo's work. Antonello of Messina or Piero of  Francesca.  From the modern art: The work of  Segantini,  some capolavori of Picasso, Braque, Gorky, or Kandinsky. But if I  have to choose my favorites, I would select  Mirò, Tobey and Twombly.

Final words of Maestro Balsamo: I want to thank you for visiting me. You have asked beautiful questions.  They took me back in time...and brought to me memories, memories of my early days...the beginning of my career, dear moments in my life. Also, unfortunately, just to be frank with you, those beautiful questions  brought to my heart and to my mind, sad memories, but that is life! Through your questions, I revisited passages and frames of the film of my life with all its intensity...thank you.

Read the biography of  Vincenzo Balsamo and in-depth art critique of his work by Professor Maximillien de Lafayette in the World Art Celebrities Journal at: http://www.worldartcelebritiesjournal.com 

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WORLD EXHIBITIONS

THE LOUVRE

Each season, the Louvre features a series of temporary exhibitions, each the result of the latest expert research. Some of these shows are more suitable for the general public, but in their conception they act as echoes, versions and counterpoints to the museum's collections.

Thursday, December 01 2005

Antique Jewelry
The Marquis Campana Collection
One of the largest collections of Greek, Roman, and Etruscan Antiquities of the Louvre.

Comprising over 150 pieces, this ensemble was regarded as one of the largest and most varied private collections in existence at the time it was assembled. Today it is one of the Louvre’s most important collections of Greek, Etruscan, and Roman Antiquities.  This exhibit was made possible by the support of the Fondazione Cassa di Risparmio di Roma (Italy). Publication: Exhibition catalogue, Bijoux de l'Italie antique, la collection du marquis Campana, edited by Françoise Gaultier and Catherine Metzger. A Musée du Louvre Editions / 5 Continents coedition, 200 p., € 35. Curator(s) : Françoise Gaultier and Catherine Metzger, curators in the Department Greek, Etruscan, and Roman Antiquities of the Musée du Louvre 

Girodet 1767–1824

Paintings, from 09-22-2005 to 01-02-2006

A chance to rediscover the forgotten genius of one of the greatest painters of the early 19th century in this international exhibition of around 100 works by Girodet. The strange, poetic and sensual paintings of Jacques-Louis David’s dissident pupil, who witnessed both the Revolution and the Empire, broadened the horizons of French painting and introduced the world of immateriality and dreams. Upon the initiative of the Cleveland Museum of Art, this exhibition was co-organized by the Musée du Louvre and the Réunion des Musées Nationaux, in collaboration with the Art Institute of Chicago, the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York), and the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Montréal. With the exceptional participation of the Musée Girodet (Montargis).This exhibition was made possible through the support of American Friends of the Louvre, and the support of France Info, i>TELE, and Zurban as media partners.

 

After its run at the Louvre, this exhibit will travel to Chicago, New York, and Montreal.– Chicago, The Art Institute of Chicago, February 11 to April 30, 2006 – New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, May 22 to August 27, 2006. – Montreal, Musée des Beaux-Arts de Montréal, October 12, 2006, to January 21, 2007. Publications: Exhibition catalogue: Girodet, 1767–1824, edited by Sylvain Bellenger, a Musée du Louvre Editions / Gallimard co-edition, 352 p., about €49; Album: Girodet, by Sylvain Bellenger, a Musée du Louvre Editions / Gallimard co-edition, 48 p., about €8. Curator(s) : Sylvain Bellenger and Sylvain Laveissière

Islamic Art
from 04-30-2005 to 04-24-2006
Exhibition extended

30 Masterpieces of Islamic Art from the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York

An extraordinary selection of works from the Metropolitan Museum's famed collection of Islamic art will be exhibited for a full year at the Musée du Louvre, in the galleries of the Department of Islamic Art. The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York has the American continent's finest collection of Islamic art. With over 10,000 items, the collection has been a curatorial department since 1963. The current displays, created in the 1970s, extend to over 4,000 square meters of exhibition space.The Department of Islamic Art at the Metropolitan Museum in New York closed to the public for a major re-fit in December 2003. During the renovation work, a number of works from the Department have been displayed on the mezzanine level above the Met's imposing entrance foyer. Others are being displayed alongside the museum's collections of Asian and Western medieval art. The Louvre's first gallery, dedicated to works from the excavations at Susa (south-west Iran), will host a selection of objects from the archaeological site at Nishapur in eastern Iran, which was overseen by the Met in the late 1930s and 1940s. Nishapur produced a wealth of finds (decorative architectural sculpture, ceramics, bronze, glass...), testifying to its close links with the rest of the Islamic world, including Susa, from the 9th to the 11th centuries. Remarkable works from the Met's collection are displayed throughout the Louvre's other galleries of Islamic art. Highlights include a rare dish decorated with an eagle, signed by the leading Islamic ceramicist of his day (Egypt 10th-11th century), lustrous tiles from the Nasrid kingdom around Granada (Spain, 14th century), an example of medieval Iranian pottery demonstrating close links with the arts of calligraphy, book-binding etc., and items of metalwork, inlaid objects (an Iranian ewer, 12th century; a perfume-burner, Egypt, 14th century; an ink bottle, Iran, 15th century), together with elements of architectural decoration (Iran, 1455; India, late 16th century). The most spectacular piece in the collection is without doubt the large glass bowl with enamel and gold decorations, from a 13th-century Syrian workshop. The piece is a magnificent example of the technique of polychrome and gold enameling on glass, developed in the eastern Islamic world during the late 12th century. The work is displayed alongside one of the masterpiece's of the Louvre's collection: the large metal vase made for an Egyptian sultan in the mid-13th century, and latterly from the collection of the Barberini Pope Urban VIII. The items come from throughout the Islamic world, from Spain to India, and cover a period ranging from the earliest years of the Islamic era to the height of the latter day empires. Curator: Sophie Makariou, Musée du Louvre

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