Afro Libio Basaldella (March 4, 1912 – July 24, 1976) was an Italian painter and educator in the post-World War II period. He began as a member of the Scuola Romana, and worked together with Alberto Burri and Lucio Fontana.[1] He was generally known by the single name, "Afro".[2][3]
Early life and education
Born on March 4, 1912, in Udine, Italy.[4] Afro first showed his work when he was sixteen, alongside the paintings of his artist brothers, Dino and Mirko.[5] Two years later he and Dino won a scholarship to study art in Rome, under a stipend from the Marangoni Arts Foundation in Udine.[6]
Career
By 1933 he was exhibiting, along with fellow Friulians Bosisio, Pittino e Taiuti, at the Galleria del Milione in Milan. In 1935 he participated in the Rome Quadriennale art exhibition, and he showed his work several times at the Venice Biennale. Afro followed the School of Rome, creating murals. In 1936, he received a commission to paint for the Udine opera house. In 1937, collaborating with Corrado Cagli, he worked on large murals for the World Exhibition held in Paris.
Afro's first personal exhibition was held in 1937 at the Galleria del Cometa in Rome. He traveled to the island of Rhodes to paint frescoes for the Hôtel des Roses. In 1941, he was awarded a lectureship for mosaic painting at the Venetian Academy of Fine Arts. By the late 1930s, Afro's painting began a migration from a crisp realist style to increasingly cubist, expressionistic, and abstract painting. After the war, his paintings, retain figurative titles, but reflect increasing neo-cubist patches, influenced by his exposure to Arshile Gorky in New York.
In 1950, he travelled to New York City, and began a twenty-year collaboration with the Catherine Viviano Gallery. Through Viviano, Afro met the collector Stanley Seeger and American artist Joseph Glasco who later let him stay in his Taos home.[7]
Afro continued to show his work internationally. He was invited to the second documenta, and held exhibitions at MIT and numerous European museums. He won first prize at the Carnegie Triennial in Pittsburgh and the Italian prize at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York. The Guggenheim bought his 1957 painting Night Flight. In 1961, Guggenheim curator James Johnson Sweeney published a monograph on his work, where he wrote: “His color is sensuous, warm—never cold; fluid, not structural; free-edged, never sharply contoured. Light and color, shadow and shape achieve a suggested space effect through their ordering and flood it with the glories of his great predecessors: this festive spirit, this celebration of light and life—of life through light”. [14]
Caramel, Luciano (1989). Afro, l'itinerario astratto. Opere 1948-1975 (Exhibition Catalog) (in Italian). Milan, Italy: Gabriele Mazzotta Editore / Galleria dello Scudo, Verona. ISBN88-202-0900-4.
Graziani, Mario (1997). Catalogo Generale Ragionato dai Documenti dell'Archivio Afro (Exhibition Catalogue) (in Italian). Curated by Mario Graziani, Preface by Isabella Reale. Rome: DataArs Scaletta, Galleria La Scaletta.
Drudi, Barbara (2012). Afro, Dal progetto all'opera (Exhibition Catalog) (in Italian). Gli Ori, Museo Carlo Bilotti. ISBN978-8873364931.