6wsd250 15x20cm
Friday, December 26, 2008
Monday, October 27, 2008
Saturday, September 27, 2008
Nico Robin Out Of Reach
20.a
Awards Ceremony Saturday, September 6 starting at 20
Compositions dedicated to the relationship of man in against this universal good.
The jury is composed of:
Terms of Membership: The award Venus Lavinia was born for charity and we require a minimum payment of € 10 in aid of Italian Association for Cancer Research "AIRC", street Corridoni 17, 20122 Milan, via CC Postale no. 307272
The payment receipt must be attached to the poem.
Organizing Committee: Angelo Cavola Architect, Surveyor Cavola Fortunato, owners of the resort complex "Rome" - The rewards offered by the architect Angelo Cavola, as Chairman of the Organizing Committee, consisting of trophies for the top five, and Plaques certificates of merit. It 'also plans to print a book as "historical collection" of the event.
The evening and the gala awards ceremony, hosted by Clare Bettinali Blasetti and Angelo, will be accompanied by measures of folk dancing by surprise by the Cultural traditions for "The Chiarantana.
Awards Ceremony Saturday, September 6 starting at 20
at the beach "Rome" * Bar * Restaurant * Pizzeria waterfront Maga Circe snc
(via Host Resort / Anzio 23.700 km) Tor San Lorenzo - Ardea
Phone 06.910.11120 fax 06.910.14211
Free entry for those wishing to dine is advisable to book at the number above
Theme: "The Sea and peoples" (via Host Resort / Anzio 23.700 km) Tor San Lorenzo - Ardea
Phone 06.910.11120 fax 06.910.14211
Free entry for those wishing to dine is advisable to book at the number above
The jury is composed of:
- Love AnnaMaria, poet won the 18th edition
- Mitzi Barbacini, vice president of LA CHIARANTANA
- Silvia Matricardi, journalist, vice president associate information
- Andrea Joseph Graziano, poet, winner of the 17th edition
- Giovanni Salzano, journalist Messenger.
Terms of Membership: The award Venus Lavinia was born for charity and we require a minimum payment of € 10 in aid of Italian Association for Cancer Research "AIRC", street Corridoni 17, 20122 Milan, via CC Postale no. 307272
The payment receipt must be attached to the poem.
Organizing Committee: Angelo Cavola Architect, Surveyor Cavola Fortunato, owners of the resort complex "Rome" - The rewards offered by the architect Angelo Cavola, as Chairman of the Organizing Committee, consisting of trophies for the top five, and Plaques certificates of merit. It 'also plans to print a book as "historical collection" of the event.
The evening and the gala awards ceremony, hosted by Clare Bettinali Blasetti and Angelo, will be accompanied by measures of folk dancing by surprise by the Cultural traditions for "The Chiarantana.
Friday, June 6, 2008
Stop People Viewing Friends List
curriculum
Eliseo Lagana
Education
Cardiff College of Art
Croydon College of Art
Slade School of Art
Selected exhibitions/mostre
Group
Arnolfini Art Gallery , Bristol
Morley Gallery , London
The Whitechapel Open, London
Personal
Central Hall University College, Cardiff
Gallery A for A, Florence
Cardiff University Art Gallery
Cardiff University Art Gallery
Gallery The warehouse, Messina
Galleria Il Gabbiano, Messina
East Wales Association
Provincia di Messina
Schumacher College, Dartington
Public Collections/Commissions - collezioni pubbliche:
The Welsh Arts Council
The National Museum of Wales (School Service Department)
The National Museum of Wales ( Fine Art Department )
The Royal National Eisteddfod of Wales
Schumacher College , Dartington Trust, Devon
University of Aberystwyth Museum and Galleries, Wales
British Government Art Collection, Dept. of Culture, London
Eliseo Lagana
Cardiff
Croydon
Slade
Group
Morley
The Whitechapel Open, London
Cafe Gallery, London
Bonhams Fine Art Auctioneers, London Gallery A for A, Florence
Cardiff
Cardiff
Gallery The warehouse, Messina
Galleria Il Gabbiano, Messina
Dartington Arts Gallery, Devon
Galleria Il Gabbiano, Messina
Kultur Gallery, Weimar
Pickwick Papers, Fondazione Mazzullo
Messina, Taormina
Sponsorships / sponsorships:
Cardiff University Art Group and South Pickwick Papers, Fondazione Mazzullo
Messina, Taormina
Sponsorships / sponsorships:
Provincia di Messina
Schumacher College, Dartington
The Welsh Arts Council
The National
The National
The Royal National Eisteddfod of
Schumacher
University of
British Government Art Collection, Dept. of Culture,
Sunday, June 1, 2008
Jt Tac 5 Recon Paintball
John Lane
Eliseo Lagana is Sicilian; he was born in Messina , home of the great Antonello, and spent the first twenty years of his life in that city. Although I myself have never set foot upon the island, I like to think that some of its vibrant light and violent contrasts are to be found in the hot reds, pungent blues and rich textured qualities of his paintings.
Yet Sicily is not only hot and fierce, it is also an island of great cultural depth: it has been a bridge between Europe and Africa, a platform between the Eastern and Western Mediterranean ; a place where the worlds of Christian and Muslim also met; a place, too, where Greek, Phoenician, Roman, Arab and English all left their mark. This depth of historical association – the comfortable rubble of a land worked and loved by scores of people and generations – has also left its mark on Lagana’s work; striated, textured, layered with the accidental detritus of paint.
But if Lagana’s paintings have in them a strong colouration and decisive calligraphy, a southern extraversion, they none the less possess a deeply poetic and contemplative mood which expresses (so the artist tells me) the introverted nature of some of these island people. At all events, Eliseo Lagana feels much at home with other introspective people, such as the British and their land, to which he has been a frequent visitor. Sitting in a garden last summer, he told me how much he enjoyed the stimulation of balancing, on the one hand, his native world of passionate sensualism, “the vibrancy and contrast of southern light and temperament” and, on the other, his adopted world of Englishness, subtle and subdued. The marriage of these opposites contributes, I believe, not only to the tension but to the sense of equilibrium, the balance between opposing forces, which one senses in his work.
In a sense Eliseo Lagana is a romantic. Like all romantics he has had to discover his own imagery. Paul Klee has been a certain influence and so, perhaps, has been the biomorphic abstractionism of Kandinsky. Morandi’s cross-hatched etchings have also held an attraction if only because of their undoubted mystery. But Lagana is his own man and his pictures, intimate in scale, self reflective, even private in mood, speak to us in their own voice. It is a voice at once bold and tender.
His way of working may be wholly compositional, that is to say only concerned with lines, shapes and colours, but that way he draws not only upon deep levels of imagination but upon a deep reflection of nature. Lagana is someone who has studied trees and clouds, stones and hills, with an attentive and meditative devotion. A story is told of one of the Jesuit fathers at Stonyhurst pointing out the young Gerard Manley Hopkins and saying that Hopkins was a great scholar. “Impossible” said the gardener, “I saw him the other day staring at a piece of glass on the path and going round and round it. I took him for a natural”. But meditation on glass, as Lagana knows, may involve the meanings, causes and the principles of things.
Being and stillness are, in fact, especially important to this painter; they precede the creative act and guide and inspire an art which distils a mood once reflective, philosophical and musical. Thus, we do not simply gaze at the surface of his paintings; we are immersed in them. With intensity we study the grains, activities, surfaces and textures - all the phenomena of paint - out of Which They Have Been Created.
Lagana Described Himself has His work in terms of "inner landscapes" Which Arise from states of stillness. Thus in His Art, Being Becomes Form, attention materialises into matter, emptiness is crystallised.
Eliseo Lagana is from Sicily, was born in Messina, Antonello birthplace of the great, and he spent the first twenty-two years of his life in that city. Although I have never set foot on the island, I like to think that his bright light, with its sharp contrasts, is found in deep red, in sharp blue and rich textures of the paintings of Elisha.
However, Sicily is not only warm and fair, is also an island of great cultural depth: it was a bridge between Europe and Africa, a platform between the East and West Mediterranean, a place where met with the Muslim world and the Christian, the land on which have left their mark of their presence, the Greeks, Phoenicians, Romans, Arabs and Spaniards. This historic and meeting people in a land worked and loved by many people for many generations, also left a sign in the work of Elisha, striated, textured, stratified deposits from accidental paint.
But if on the one hand the work of Laganas have strong colors and strong mark, un'estroversione south, on the other hand, not less, show a highly lyrical and contemplative mood, reveal the introverted nature which is also and often (so he told me the artist) in the island. In any case, Eliseo Lagana feels at ease in the land of introspective people, like the British. While conversing together, last summer in a garden, he told me to love a certain search for balance between his native world of passionate sensuality, the vibrations and the contrasts in light and temper of the South, and his adopted world of Englishness, thin and quiet. The union of these opposites helps, I believe, not only to live but also to the sense of balance, the balance of opposing forces, who feels in his works.
On the other hand, it is true that Lagana has spent many years in northern Europe. After graduating from the University of Messina, has gone to Paris, and then to Budapest, Warsaw and Monaco, and then arrive and settle in our land, the first of Wales, Bangor and in Cardiff, where he discovered the art of engraving, and then to London, where he has resumed to study at the Art College in Croydon, and then at the Slade School.
In a sense, Eliseo Lagana is a romantic. As the Romantics had to explore her own images. Paul Klee has had some influence on him, and also, perhaps, the abstraction of Kandinsky Biomorphology. The etchings by Morandi have also attracted much, if only for their undoubted mystery. But Lagat belongs to himself and his paintings, even intimate in size, reflective of meditative tone, speak with their voice. It 's a soft but clear voice.
His way of working can sometimes be largely compositional, ie involve only lines, shapes and colors, but in doing so, he evokes not only the deep levels of imagination but also a profound reflection on the nature. Laganas is one who has studied the trees and clouds, rocks and mountains, with careful and contemplative devotion. (.) Being and tranquility are in fact very important to this painter, before the creative act, lead and inspired art that distills a reflective mood at the same time, philosophical and musical. So we do not just stare at the surface of his paintings but we immerse ourselves in them. We study it with intensity texture, surfaces and textures, all the elements that compose them. The same
Lagat has described his paintings as "inner landscapes" that are made visible through the stillness. Thus, in his art, be it becomes form, the focus is materialized in the subject, silence is crystallized.
The art of Eliseo Lagana
b y John Lane
b y John Lane
Eliseo Lagana is Sicilian; he was born in
Yet
But if Lagana’s paintings have in them a strong colouration and decisive calligraphy, a southern extraversion, they none the less possess a deeply poetic and contemplative mood which expresses (so the artist tells me) the introverted nature of some of these island people. At all events, Eliseo Lagana feels much at home with other introspective people, such as the British and their land, to which he has been a frequent visitor. Sitting in a garden last summer, he told me how much he enjoyed the stimulation of balancing, on the one hand, his native world of passionate sensualism, “the vibrancy and contrast of southern light and temperament” and, on the other, his adopted world of Englishness, subtle and subdued. The marriage of these opposites contributes, I believe, not only to the tension but to the sense of equilibrium, the balance between opposing forces, which one senses in his work.
In a sense Eliseo Lagana is a romantic. Like all romantics he has had to discover his own imagery. Paul Klee has been a certain influence and so, perhaps, has been the biomorphic abstractionism of Kandinsky. Morandi’s cross-hatched etchings have also held an attraction if only because of their undoubted mystery. But Lagana is his own man and his pictures, intimate in scale, self reflective, even private in mood, speak to us in their own voice. It is a voice at once bold and tender.
His way of working may be wholly compositional, that is to say only concerned with lines, shapes and colours, but that way he draws not only upon deep levels of imagination but upon a deep reflection of nature. Lagana is someone who has studied trees and clouds, stones and hills, with an attentive and meditative devotion. A story is told of one of the Jesuit fathers at Stonyhurst pointing out the young Gerard Manley Hopkins and saying that
Being and stillness are, in fact, especially important to this painter; they precede the creative act and guide and inspire an art which distils a mood once reflective, philosophical and musical. Thus, we do not simply gaze at the surface of his paintings; we are immersed in them. With intensity we study the grains, activities, surfaces and textures - all the phenomena of paint - out of Which They Have Been Created.
Lagana Described Himself has His work in terms of "inner landscapes" Which Arise from states of stillness. Thus in His Art, Being Becomes Form, attention materialises into matter, emptiness is crystallised.
John Lane, famous English writer and art critic, founder of Schumacher College, was for many years director of the foundation Dartington.
The Art of Eliseo Lagana
John Lane
However, Sicily is not only warm and fair, is also an island of great cultural depth: it was a bridge between Europe and Africa, a platform between the East and West Mediterranean, a place where met with the Muslim world and the Christian, the land on which have left their mark of their presence, the Greeks, Phoenicians, Romans, Arabs and Spaniards. This historic and meeting people in a land worked and loved by many people for many generations, also left a sign in the work of Elisha, striated, textured, stratified deposits from accidental paint.
But if on the one hand the work of Laganas have strong colors and strong mark, un'estroversione south, on the other hand, not less, show a highly lyrical and contemplative mood, reveal the introverted nature which is also and often (so he told me the artist) in the island. In any case, Eliseo Lagana feels at ease in the land of introspective people, like the British. While conversing together, last summer in a garden, he told me to love a certain search for balance between his native world of passionate sensuality, the vibrations and the contrasts in light and temper of the South, and his adopted world of Englishness, thin and quiet. The union of these opposites helps, I believe, not only to live but also to the sense of balance, the balance of opposing forces, who feels in his works.
On the other hand, it is true that Lagana has spent many years in northern Europe. After graduating from the University of Messina, has gone to Paris, and then to Budapest, Warsaw and Monaco, and then arrive and settle in our land, the first of Wales, Bangor and in Cardiff, where he discovered the art of engraving, and then to London, where he has resumed to study at the Art College in Croydon, and then at the Slade School.
In a sense, Eliseo Lagana is a romantic. As the Romantics had to explore her own images. Paul Klee has had some influence on him, and also, perhaps, the abstraction of Kandinsky Biomorphology. The etchings by Morandi have also attracted much, if only for their undoubted mystery. But Lagat belongs to himself and his paintings, even intimate in size, reflective of meditative tone, speak with their voice. It 's a soft but clear voice.
His way of working can sometimes be largely compositional, ie involve only lines, shapes and colors, but in doing so, he evokes not only the deep levels of imagination but also a profound reflection on the nature. Laganas is one who has studied the trees and clouds, rocks and mountains, with careful and contemplative devotion. (.) Being and tranquility are in fact very important to this painter, before the creative act, lead and inspired art that distills a reflective mood at the same time, philosophical and musical. So we do not just stare at the surface of his paintings but we immerse ourselves in them. We study it with intensity texture, surfaces and textures, all the elements that compose them. The same
Lagat has described his paintings as "inner landscapes" that are made visible through the stillness. Thus, in his art, be it becomes form, the focus is materialized in the subject, silence is crystallized.
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