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Angelo Vadalà was born in Messina. He
started painting five decades ago, when he was only 12. At the age of 18,
Vadalà left Sicily to live
and study in Florence,
officially to attend university and study architecture. But after two years of
study at the Florence University of Architecture, Vadalà found he was
distracted by what the many museums of that beautiful city contained, and not
by the stone and wood that housed the art. His desire to capture a movement or
a moment in time on canvas or in clay, called him from the study of the
building of structures. His strongest need was to capture the human form, in
all its beauty and majesty, and become a part of the long legacy of Italian
artists that came before him. The city of Florence itself
became his inspiration; Leonardo DaVinci, Velàzquez and Caravaggio, his teachers.
From his study of architecture, Vadalà had received a foundation
in the art and technique of draftsmanship. Combined with his innate artistic
talent and his personal study of art in the museums and churches of Florence, he paid
the same scrupulous attention to mastering the techniques of painting, as it
applied to the human form. One example of Vadalà's discipline and
determination to achieve excellence was the enormous time he dedicated to
studying hands. He described these early efforts as critical to subsequent
artistic success, often saying, “Hands have millions of positions, if you
are able to draw hands well, you can draw everything”.
Throughout the 1960’s, Vadalà continued his study of art on his
own. At the end of the ‘60’s, he went to New
York where he was influenced by the new realism
movement and the new American figurative painting style. Over the next decade
and a half, he developed his personal style, based on technical perfection and
dream themes. In the 1980’s he began to explore neo-classic art, Oriental art
and romantic myths. Today, he is considered one of the best contemporary
portrait painters in Italy. At an
international level he has painted great figures of the cultural scene, show
business and the world of finance, political figures, and the aristocracy of Europe. Some of
his subjects have included Cinzano, Rod Stieger, Jonny Hallyday, the President
of Senegal. He has received awards in many art competitions throughout Italy as well
as numerous commissions for public works and for the Catholic Church. Vadalà’s
work his been included in museum shows throughout his native Italy and in
the United States,
including the Museum of Modern
Art in New
York.
Today, Vadalà lives and works in Florence and Milan. He
often visits and shows in the United
States. His medium is most
often oil on canvas, although he often works in pastel and pencil.
While Vadalà continues to take portrait commissions and paint
unique and masterful figurative works, he has recently begun a series of city
scenes (Venice, Jerusalem) in his
precise and original style. The cityscapes are magical and extraordinary, yet
immediately identifiable. They capture a light and mood that is timeless and
beautiful, allowing the viewer to be transported to an idyllic place, based on
reality that is better than any dream. The world he creates in his paintings is
a place we would all like to be. t
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