|
"Italo Scanga Made Art by Recycling
Found Objects"
Myrna Oliver
Italo Scanga, an innovative neo-Dadaist, neo-Expressionist
and neo- Cubist multimedia artist who made sculptures of ordinary
objects and created prints, glass and ceramic works, has died.
He was 69.
Scanga, whose works were exhibited at the Los Angeles County
Museum of Art, New York's Whitney and Museum of Modern Art,
and galleries up and down the West Coast, died Friday of a
heart attack at his studio home in La Jolla. Born in Lago,
Italy, Scanga attributed his penchant for recycling things
to the poverty of his childhood.
His sculptures included wooden animals, papier-mache vegetables,
vases of cut flowers, rope, antique irons, shoes, shovels
and musical instruments. He often scoured swap meets and thrift
shops to collect items he could glue into his collage sculptures.
"He was an alchemist when it came to transforming found
objects into art," said Hugh Davies, director of the
San Diego Museum of Contemporary Art. "He was a collagist
equally at home sculpting or painting, and frequently combined
both."
Scanga discussed his work with The Times in 1985, explaining:
"I'm using a real guitar. Now Picasso, in his Cubist
paintings, will paint the guitar because it's a symbol--of
freedom, individual expression, whatever--whereas I just put
a real guitar in the work and paint on it. . . . I go back
to Cubism without hiding it. . . . People say you gotta hide
the sources. I don't hide anything."
Scanga, who said his family discouraged his interest in art
and hoped he would sell groceries, came to the United States
in 1947 when he was 15. He earned bachelor's and master's
degrees from Michigan State University after serving in the
U.S. Army.
Although he created steadily, Scanga did not become a commercially
successful artist until he was nearly 50. He supported his
work by teaching--at the University of Wisconsin, the Rhode
Island School of Design, Pennsylvania State University and
the Tyler School of Art.
In 1976, UC San Diego lured him to California as a visiting
professor and, by promising him a studio, hired him for its
faculty permanently in 1978. The self-described gypsy teacher
and artist had found a home.
Settling in California, he told The Times in 1988, changed
his work, making it "very colorful, very joyous, happy
work. It was about the good things in life, not about the
horrible things. It wasn't always tragic, like my earlier
work."
Successful with his art and his teaching, Scanga struggled
with what he called the schizophrenia of pursuing both. "Great,
great, great artists," he insisted, "were never
teachers."
The artist's amazing range--he even decorated handkerchiefs--
confounded fans and critics alike. He could, one wrote, "paint
ceramic plates in a light, buoyant style, full of charm and
color . . . assemble sculptures out of leather belts, metal
machinery fragments and scavenged wood . . . paint and make
prints . . . and illustrate poems on sheets of old liturgical
music."
Another wrote: "Scanga tends to roam at will around
the art history map, endearingly oblivious to boundary or
rule. His work might be figurative one moment, only to wander
off into abstraction in the next passage."
Scanga's painted ceramic plates, in particular, often incorporated
the names and imagery of some of his favorite artists and
composers-- Picasso, Mozart and Copland--becoming in effect
public fan letters.
The artist staged about 80 one-man shows and contributed
pieces to more than 225 group exhibitions across the United
States and in Europe. Examples of his work were published
in the Arts Yearbook of Contemporary Sculpture, Glass Art
Mag, Art in America and other publications.
Scanga received several grants, including one from the National
Endowment for the Arts.
For the last several years, Scanga lived in La Jolla with
Thailand-born chef and cookbook author Su-Mei Yu. He is survived
by her, five children from a previous marriage and four grandchildren.
|