Biography
Augusto
Giacometti
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Biography of Augusto Giacometti
Antonio Augusto
Giacometti, the son of Giacomo and Marta Giacometti Stampa,
was born on 16th August 1877 in Stampa, in the Val Bregaglia (Grigioni Canton) in Switzerland. His second cousin was Giovanni Giacometti,
father of Alberto. From 1894 to 1897 he lived in Zurich, where he gained a diploma as a teacher of
drawing at the School of Arts and Crafts. In the summer of 1897 he went to Paris, where he
enrolled at the School of Decorative Arts and studied under Eugène Grasset. He put
his manual skill into practice in graphic decoration based on the floral style pioneered by William
Morris. Augusto took images from painting and used them in
artisan work, designing mosaics, glass, clocks and posters. From 1902 onwards he lived in
Florence and studied in depth the work of Beato Angelico and all the great
Renaissance masters. He shared the enthusiasm for the avant-garde that originated from the Caffè delle
Giubbe Rosse in the circle of Papini, Soffici and Prezzemolini. In a process of gradual
emancipation from ornamental art, he used a technique of applying separate colours with a
spatula to flattened areas in order to create a range of effects, including the "carpet" and
"separate tessera mosaic" effect. He received his first public
commissions in Switzerland in 1914: a mosaic for a fountain at the University of Zurich and a
tempera canvas portraying the Resurrection of Christ for the church of San Pietro in Coltura.
During the same period he began to produce a series of pastels with total freedom of
form, including the Astrazione da un quadro di Fra Angelico. When the First World War broke out,
he was obliged to return to Stampa. In 1917 he became interested in
the dadaist movement, admiring its spirit of freedom of expression, and appeared in the
manifesto of radical artists. After achieving fame in Switzerland, even in the most
bourgeois circles, in 1921-22 Augusto returned to Italy, where he visited Venice, Turin, Milan and
Naples. He subsequently travelled around Europe, seeking fortune in Germany, Sweden, Denmark and
Holland. A journey to London in 1928 brought him into contact with William Turner, whom he considered to be
the founder of impressionism not yet fully understood by the critics.
He travelled to Tunisia and Algeria and received numerous public awards in his homeland. The
war shook the whole of Europe and brought all the major art exhibitions and markets
to a standstill. Augusto Giacometti devoted the later years of his life to writing
his autobiography, which was published in 1943 under the title Da Stampa a Firenze. He
died on 9th June 1947 from a heart attack.
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