Showing posts with label Martinho Correia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Martinho Correia. Show all posts

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Sbandieratori Villa Bardini Florence Italy

Cari Amici (Dear Friends),

Here are some more images from the art reception for “Annigoni’s Legacy – Angel Academy Student/Faculty Exhibition” at the Villa Bardini in Florence, Italy.


The Sbandieratori performed that night as they have since Angel Academy instructor Martinho Isidro Correia joined their ranks.

The group is officially called ”Sbandieratori dei Borghi e Sestieri Fiorentini” and is the team of Florentine flag wavers, drummers, and trumpeters. They are available for events in various size groups, normally a smaller group at Angel’s previous exhibits on Via San Niccolò (also in Florence). However, the Villa Bardini had such a lovely and larger space that we were able to enjoy a more full experience.

The Sbandieratori combines a type of martial art with the military disciplines of the Middle Ages. Today the Sbandieratori bring a festive feel to any event in Florence, as well as an “elegant, noble and strong, sturdy and vibrant” youthful vigor. I hope you enjoy these snapshots of their performances as the sun went down over Florence and the Villa Bardini.







Sunday, July 6, 2008

Teaching Art in Florence, Italy

Cari Amici,

I mentioned before that I have been working as an assistant for Martinho Correia at the Angel Academy of Art here in Florence, Italy.
Martinho has been teaching a 2-week workshop on Painting Methods of the Great European Academies.


By day, we worked in the studio in the traditional method of learning how to paint by copying great artworks of the past. This teaches an artist so much more than copying a photograph! Martinho is shown here with one of his students. We had a great class – good energy with all of us.

One morning we all met Martinho at the mercato porcellino for a quick coffee or breakfast and then we walked to the Chiesa di Santa Felìcita, between the Ponte Vecchio and the Pitti Palace. I show you here some images I took in the church. The painting on the right is by Antonio Ciseri (1821-1891) titled “Santa Felìcita e il martirio dei Maccabei”. The bodies are fantastic and I like the zig-zagging composition. We also viewed the beautiful colors and figures of the Deposizione by Jacopo Pontormo (1494-1556), a lovely fresco on the right as you enter the church.

Our next stop was the Pitti Palace and her museums. Especially interesting was the section that the Medici family lived in. Martinho is very familiar with so many specific artworks and gave interesting comments on many of them, relating them to our current projects. Unfortunately for me, I missed too many of his art lessons because I tend to linger too long and can never seem to stay with a group for all of the time.



I often kept the studio open daily longer than promised so that we could try to get more painting done, but afterwards, we would meet one another for dinner and later, dancing. Pictured here are Ksenia, Isabelle, Martinho, and me at the salsa club Jaragua. We danced here many nights, but also visited many of the other clubs and aperitivos around Florence. One night at Jaragua, we got to see a performance by more professional dancers.

This 2-week workshop has been a great experience for me. But as much as I love to dance, the “getting-to-bed-at-5-am” routine is starting to wear on me. That said, I would probably make the same choice again because I met such cool people and we learned a lot and danced even more.

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Street Painting Melinda Gallo



Cari Amici,

On Monday, I began working as an assistant to Canadian painter and current instructor at Angel Academy of Art Martinho Correia. Martinho is teaching a 2-week workshop on Painting Methods of the Great European Academies and I am happy to have been asked to assist so that I can learn something about this painting technique.

Allora, I am quite busy now as I prepare on my few “off” hours to return to Texas for a summer of teaching and sculpting. Luckily, I recently received an e-mail from the famous blogger Melinda Gallo with the attached photo taken on the 2nd of June here in Florence, Italy. I print it here with her permission. I heard about Melinda Gallo’s blog about her life in Florence last fall from my friend Lisa (who heard about it from her husband). And this past April, I met the writer at an ex-pat’s lunch in Piazza Della Signoria. Anyway, she caught me as I was re-creating William Adolph Bouguereau in 1888 titled “L’Amour au Papillon” or “Cupid With A Butterfly.”
If you want to visit Florence, you must certainly read her blog

Enjoy . . .

Thursday, June 5, 2008

More Street Painting - Florence, Italy

Cari Amici,

I hope you are not getting tired of seeing my process of being a madonnara (Italian street painter) in Florence, Italy. This past Monday was a national holiday for la bella Italia. I was hoping that this day would make up for all of the rainy Mondays that I have paid for a tessera (permit) to create paintings in pastel in the street. But . . .

I arrived to my spazio on Via Calimala around 11 a.m., about an hour or so after the other two madonnari, Roderick and Giovanni, began their day’s labor. I chose to draw a work by William Adolph Bouguereau in 1888 titled “L’Amour au Papillon” or “Cupid With A Butterfly.”

Bouguereau is a difficult artist for me to copy because his key is so light. I have a challenge to try to determine what is a light shape and what is dark on his figures. I think that was ultimately my main problem with this drawing of the bambino. However, I was able to get a decent head drawn and placed the shoulders so that I could draw in the wings. And then the drizzly rain hit. The kind that makes an artist wonder whether it is better to wait it out or just go home and work on other art projects.

I took the plastic that I had and covered up the next areas that I wanted to draw. I can work on dry pavement only. While the rain was still light, I took out my black pigment in powder form and created the background. I love the way that a black background makes the figure’s form just pop out of the ground! Most of the street painters use rubbing alcohol or even just water to help spread the powder over a large area. I prefer to simply sprinkle dark dust everywhere and rub the pigment into the pavement with my hands. But in the rain, there is no problem. Go figure . . .

I lost several hours due to the rain and called up my friend Martinho Correia to see if I could do something productive during this time. Martinho had asked me if I would work as his assistant while he teaches a class later this month called “Painting Methods of the Great European Academies” and so I was able to drop by his place nearby and find out what my job entailed. Click here if you would like more information about his workshop here in Florence.

By around 4 p.m. as my meeting was just getting started, the rain let up and the day turned out beautifully! In this next image, I am trying to fix the face after the rain. You can see how the pigment has faded a bit (compare the blacks and general contrast). And thus, I began to finish the drawing, first working on the body and legs of Cupid, then adding the architecture in the background and foreground. Lastly, I added the greenery and grasses at the bottom of the image.

You can see the Mercato Porcellino in the background, as well as my fellow madonnari street painters. The image on the right shows Giovanni cleaning his square. (Rod on the far side of Giovanni had already gone.)

Hafiza’s lovely bicycle is serving me well. I still have difficulty navigating through tourists and narrow roads, but I feel these wheels give me a freedom I did not have before. I am loving it, especially after a long day’s work and an otherwise decent walk home with all of my supplies!

Below, you may see how I finished this street painting. So many people express dismay at the idea of washing the art away each night, but I have made a discovery. There is a bizarre beauty in the destruction of such fragile art. And I find myself fascinated by the paths and patterns the draining water makes over the dry art before I start to scrub. So, for me, the destruction has become a temporary creative act. Like the rest of my “performing art” day, I am ending on a high of sorts.

And some cool news: I was contacted by Anthony Cappetto of StreetPainting.tv and interviewed for their blog about street art. Here is the interview:

StreetPainting.tv Interview of madonnara Kelly Borsheim

Buona notte!

Monday, May 26, 2008

Angel Art Exhibit - Florence, Italy

Cari Amici,
What a fantastic night last Thursday was! We held the reception for the “2008 Annual Exhibition of the Angel Academy of Art” that night. Along with other staff members, I helped Thomas Galdy hang the show. This in itself was educational for me as I watched and listened to him as he generously explained his thoughts in hanging artwork.




Martinho Correia, a painter and one of the instructors at the Angel Academy, is also one of the Bandierai degli Uffizi or “The Flagwavers of the Uffizi.” Although the house had been packed for about an hour, once we all heard that familiar drum beat in Florence, Italy, everyone followed the sound outside to watch Martinho and some of his fellow bandierai throw Florentine flags in the air back and forth in a lively performance. It was quite the show on Via San Niccolò.

[Photos of the bandierai were taken on my camera by my dear friend Hélène Delmaire.]


In the crowd outside I spotted my new friend Caitlin Andrews. I met Caitlin and her friend Teo Ninković while I was drawing in the streets of Florence as a madonnari. Although I had not heard her sing before, I invited her to sing at the reception and Angel’s director Lynne Barton was delighted to invite her as well. Caitlin did not disappoint with her animated performance in front of the delicious still lifes from the Angel Academy students. I will try to include video on my blog later.


I am afraid that, as in most gatherings of huge amounts of people, I did not get to see or speak with many that I would have liked to and I did not take enough images either. So much was going on and there was lots of positive energy to be absorbed! With her permission, I share with you an image of Hélène and me in front of one of her drawings in carboncino on exhibit. We unknowingly both wore our hair in an off-centered ponytail. Fun night! Thank you for reading and sharing it with me in this way.

PS. Buon Compleanno e baci, Hafiza! (25 Maggio)

Angel Academy of Art
Martinho Correia’s Art Site
Martinho’s Blog
Caitlin Andrews' Blog