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Born
in Florence on October 1, 1915, Marcello Fantoni registered at the Institute
of Art at Porta Romana in 1927 to attend the course The Art of Ceramics,
which at that time was taught by the ceramist Carlo Guerrini, artistic director
of the Cantagalli factory. Other teachers also contributed to his artistic
formation including Libero Andreotti and Bruno Innocenti in sculpture and
Gianni Vagnetti in the figure. He graduated in '34 as a 'maestro' of art,
and began working as a ceramist. In 1936, after having worked for a few
months as the artistic director of a factory in Perugia, he established
himself in the stables of Villa Fabbricotti in Florence and established
the Fantoni Ceramic studio. Its production of serial and unique pieces had
remarkable success at the Florentine Arts and Crafts Exhibit in '37, revealing
itself in line with the most recent tendencies, so much so that at the beginning
of hostilities his production had already received notable artistic and
commercial attention in Italy and abroad. After the war years, when Fantoni
was involved in the resistance, in '46 he began the creative and productive
fervor that will allow him to enlarge his company, reaching at the beginning
of the next decade the impressive size of over fifty collaborators. Among
his employees there were many students who, in ceramics and other fields,
would become excellent artisans and even famous artists. In the following
decades, especially between '50 and '70, the success of his work continued
to increase, his unique pieces of sculpture and vascular formations, characterized
by a design in step with the contemporary artistic currents, like archaic
stylization inspired by Etruscan models, rendered modern because of their
modern handling of materials, glazes and colors. For this original spirit
of modernity, his works entered in private collections and in the most important
museums of the world: in the United States his works can be seen at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art of New York, the Brooklyn Museum, the Museum
of Fine Art of Boston, the Currier Gallery, the Syracuse Museum. In Britain
they are in the Victoria and Albert Museum of London, the City Art Gallery
of Manchester, at Royal Scottish Museum of Edinburg. In Japan they are present
at the Museum of Modern Art of Tokyo and Kyoto. In Italy they are represented
at the International Museum of Ceramics in Faenza, the National Bargello
Museum and at the Gabinetto Disegni e Stampe of the Uffizi. In his long
and versatile career, Fantoni has completed works for churches, public and
private buildings, schools, cinemas, theaters and ships cementing himself
in both figurative and abstract ceramics and various metals, and qualifying
himself also in the field of medalism. In 1970 he founded the International
School of Ceramic Arts at his laboratory in via Bolognese in Florence where
he continues to work and teach... |