Tano Festa
Brother of the artist Francesco Lo Savio, Tano Festa was both a painter and a photographer. His career was rooted in his childhood, as his father transmitted him a love of painting. After completing his education in philosophy and photography in Rome, Festa wrote poems that he distributed to the people in Piazza di Spagna. He lived and operated in working-class neighbourhoods and was perceived as a dangerous individual by the police. Festa exhibited for the first time in 1959 with Franco Angeli, Mario Schifano and Giuseppe Uncini at the gallery La Salita in Rome, which would present his first solo exhibition in 1961. The works of this period had an unusual force, and would be defined by De Chirico as “modernist chaos”. He also painted on small albums, later acquired by Giorgio Franchetti, collector and one of Festa’s greatest supporters. These sketches are seminal, in that they show the careful reflection preceding his final works. He was particularly attracted by the mystery and multiplicity behind the pure reality of objects, which in his canvases were translated into blue fields, red cities and shocking lighting. He also constantly observed and collected pyramids and spheres. Adhering to informal and gestural art, he painted monochromes and isolated objects of everyday life, especially shutters, mirrors and windows, which fascinated him since his childhood. In an interview from 1987 he would state that in that period he found inspiration also in Matta, Tobey, De Kooning and Pollock. In 1962 he travelled to the USA with his colleague and friend Mario Schifano, and they participated with Baj, Rotella and others in the exhibition “New Realists” at the Sidney Janis Gallery in New York. In 1963, following the suicide of his brother Rosario, he started painting with unprecedented rage, dipping his fingers directly in the paint. It was in this period that with Schifano he came up with the idea of reversing American Pop Art, by revisiting famous Italian artists of the past, such as Michelangelo and Leonardo, and interpreting their pieces as advertisings. In fact, according to them, unlike Americans, Italians still consumed cultural images. Throughout the 1960s, in Rome, he became close with gallerist Plinio de’ Martiis, collector Giorgio Franchetti and artists Mario Schifano, Mimmo Rotella, Enrico Castellani and Franco Angeli. In 1964 he exhibited for the first time at the Venice Biennale. The 1970s marked a difficult period in his life: addicted to drugs, medicines and alcohol, he lost his creativity, and lived in poverty and isolation. The 1980s brought him back to the artistic life and saw him painting in a more figurative way. His works arose now from an intuition, a historic picture, a movie or a dream, which he would define as his culture’s ghosts, namely television images assailing him every day. Weakened since his early age by a bad health, and after a long illness, Festa died in 1988.
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Tano Festa
Brother of the artist Francesco Lo Savio, Tano Festa was both a painter and a photographer. His career was rooted in his childhood, as his father transmitted him a love of painting. After completing his education in philosophy and photography in Rome, Festa wrote poems that he distributed to the people in Piazza di Spagna. He lived and operated in working-class neighbourhoods and was perceived as a dangerous individual by the police. Festa exhibited for the first time in 1959 with Franco Angeli, Mario Schifano and Giuseppe Uncini at the gallery La Salita in Rome, which would present his first solo exhibition in 1961. The works of this period had an unusual force, and would be defined by De Chirico as “modernist chaos”. He also painted on small albums, later acquired by Giorgio Franchetti, collector and one of Festa’s greatest supporters. These sketches are seminal, in that they show the careful reflection preceding his final works. He was particularly attracted by the mystery and multiplicity behind the pure reality of objects, which in his canvases were translated into blue fields, red cities and shocking lighting. He also constantly observed and collected pyramids and spheres. Adhering to informal and gestural art, he painted monochromes and isolated objects of everyday life, especially shutters, mirrors and windows, which fascinated him since his childhood. In an interview from 1987 he would state that in that period he found inspiration also in Matta, Tobey, De Kooning and Pollock. In 1962 he travelled to the USA with his colleague and friend Mario Schifano, and they participated with Baj, Rotella and others in the exhibition “New Realists” at the Sidney Janis Gallery in New York. In 1963, following the suicide of his brother Rosario, he started painting with unprecedented rage, dipping his fingers directly in the paint. It was in this period that with Schifano he came up with the idea of reversing American Pop Art, by revisiting famous Italian artists of the past, such as Michelangelo and Leonardo, and interpreting their pieces as advertisings. In fact, according to them, unlike Americans, Italians still consumed cultural images. Throughout the 1960s, in Rome, he became close with gallerist Plinio de’ Martiis, collector Giorgio Franchetti and artists Mario Schifano, Mimmo Rotella, Enrico Castellani and Franco Angeli. In 1964 he exhibited for the first time at the Venice Biennale. The 1970s marked a difficult period in his life: addicted to drugs, medicines and alcohol, he lost his creativity, and lived in poverty and isolation. The 1980s brought him back to the artistic life and saw him painting in a more figurative way. His works arose now from an intuition, a historic picture, a movie or a dream, which he would define as his culture’s ghosts, namely television images assailing him every day. Weakened since his early age by a bad health, and after a long illness, Festa died in 1988.
Learn More
Sign up for a FREE account today!
Sign Up
Digitizing your art collection allows you to access it anywhere around the world.
A computer, tablet, and phone showing the native ArtCollection.io applications.

Available on any device, mac, pc & more

ArtCollection.io is a cloud based solution that gives you access to your collection anywhere you have a secure internet connection. In addition to a beautiful web dashboard, we also provide users with a suite of mobile applications that allow for data synchronization and offline browsing. Feel confident in your ability to access your art collection anywhere around the world at anytime. Download ArtCollection.io today!

App Store button to download iOS application.
Google Play Button to download Android application.