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UMVA Portraits Pop Up at the Lincoln Theatre in August

 The Union of Maine Visual Artists in conjunction with The Lincoln Theatre, 2 Theater St, Damariscotta, ME, proudly presents the UMVA Portrait Pop-Up, which will take place in the Lincoln Theatre second floor lobby. The 2D exhibition of Portraits in a variety of mediums runs from July 30th to August 17th, and features notable works by current and former members of the UMVA, including the late UMVA founder Carlo Pittore.  Pittore is the subject of Maine Masters film, CARLO …  and his Merry Band of Artists, a documentary by Richard Kane, which will be shown at 7 pm at the Lincoln Theatre on August 8th. The artists’ reception is also August 8th, from 4:30 to 6:30 pm.  The art exhibit is intended to complement the documentary film.  All works will be for sale, and will benefit UMVA artists as well as The Lincoln Theatre.  Contact the Lincoln Theatre for other show times and ticket prices.

 

Lesia Sochor - Self Portrait



Lesley MacVane - Viva La Revolution!

Pittore, In addition to being one of the UMVA founders in 1975, also created "The Academy of Carlo Pittore" in 1987 at his studio in Bowdoinham, Maine.  Here he invited artists from all over to come and share their knowledge and talents in an academic forum; while he hosted drawing classes, painted and drew the artists (and models) and also cooked for them. The full film portrait of Pittore that emerges in interviews with those who knew him is a collage of Neal Cassady, Pablo Picasso, and Emeril Lagasse.  The UMVA proposed, lobbied for, and successfully passed into state law the “Maine Percent for Art Program” and the “Artist’s Estate Tax Law”. From 1978 to 1980, Pittore was a council member for the "Comprehensive Employment Training Act Artists Project" in New York City. Just before his death in 2005, the Maine College of Art awarded Pittore an honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts. 

 

Self Portrait by Carlo Pittore

The "Carlo Pittore Foundation for the Figurative Arts" was founded in 2006. Pittore was a thoroughgoing humanist devoted to the human figure. He drew and painted just about everyone he knew. His nudes and portraits are very much like the man himself — bold, boisterous even, frank, sensuous, and uncompromising. His oeuvre includes paintings of boxers, carnival performers, and modern takes on classical paintings, portraits, self-portraits, nudes, landscapes, mail art, and his comic drawings. 

A figurative painter in the modernist manner of Lucian Freud and Alice Neel, Pittore painted in the figurative expressionist and portraiture style; focusing mainly on the nude form of study. On account of this, critics and objectors occasionally viewed his work as "erotic" rather than objective art. 

Throughout his life, Pittore was extremely vocal toward such critics and what he perceived to be "ignorance" toward his art or art in general. He refused the title of Gay artist. He did not shy away from either voicing his opinion in letters to the editor or removing his exhibits from art galleries or public showings. His exhibit of Boxers at a Portland restaurant was removed by the owner after patrons complained of their gruesome nature.   The colors red and green (symbols of the Italian flag) were two essential components in Pittore's work that defined his belief and understanding of complementary palette application. 

The contrast of these two color schemes arise time and again throughout his works; as can be seen in "Portrait of Blair Tily" (1987), "Opera - Self Portrait" (1981), "La Buffonera" (1983), and "Portrait of a Skeptic" (1996). Pittore's "Lincoln Portrait Series" was the only oil-on-canvas medium in which he worked without color. For this, he painted entirely in black and white due to the fact that the portraits were modeled after 19th-century photographs of Abraham Lincoln. Pittore died in 2005 from cancer.

The UMVA, founded in 1975, is a non-profit organization that promotes and advocates for the visual arts, artists, and all arts supporters.  As artist advocates, the UMVA initiated and saw enacted into state law the Maine Percent for Art Program (requiring a percentage of funds for state buildings to include art) and the Artist's Estate Tax Law (allowing art work to be used to pay artists estate taxes).  Other programs and projects supported by UMVA include: The Maine Arts Journal, an online, quarterly publication featuring essays by and about artists, interviews, UMVA member submissions, poetry, UMVA updates about its current projects, local chapters, and more; ARRT! Artists' Rapid Response Team, a collaboration of artists & progressive groups making art to create positive change; Lumen ARRT!!, a group creating large-scale video projections in public spaces to give a visual voice to progressive non-profits; and the New England Emmy Award-nominated Maine Masters Project, a video series of 19 compelling profiles of some of Maine’s most distinguished and often less recognized artists. There are currently two chapters: Portland and Midcoast. More information is at www.TheUMVA.org.

 

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