Tony Tascona
Tony Tascona | |
---|---|
Born | Saint Boniface, Manitoba, Canada | 16 March 1926
Died | 28 May 2006 | (aged 80)
Notable work | Commission for the Lobby of Manitoba Centennial Concert Hall, Commission for the Freshwater Institute, Commission for the Winnipeg Centennial Library, Commission for the Manitoba Law Courts Building |
Awards | Royal Architecture Institute of Canada Arts Medal 1970, Canadian Silver Jubilee Medal 1977, Academia Italia Del Arti e Del Lavoro Gold Medal 1980, Order of Canada 1996 |
Antonio Tascona CM RCA (16 March 1926 – 28 May 2006) was a Canadian artist of Italian heritage, best known for his abstract constructions featuring metallic panels made of aluminum, steel, resin, and industrial paints and lacquers.
Tascona's employment in the aircraft industry as a technician taught him the techniques used in his mature work featuring geometric abstraction. His work hangs in numerous public institutions in and throughout Canada. He was appointed to the Order of Canada in 1996.
Early life and education
Tascona was born the fifteenth of sixteen children in the predominantly francophone town of
In 1946, Tascona enrolled in the
In 1953 Tascona began work as a technician for
Development of constructions
Utilizing the skills he learned in the aircraft industry, Tascona began in the late 1960s and would continue throughout the 70's and 80's to produce large format constructions built from incised metal sheets painted with industrial strength paints and lacquers giving these works a sculptural, frieze-like quality while still possessing certain modernist formal elements.[4] An early example is Tascona's first major commission in 1963 for the Manitoba Centennial Concert Hall which still hangs in situ today. This was his first construction and consisted of two ten by sixteen foot constructions consisting of numerous layered sheets of aluminium and painted using his unique industry-inspired technique.
References
- ^ Hughes, K.J. (1982). Manitoba Art Monographs. Dept. of Cultural Affairs and Historical Resources. p. 251.
- ^ a b c Enright, Robert (Summer 1984). "Winnipeg's Benevolent Godfather: an interview with Tony Tascona". Arts Manitoba. 3 (3): 31.
- ^ a b Patten, J (2001). Tony Tascona: Resonance. Winnipeg Art Gallery. p. 18.
- ^ .
- ^ a b Dillow, N.E. (1984). The dynamics of Tony Tascona: works on aluminum, 1973 to 1984. Winnipeg Art Gallery. p. 7-9.