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Arieto Bertoia was born on March 10, 1915, in the small village of San Lorenzo, Friuli, Italy, about 50 miles north of Venice and 70 miles south of Austria. He had one brother, Oreste, and one sister, Ave. Another sister died at eighteen months old; she was the subject of one of his first paintings. Even as a youngster, the local brides would ask him to design their wedding day linen embroidery patterns, as his talents were already recognized. He attended high school in Arzene, Carsara, until age 15. He then accompanied his father to Detroit to visit his brother Oreste. Upon entering North America, his birth name Arri, which often morphed into the nickname Arieto ("little Harry" in Italian), was altered to the Americanized "Harry." Bertoia stayed in Michigan to attend Cass Technical High School, a public school with a special program for talented students in arts and sciences. Later, a one-year scholarship to the Art School of the Detroit Society of Arts and Crafts allowed him to study painting and drawing. He entered and placed in many local art competitions.
Cranbrook Academy of Art 1937-1943
“Probably the best instructor I ever had. Wonderful to be with; quiet, inspirational.”
- Robert Sailors
“It is to be regretted that the days are not twice as long, as he is also an accomplished painter and wood engraver.”
- Annual report on Harry as student, Cranbrook, 1940
By the fall of 1937, another scholarship entitled him to become a student, again of painting and drawing, at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan. Cranbrook was, at the time, an amazing melting pot of creativity attracting many famous artists and designers: Carl Milles, resident-sculptor, Maija Grotell, resident-ceramist, Walter Gropius, visiting Bauhaus-architect, and others. Students did not receive a degree; rather they discovered their passion. This residence at Cranbrook was a momentous turning point in Harry’s life and career.
In 1939, Eliel Saarinen, director of the art community, asked Bertoia, age 24, to stay on at the academy to re-open the department of metalworking. With the war-time need for metals, Bertoia was forced to concentrate on jewelry, which did not use as much metal. Many of his jewelry pieces were exhibited through the Nierendorf Gallery in New York. He also shared jewelry with his friends at Cranbrook and made wedding rings for Charles and Ray Eames and Edmund Bacon. The organic shapes and fine detail of the jewelry later evolved into the early sculpture forms. Harry continued an after-hour activity he had begun as a student, experimenting and producing one-of-a-kind prints and drawings later known as monoprints. The monotypes of the 1940s are considered some of his most imaginative graphics.
Bertoia Wedding - 1943
Fellow students at Cranbrook - Florence Shust (Knoll), Charles Eames and Eero Saarinen - were influential to Bertoia’s life in later years. In 1940, Harry met Brigitta Valentiner, the daughter of Wilhelm Valentiner, Director of the Detroit Institute of Arts and the foremost expert on Rembrandt in the U.S. Brigitta pursued him relentlessly, and he and Brigitta were married on May 10, 1943.
While at Cranbrook, Harry Bertoia sent 100 prints to The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum of Non-Objective Paintings for evaluation. To his amazement, Hilla Rebay, the acquisitions director, kept all 100 prints. She bought some for herself and some for the museum. In 1943, 19 of those prints were exhibited by the Solomon Guggenheim Foundation. Harry had the most works by a single artist in that show, which included works by Moholy-Nagy, Werner Drewes and Charles Smith. Supported by a stipend from Karl Nierendorf of Nierendorf Gallery in New York, Harry continued to hold exhibits of jewelry and drawings. Harry designed two sleek tea sets; one for Eliel Saarinen which is in the Cranbrook permanent collection and the second at the Detroit Institute of Art.
California 1943-1950
In 1943, Bertoia amiably left Cranbrook to join Charles Eames in California to pursue ongoing experimental work on molded plywood. The plywood work stemmed from a continuation of the Eames/Saarinen Cranbrook chair design that won the Museum of Modern Art furniture competition. The award winning chair could not be successfully mass produced, so the mission was to find a way in which to do so. In addition, he contributed to the war effort making airplane parts manufactured by Evans Products Co, where Eames was director of Resarch & Development. Harry's innovative chair solutions made production possible and were adopted by Eames with no credit attributed to Bertoia. In frustration, Bertoia moved on.
He spent two years in San Diego, at Point Loma Naval Electrical Lab, where he worked on a project involving human engineering (ergonomics, although the word had not yet been invented) and stroboscopic photography designed to evaluate equipment. This is where he began making metal sculptures after hours, while continuing to create the monoprint drawings. In 1945, Harry held a show of his monotypes at the San Francisco Museum of Art. He became an American citizen in 1946. His daughter Lesta and son Val were born in California.
Early years in Pennsylvania 1950-1960
“Physically, he was stocky and powerfully built, capable of feats of strength. Yet he was soft-spoken, slow to anger, and gentle in his actions.”
- June Kompass Nelson
Bertoia Family Picture
In 1950, at the invitation of Hans and Florence Knoll of Knoll, Inc. furniture design company, Harry moved to eastern Pennsylvania with his growing family. The Knolls had seen his work at Cranbrook and suspected he had more ideas inside. They offered him free rein to design what he wished - furniture or sculpture - with full credit and complete recognition of his work, which was their policy with all designers. The Bertoia Diamond chair series was introduced in 1952 by Knoll. Bertoia also designed all the jigs for the production of the items. Harry set up shop in Bally in an old leaky garage building. The chair became part of the “modern” furniture movement of the 1950s. In the span of a couple of years, Bertoia completed several chair designs for Knoll. They compensated him handsomely for his wildly popular work, enabling Bertoia to purchase the farmhouse he had been renting, as well as his shop in Bally. Daughter Celia was born in Pennsylvania. The 1800’s rural stone house and the shop are still in the family.
MIT Sculpture
The first architectural sculpture commission that Harry earned was in 1953 for the General Motors Technical Center, thanks to designer and Cranbrook pal Eero Saarinen. Also commissioned by Eero Saarinen was the altar piece in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Chapel, created in 1955. This is one of the most striking sculptures by Harry Bertoia. It ushers in the contemporary era of spacial sculpture, liberated from a base.
In 1957, Harry received a grant from Chicago's Graham Foundation, affording him the opportunity to return to Italy for the first time since 1930. He visited relatives and most of the great Italian museums, reveling in the travels. He never managed to return to Italy again, although he fervently wished to do so. During this period, he began earning awards, which would continue for the rest of his life. The first European exhibit of his sculptural work was at the US Pavilion of the 1958 Brussels World's Fair.
1959 brought the first of many sculptural shows to the Staempfli Gallery, New York. They held a retrospective show in 1981. Each exhibition boasted beautiful full color catalogs.
The drawings, or monographics, were part of Harry’s creative process throughout his career. Many of them clearly show his planning and experimentation with ideas for sculptures. He enjoyed the way that the free form medium of ink and paper permitted him to get his ideas on paper quickly and spontaneously. June Kompass Nelson authored an informative and well-illustrated book on the monoprints entitled Harry Bertoia, Printmaker, in 1988.
Tonals and Sonambient 1960-1969
In 1960, Harry Bertoia started the exploration of tonal sculptures. The "tonal", or sounding sculpture, is the art that is most often associated with Harry Bertoia. Their sizes vary from a few inches all the way up to 20+ feet. Many metals were used for the rods, the most common being beryllium copper known for its wide range of color variations. Some rods are capped with cylinders or drops of metal, which, by their weight, accentuate the swaying of the tonal rods. Harry and Oreste (his brother) both loved music and spent endless happy hours experimenting and finding new sounds to incorporate into Sonambient, the auditory and visual environment created by the tonals.
Picture of Barn
Harry set up his remodeled barn in 1968-1969 to hold his special collection of 100+ tonal sculptures and act as a sound recording studio. He gave small concerts to visitors and friends. Bertoia recorded 11 albums of the haunting sounds of sculpture known as Sonambient during his lifetime. The original albums are now available on CD. Three major documentaries featuring the barn and other pieces were released about Bertoia, one of which was made by Clifford West, a colleague from Cranbrook. The Sonambient Barn has remained as he left it to this day.
A spur of the tonal experimentation was the dandelion form, which resembled a dandelion flower gone to seed. The 1964 New York World’s Fair Kodak building displayed seven gold-plated dandelions around a spraying fountain. Hundreds of carefully welded thin rods around a center orb became a spectacle of shiny wonder. These created quite a stir and are still extremely popular, fetching the highest prices of all Bertoia sculptures.
From 1953 to 1978 Harry Bertoia crafted numerous large sculptural commissions. Harry Bertoia made over 50 public sculptures of all types, which are on display in cities throughout the United States as well as abroad. Harry Bertoia was hired and admired by the greatest architects of the time, including Eero Saarinen, Henry Dreyfuss, Roche & Dinkeloo, Minoru Yamasaki, and Edward Durell Stone & I M Pei.
Dandelion Sculpture
The Last Years, 1970-1978
In 1971, Muhlenberg College of Allentown, PA, paid tribute to Harry with an Honorary Doctorate degree in Fine Arts. The Allentown Art Museum, close to his home, has shown their respect of Bertoia’s work with several exhibits both during his lifetime and since. Bertoia has been honored by local admirers near his residence in Pennsylvania as well as collectors all over the world. Bertoia was selected to do the memorial piece for the Marshall University football team in Huntington, WV, in 1972. The 2006 movie, We Are Marshall, outlines the tragic plane crash. The 6500 pound 13’ high sculpture commemorates the 75 lives taken.
Two large exhibitions were well received in Oslo, Norway, but a tragic fire destroyed several large sculptures as well as numerous monoprints. Bertoia was deeply saddened by the loss, especially of the monoprints. A successful show in Caracas, Venezuela received rave reviews.
Bertoia Gong
Learning of the dismal diagnosis of cancer caused Bertoia to work furiously on organizing his monoprints, perfecting the tonal barn collection, and putting his life’s work in order. He had produced more than 50,000 pieces of art during his short life. His work had consumed most of his time, much of his passion, and ultimately all of his energy. Toxic fumes from the materials he worked with, such as the beryllium copper he so loved, contributed to the lung cancer. Yet, his death was peaceful, he felt complete, and he accepted dying as simply one more graceful part of life. Harry Bertoia died at age 63 on November 6th, 1978. After his death, his wife Brigitta, his son Val, and his daughter Lesta continued the musical barn concert tradition begun by Harry. His wife Brigitta died in 2007 shortly after her 87th birthday. His children Val and Lesta are artists in their own right, while daughter Celia has taken over the handling of his monoprints. Lesta paints intuitive portraits and dreamy spiritual landscapes. The studio in Bally, PA, is still used today by Val Bertoia, his son, who is a sculptor and inventor. Bertoia is buried behind the Sonambient Barn under a huge 1-ton Bertoia gong.
“Man is not important. Humanity is what counts, to which, I feel, I have given my contribution. Humanity shall continue without me, but I am not going away. I am not leaving you. Every time you see some tree tops moving in the wind, you will think of me. Or you will see some beautiful flowers; you will think of me. I have never been a very religious man, not in the formal way, but each time I took a walk in the woods, I felt the presence of a superior force around me.”
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