Michele Caltagirone Explained

Michele Caltagirone
Birth Date:1854 9, df = yes
Birth Place:Casteltermini, Kingdom of the Two Sicilies
Death Place:Casteltermini, Sicily, Italy

Michele Caltagirone (1854-1928) also known as il Quarantino[1] was a Sicilian sculptor who spent most of his life in Casteltermini, Sicily, Italy. He is known for producing ecclesiastical works for various churches throughout Sicily using stone, wood, and clay.[2]

Early life

Caltagirone was born on 2 September 1854 to Girolamo Caltagirone and Maria Angela Lo Bue in Casteltermini, a commune in the province of Agrigento, Sicily, southern Italy. Although Sicilian feudalism was formally abolished during the Napoleonic Wars, much of the peasant class was excluded from rising in social status.[3] Consequently, Caltagirone was expected to become a shoemaker, the profession of his father. As a young apprentice, he spent time away from his father's workshop to model and shape clay.

Career

By the time Caltagirone was 25 years old, he had quit his occupation as a shoemaker to become a full time sculptor. He studied in Palermo for about two years to learn the techniques of sculpting wood before returning to Casteltermini to open a workshop. He was commissioned by monasteries, congregations, parish priests, and private citizens to create works that primarily focused on sacred images.[4]

Michele Caltagirone remained an isolated person for most of his life. Having never married or had children, he died on 1 January 1928 in Casteltermini after becoming ill several months prior.[5] [6]

Works

In Sicily and the United States:[7]

In Casteltermini:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Gulli, Domenica. Casteltermini Dal Territorio al Museo. Kalòs, n. 3, July/September 2010, pp. 40-43.
  2. Calderone, Roberto. Michele Caltagirone (Quarantino) : una vita per l'arte. 1970.
  3. Sardell, Jason. Economic Origins of the Mafia and Patronage System in Sicily. 2009. Worcester Polytechnic Institute, undergraduate dissertation.
  4. Calderone 42-43.
  5. Calderone, 25-26.
  6. http://www.comune.casteltermini.ag.it/zf/index.php/storia-comune "Storia Del Comune."
  7. Calderone, 41-46.
  8. Italy. Comune di Acquaviva Platani, Caltanissetta, Sicilia. Piano d'Azione per l'Energia Sostenibile. Patto dei Sindaci, January 2015.
  9. http://lnx.comune.casteltermini.ag.it/home/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=80 Le Chiese