Legend Fine Arts

 


Mike Jackson, Owner

  Biographies   Pottery   Kansas Potters  

legendfinearts@sbcglobal.net


Angelo Garzio (1922-2008)


Angelo Garzio is Professor Emeritus of Ceramics at Kansas State University. He received an M.F.A. in 1954 and has taught in multiple universities and crafts programs throughout the country.

His style is distinct, and his technique and artistry are sharp and sophisticated. The forms he employs are most frequently classical in nature, but with his very individualistically subtle style.

He is an innovative and master glazer. Many of his glazes are revolutionary ideas used on classical forms. This probably is the most outstanding characteristic of the bowl that is found in this gallery. The form itself would be classified as high art. With the addition of his both strong and subtle glazing affect, the piece is stunning and stands comfortably next to any other masterpiece.

Garzio’s work is widely exhibited throughout the world. He commands high prices that are rapidly escalating. His works are found only in major galleries and prominent auctions.

Mr. Garzio was a master potter and KSU distinguished graduate professor of art. He was a resident of Manhattan for more than 50 years.

Prof. Garzio was born July 22, 1922 in the small Italian village of Mirabello Sannitico in the Molise region. In what was a familiar story in those days, his father immigrated to this country first, working in Syracuse, N.Y. as a bricklayer and stonemason until the rest of the family could afford to join him. Angelo and his mother Rose, joined his father in this country in 1929. Raised as an only child (his brother, Giovanni, died in Italy as a toddler of influenza), Angelo was educated in the Syracuse public school system.

In October 1939, he enlisted in the New York National Guard; in 1942, he joined the U.S. Army Air Force, flying in B-26 bombers in the war in the Pacific, and was honorably discharged in 1945. In one of his proudest moments, he became a U.S. citizen in 1956.

While most in the community knew Prof. Garzio as an artist and craftsman, fewer may have known that his early training was as a librarian and a musician. Using the GI Bill, he earned two degrees from Syracuse University in 1949: a BS in library science and BA in music, art, and literature. Prof. Garzio played French horn professionally with the Syracuse and Utica, N.Y. symphonies and the Bridgeport, Conn. Symphony.

His first trip back to his country of birth came in 1950, when he studied Art History at the University of Florence, Italy, receiving the diploma di proffito. He studied one year at the University of Chicago, majoring in art history. He transferred to the University of Iowa to continue in art history, receiving a master of arts degree in 1954.

It was while he was at the University of Iowa that Prof. Garzio took a course in ceramics from Prof. Glen Nelson. At that time, Nelson was one of the leaders in reviving pottery as an art form in America. Prof. Garzio fell in love with pottery, and at the end of the semester took first prize in the Iowa Arts and Crafts Show. In 1955, he completed his MFA in ceramics at the University of Iowa, the terminal degree in his field.

Before coming to Kansas State University in 1957, he was a guest potter at the famous Arabia Potteries in Helsinki, Finland in 1956-57, marking the beginning of his international reputation as a master potter. Prof. Garzio was awarded four Fulbright Senior Lectureships during his career: Lahore, Pakistan (1961-62); Seoul, South Korea (1973-74); Zaria, Nigeria (1977-78); and Obera, Argentina (1992). At the age of 70, Prof. Garzio was a U.S. State Department Cultural Arts Visiting Ceramic Lecturer to Santa Cruz and Sucre, Bolivia.

When Prof. Garzio arrived at Kansas State in 1957 as an assistant professor, ceramics was taught in the College of Home Economics, though pottery eventually was integrated with the other arts to form the Department of Art in the College of Arts and Sciences. He became associate professor in 1962 and full professor in 1966. In 1972, he became the first humanist to receive the university’s Distinguished Graduate Faculty Award.

He was listed in Who’s Who in American Art since 1986. His pottery has been exhibited regionally, nationally, and internationally. Further, and unusual for a practicing artist, Prof. Garzio published extensively in journals such as “Ceramics Monthly,” the “New Zealand Potter,” and “Ceramica.”

He demonstrated his zest for life in many ways. Though Italian by birth and raised in an East Coast city, the stark beauty of the Flint Hills resonated deeply within him, and he spent long hours on his farm near Riley. Every year, he would plant hundreds of trees there, watering them by hand; tree farming and land preservation became his passions, and he was honored for his commitment and work in this area. One often could find him out at the farm working on the land, aided by a strong-backed K-State student trying to keep up with this man four times their age.

Prof. Garzio had a passion for teaching, and for him teaching and learning neither began nor ended in the classroom. While his daughter remembers him decrying the woeful state of students every year for the last 20 years that he taught, he remained in the KSU classroom until the age of 70, and was a fixture in his studio in the old West Stadium on campus up until his stroke in August 2007. He maintained close relationships with many of his former students through the years, and would speak of them with great pride and fondness.

Items for sale from Legend Fine Arts


Legend Fine Arts

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