Breaking Walls
An emigrant/immigrant journey through Southern Italy
Paintings and Ceramics by William Papaleo
An exhibition at the Calandra Institute
April 20, 2017 through August 31, 2017
Opening reception Thursday, April 20, 6pm
“Over twenty years ago, William Papaleo moved to Naples to practice the art he had learned in the U.S. A third-generation U.S. American with ancestors from Italy, Papaleo is different from most Italian American artists who use Italy to set up a sense of the past and reconnect to it through travel. Their art, more oſten than not focuses on the family and their own reactions to retiring to the home of their ancestors. What you find in Papaleo’s art is something new, something all other Italian Americans have not dealt with, and that is the role of the immigrant in today’s Italy. It is through art like this work, that we can we reach beyond the real, and sometime we even achieve the impossible.“
– from Distinguished Professor Fred Gardaphe’s exhibition catalogue essay
The John D. Calandra Italian American Institute
25 West 43rd Street, 17th floor
New York, NY 10036
Info: (212) 642-2094
For contact: Rosemary Serra
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olio su lino
150cm x 100cm
Immigrants Emigrants
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olio su lino
95cm x 145cm
Olive Workers
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olio su lino
65cm x 95cm
Guarding the Saints, Rani, Sri Lankan Man Guarding the Vasari Frescoes, Naples
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olio su lino
65cm x 95cm
Piazza del Gesù
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olio su tavola
40cm x 50cm
Ship Builder Salerno
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olio su lino
60cm x 40cm
Vicolo Naples
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olio su tavola
40cm x 40cm
Senegalese Man Salerno
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olio su legno
25cm x 40cm
Vicolo Salerno
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olio su lino
66cm x 98cm
Survivors
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olio su lino
100cm x 70cm
Naples Side Street - Indians and Italians