From 1909 to 1913 Augusto Giacometti was a great inspiration for Czech-born sculptor Helen Zelezny-Scholz.
A two-day hiking trail connects most of the locations of the family in Val Bregaglia.[1]
Life and work
Augusto was part of the successful Giacometti dynasty of painters. He grew up near the home and studio of his cousin Giovanni Giacometti, and devoted himself to painting from a young age. After completing his training as an art teacher at the Zurich University of the Arts between 1894 and 1897, he moved to Paris to study under Eugène Grasset from 1897 to 1901.[2] Following periods of residence in Florence and Zurich he settled down in Zurich in 1915.[3]
In 1917 Giacometti came to know the DadaistsTristan Tzara, Marcel Janco, Sophie Taeuber-Arp, and Hugo Ball.[2] He took part in the 8th Dada-Soirée in the Zurich merchants' hall and became a member of the group of artists "Das Neue Leben" (1918–1920). Known for his decorations in holy arts and his floral subjects, in 1919 Giacometti was initiated to the Swiss Freemasonry at Zürich.[4]
With the realization of his design for the entrance hall (now known as Giacometti-Halle) of the police station at Waisenhaus Zürich between 1923 and 1925, Giacometti accomplished one of his most important works. The great recognition he received for this work paved the way for him to further important commissions.
In 1929 he created the colourful glass windows in the east wall of the Protestant church in Frauenfeld, in 1933 the choral windows of Grossmünster in Zurich, in 1937 the choral windows of the village church of Adelboden, and in 1945 a stained-glass window of Fraumünster.
He was one of the first painters of the 20th century to take steps into non-representational painting; his abstract paintings reflect his exhaustive study of the characteristics and rules of colour. His epitaph reads Qui riposa il maestro dei colori, "here lies the master of colour."
Giacometti influenced the German painter August Babberger greatly in both his style and his choice of subjects.
Giacometti's works
Giacometti's window in Grossmünster (1933)
Window of Kirche San Giorgio in Borgonovo, where Giacometti is buried
Window of Fraumünster Das himmlische Paradies (1945)