Arteni was born on September 21, 1947, in Bucharest, Romania, to Constanța Arteni and Vasile Arteni, a physician who specialized in otorhinolaryngology. Ștefan grew up primarily in Bucharest, and as a teenager was introduced to eastern Asian characters and letters while watching the movie Harakiri (1962) on his black-and-white family television set. Eastern Asian characters and letters piqued his curiosity and he discovered a passion, deep respect and understanding for the oriental arts, symbols, and calligraphy. In a letter to his close friend Michael Finkenthal,[1] he expressed the impact this experience had on him, and how it influenced his style and later work:
My interest in calligraphy began in high school. My Japanization - he wrote - began with that black-and-white film Harakiri, seen in the motherland: every image perfectly composed and especially... the ritual. I was profoundly impressed by the perfect composition of each image. Many scenes suggest a wonderful calligraphic dance. In terms of its content, the motion picture draws attention to the performative qualities of ritual.
After attending the Nicolae Tonitza High School of Fine Arts[2] between 1961 and 1965, he was denied admission to a Fine Arts program in the state-run university system because his liberal parents were considered politically unreliable by Nicolae Ceaușescu's regime. As a result, he studied architecture at the Ion Mincu University of Architecture and Urban Planning,[3] from which he graduated in 1970.[4]
1971 - present
His early life was profoundly impacted by the communist regime in Romania under Ceaușescu's administration. Due to the harsh conditions by the communist party, upon completion of his studies in 1971, Arteni's parents' graduation gift was a trip to Paris to study the city's great museums. However, his parents' real intentions were to flee Romania and remain in exile. As such, they escaped Romania in 1971 and sought political asylum in Rome, Italy, due to cultural and financial reasons.
Arteni never returned to his native land, but the imprint of the country never left his sense of self.[5]
After a few weeks, in 1971 at the age of 24, Arteni enrolled in the Accademia di Belle Arti di Roma, where he studied with Luigi Montanarini and Sandro Trotti, both celebrated painters.[citation needed] On the very first day of class he met Myriam Sánchez Posada, a fellow student from Colombia.[citation needed] They became inseparable and married in 1975. In the words of Arteni, "together we wandered into the labyrinth of art".[citation needed]
At this point in his career, Arteni increased his emphasis on abstract forms in his painting, while continuing his exploration of line, color, and composition.
In Rome, between 1972 and 1974 he thoroughly explored Italian painting and art and worked for the Romanian broadcast of Vatican Radio as a redactor and art historian. He wrote, produced, and broadcast 61-episode series on Christian Art in Europe. In this time period, he exhibited some of his first works and published some of the results of the research he and Myriam made on materials and techniques of painting, authoring over 40 papers published by the International Council of Museums,[6] on techniques, individual artists, materials and the theory of art. These investigations were presented in the form of scientific papers at various international conferences, and are currently being used in several European teaching institutions.
In 1977, Arteni and his wife Myriam, herself an award-winning painter and skilled fine art book-maker, left Rome and moved to New York City, where they established themselves and lived together for the remainder of his life until his death in 2020 at the age of 72, due to a sudden and aggressive form of cancer.
Career
Arteni continued his informal studies of art at several universities in New York, but as a formal student he studied at Chinese, Korean, and Japanese calligraphy. He pursued his education in art history, fine arts, icon and mural painting, and the restitution and conservation of architectural monuments.
Arteni became a student of Tanaka Setsuzan,[7] a Living Master and President of the Nihon Shodo Geijutsu Kyokai[8] (the Japanese Calligraphy Art Association), founded by Kamijo Shinzan, one of the greatest calligraphers of Japan.
He pursued studies in architecture, art, history, fine arts, icon and mural painting, and the restitution and conservation of architectural monuments. He was also proficient in several languages including Romanian, English, Spanish, French, Italian, Japanese, Russian, Latin, Greek, and German.
Building upon Hesychast and Zen spirituality, Ștefan Arteni, who sometimes used the sobriquet Kyosen (Crazy Hermit), also taught calligraphy: dwelling in art, stilling the mind, enstasis and meditation with the brush.
Arteni described the process of painting as second-order cybernetics in action. The appropriate epistemology is constructivist. The ludic ritual act of the performance event creates form.
Arteni's work echoes the myth of Ulysses, it is a quest leading the artist to address the intersection of art and meditative spirituality at the heart of form.
Awards
In 2005, Arteni was awarded the highest rank in Japanese calligraphy, the title of Shihan, an honorific title used to refer to Master Teachers or masters of a specific style. He is the only non-Japanese artist to earn the title, to date. According to the ancient custom, along with his promotion to the rank of master came the bestowing of a new calligraphy name, Geizan, which translates from Japanese as "Art Mountain". The name was given to Arteni by Tanaka Setsuzan.
During this period, Arteni was also the first western artist to be awarded the title of Master Seal Carver. His seals have been favorably compared to Qi Baishi's, the President of the China Artists Association, whose artistic style showed no signs of western influence.
In competitions organized by the Japan Calligraphic Art Academy in Tokyo and the Japan Calligraphy Center in Los Angeles, Arteni was awarded the Japan Foreign Minister's Grand Prize for Calligraphy in 1996 and 2005, the Silver Award for Kana in 1999, and the Grand Prize for Calligraphy of the Japanese Consul in 2002.
Works
Arteni has extensively exhibited calligraphies and paintings throughout Europe, the United States and in Japan, Korea, China and Taiwan, with over 50 exhibitions.[9] His works are in numerous prestigious private, public and corporate collections.[10] In addition, Arteni frequently provided demonstrations and lectures on many aspects of his work.[11] He participated in numerous international conferences and expositions over the years.
Year
Title
Location
1973
"Mostra Personalle de Pittura"
Galleria La Papessa, Rome, Italy
1973
"Mostra Personale di Myriam Sánchez Posada e Ștefan Arteni"
Galleria L'Accento, Rome, Italy
1974
"L'Arte Giapponese in Italia"
Foreign Press Club (Rome)
1990
"Art in Exile"
Manhattan East Gallery (New York)
1991
Unknown
Manhattan East Gallery (New York)
1992
Unknown
Manhattan East Gallery (New York)
1995
Unknown
Golden West College Galleries (Huntington Beach, California)
1995
Unknown
Sumner Museum (Washington, DC)
1996
Unknown
Doizaki Galleries (Los Angeles)
1996
Unknown
Seton Hall University Galleries (South Orange, New Jersey)
1997
Unknown
Doizaki Galleries (Los Angeles)
1997
Unknown
Tweed Museum (Duluth, Minnesota)
1997
"East and West. Allegories"
Kobe Art Hall (Kobe, Japan)
1998
Unknown
Mansfield Freeman and Davison Center for the Arts, Wesleyan University (Middletown, Connecticut)
1998
Unknown
Doizaki Galleries (Los Angeles)
1999
Avant-garde Oriental Calligraphy
Doul Art Center (Seoul)
1999
Unknown
Doizaki Galleries (Los Angeles)
1999
"Scroll Fragments"
Kobe Art Hall, (Kobe, Japan)
1999
"The Sign of the Logos"
St. Mark's Library, The General Theological Seminary (New York)
1999
"Brushpaths"
The General Theological Seminary (New York)
2000
Unknown
Doizaki Galleries (Los Angeles)
2000
"Ink 2000"
Newhouse Salon, (Brooklyn, New York)
2000
"Orpheus"
St. Mark's Library Seabury Hall, The General Theological Seminary (New York)
2000
"A New Perspective on Contemporary Calligraphy: A Dialogue with Modern Sinitic Writing Art"
Taiwan Museum of Art and Seaport Art Center (Taichung, Taiwan)
2001
Unknown
Doizaki Galleries (Los Angeles)
2001
"Contemporary Calligraphy Masters, Representatives and Invitational Exhibition"
Tokyo Ginza Gallery Museum (Tokyo)
2002
Unknown
Doizaki Galleries (Los Angeles)
2003
Unknown
Tokyo Ginza Gallery Museum (Tokyo, Japan)
2003
"Art of Ink 2003"
Shaanxi History Museum (Xi'an, China)
2004
Unknown
Doizaki Galleries, (Los Angeles)
2004
"Art of Ink 2004"
Mobile Museum of Art (Mobile, Alabama)
2004
"Mulpa International Exhibition"
Mulpa Art Center (Seoul, Korea) and Seoho Museum (Seoul, Korea)
2004
"Yusho Ten"
Tokyo-Geijyutu-Gekijyo (Tokyo, Japan)
2005
"Energy and Diffusion" - Seoul Calligraphy Biennial
Seoul Museum of Art, Seoul Museum of History, Gong-Pyung Art Center, Gallery La Mer, Gong Gallery, Seoul, Korea
Collective Exhibition "The World Calligraphy Festival"
International Modern Calligraphy Exhibition, Gong-Pyung Art Center, Seoul, Korea)
2007
"Art of ink"
Association Culturelle Franco-Japonaise de TENRI - Espace Culturel Bertin Poirée, Paris, France
2008
"On the Borderline"
National Seoul Art Center, Seoul, Korea
2008
"Art of Seal Carving in America 2008"
Irvine Fine Arts Center, Irvine, California
2009
"Calligraphy Trends Sprouting in Europe"
Sori Arts Center of Jeollabuk-do, Jeonju, South Korea
2009
"Ashdown Forest"
New York Public Library
2011
"Art of Ink"
Chiang Mai University, Thailand
2012
"Brushed Voices" (Art of Ink)
Shelter Rock Art Gallery, Unitarian Universalist Congregation, Manhasset, NY
2013
9th World Calligraphy Biennale of Jeollabuk-do
Sori Arts Center of Jeollabuk-do, Jeonju, South Korea
2013
"Art of Ink in America: Gesture and Beyond"
Godwin-Ternbach Museum, Queens College, NY
2014
"Art of Ink in America"
Alexey von Schlippe Gallery of Art, University of Connecticut
2017
Unknown
La National, Spanish Benevolent Society of New York
2018
"Composition"
Saphira & Ventura Gallery, Midtown NYC
2022
"Time Waits For No Man"
Miyako Hotel & Hammerfriar Gallery, California
Publications and lecture demonstrations
Since 1974, Arteni has authored over one-hundred radio broadcasts and published papers on art history, the manufacture of artist's materials, the techniques and materials of painting, and aesthetics (phenomenology and systems theory).
He has participated in the Congresses of the International Council of Museums (Committee for Conservation),[13] the Deutsches Farbenzentrum, the Chinese Society for Aesthetics, ICMS8 (Gestes, formes et processus signifiants en musique et semiotique interarts), and in numerous other international Symposia and Conferences. Arteni has also participated in the Conferences of and chaired the I.S.F. Section "Lipids in Art" in the United States, England, and France.
In recent years, he has lectured on and demonstrated calligraphy (Greek, Sanskrit, Chinese, and Japanese), and participated in workshops in New York (1995 and 1996); the Freeman Center for East Asian Studies at Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT (1998); Columbia University, New York (1998); and Saint Mark Library, General Theological Seminary, New York (1999).[14]
He concentrated his research on the pictorial fact and procedural switches between formal contextures, the ludic ritual act of performance event that creates a form-space, art communication as a high-context process, the mereotopology of formal constructs, metacultural sensibility and complexity theory, and the complementarity of painting and calligraphy.
Arteni is also the first Western artist to master the art of seal cutting and is co-founder of Sol Invictus Press (sol invictus means invincible sun, which is a reference to the last Roman god before the Christianization of the Roman Empire). Many of their creations have been included in the Bodleian Library at Oxford University. These works extensively detailed Arteni's fascination and love of calligraphy from different cultures.
He has also pioneered the art of sumi ink monoprinting and large-size seal cutting, and has explored and expanded the horizon of clay monoprinting. In addition to painting and calligraphy, Arteni demonstrated his excellence in drawing, printmaking and collage. He also expanded his art into new materials, including alkyds, gouache, watercolor and red seal paste.
His limited-edition published books have been widely exhibited:
Year
Location
2022
Symbiosis of Script, Font, and Form: A Selection of Artists’ Books - Laudes Creaturarum - Bridwell Library Special Collections
2004
"In Memoriam Daniel Simko. Word as Icon" - The New York Public Library, Slavic and Baltic Division (New York)
2000
22 Book Artists - Harper Collins Exhibition Space (New York)
1998
Retrospective of Artist's Books and Related Materials - St. Mark's Library, The General Theological Seminary (New York)
Materials of the artist, the survival of traditional grounding and priming methods for oil painting[36]
1984
Glas sub-surface painting in Romania, seventeenth to twentieth centuries[37]
1984
Critical evaluation of data on the composition of ancient materials. P 1: Structural components of painter layer. P 2: Paints and technics[38]
1984
The secret of masters: Historical controversies and hypotheses[39]
1984
From Handcraft to Mass production: notes on the manufacture of oil painting materials[40]
1984
Critical ealuation of data on the composition of ancient materials: part. I: Structural components of the paint layer: part. II: Paints and techniques[41]
1984
The secret of the Masters: historical controversies and hypotheses[42]
1981
The medium et grounds of 17th century Flemish et Dutch pictures of flowers[43]
Arteni's stylistic matrix consists of the interplay of Byzantine tradition, Western formal procedures, and Far Eastern calligraphy and seal-carving methods, a simultaneous plurality of interwoven recursive and permutative differences.[48]
^小林一茶; Mackenzie, Lewis; De Arteni, Myriam S. P; Arteni, Stefan; Sol Invictus Press (1997). Fool of a cat ...: haiku (in Italian). Jackson Heights, New York, N.Y.: Sol Invictus. OCLC727829389.
^Arteni, Stefan C; De Arteni, Myrian Sanchez-Posada (1988). "Drawing materials water-base mediums". Conservation-restoration of Leather and Wood Training of Restorers, Budapest, 1988.: 449–456. OCLC908497561.