Achilles Rizzoli
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Achilles G. Rizzoli (1896 - 1981), anonymous during his lifetime, has since his death become celebrated as an outsider artist. He is an unusual example of an "outsider" artist who had considerable formal training in drawing.
Rizzoli lived near the U.S. city of San Francisco, where he was employed as an architectural draftsman. After his death, a group of elaborate drawings came to light, many in the form of maps and architectural renderings that described an imaginary world exposition (much of which was designated "Y.T.T.E.," for "Yield To Total Elation"). The drawings include "portraits" of his mother (whom he lived with until her death in 1937) and neighborhood children "symbolically sketched" in the form of fanciful neo-baroque buildings. Some of the buildings commemorated events in Rizzoli's life, including his first glimpse of a vulva at age forty.[citation needed]
A film was made about his life and work, called Yield to Total Elation: The Life and Art of Achilles Rizzoli.
[edit] External links
- Web site for the film Yield to Total Elation
- The Ames Gallery the Artists profile of A.G. Rizzoli
- The New York Times review of 1998 Rizzoli exhibit at Museum of American Folk Art in New York City.
[edit] References
- Jo Farb Hernandez, John Beardsley, and Roger Cardinal. A, G. Rizzoli: Architect of Magnificent Visions. Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1997. ISBN 0-8109-4293-3 (trade cloth binding) and ISBN 0-937108-20-0 (paperback).
- Sarah F. Maclaren, "L'architettura magnifica di Achilles G. Rizzoli", Ágalma. Rivista di studi culturali e di estetica, 14, 2007: 42-57. ISBN 9788883535994. In Italian. On-line article: http://www.agalmaweb.org/articoli.php?rivistaID=14


