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Impressionist

WEB EXCLUSIVE: The Impressionist Rolling Stone

By: Latasia Brown

April 2008

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Marco Sassone’s artwork is like watching an intensely colored dream flood onto a canvas television screen, from the tumbling white clouds that halo the city in “Toronto 7” (2008) to the vibrating nocturnal streets of Toronto in “View from the Bellagio” (2008). Taught to craft his own voice and style in the ever-competing art world, Sassone has proven himself as one of today’s most prominent impressionist painters. In addition to being showcased in countless exhibitions, solo and with other artists, Sassone has received praise from numerous critics.

Born in 1942 in the Tuscan village of Campi Bisenzio, Sassone created his own style with the encouragement of his teacher, painter Silvio Loffredo, who studied under the Austrian master Oskar Kokoschka and taught at the Academia in Florence. Sassone’s earliest and most prominent influence is the Macchiaioli, a group of 19th century Tuscan painters—Giovanni Fattori, Vito D’Ancona and Silvestro Lega—who led the rebellion against academia-styled art and embraced the vivaciousness of color through natural light. They specialized in impressionist-style portraits, landscapes and genre scenes, which were non-idealized scenes that dealt with realities of daily life.

His family moved to Florence in 1954, which was a more suitable place for the family during the postwar years. There was superior schooling for Sassone and his siblings, and his father was hired at the Florence City Hall, saving his family financially. When a flood devastated the region in 1967, Sassone began a 40-year journey, to places like Los Angeles, Laguna Beach and San Francisco, ending in Toronto, where his new exhibit, “Toronto,” is featured from April 4 through 26 at Odon Wagner Gallery. Sassone’s urban landscapes that show the gritty, dreamlike visual testimonies of the city’s heart, will be on display.

Throughout his travels, Sassone submerges himself into each city and creates paintings, drawings and other work that reflect both the breathtaking and the heartbreaking. “When you move, there’s always something with you—unsettledness—and from that I get to paint. I was attracted to the skyscrapers and industrial sites of Toronto.”

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