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Tullio DeSantis

Tullio DeSantis
Born
Tullio Francesco DeSantis

1948 (age 75–76)
EducationSan Francisco Art Institute
Known forVisual art, writing, technology

Tullio Francesco DeSantis (born 1948), also known as Tullio, is an American contemporary artist, writer, technologist, and teacher. His work is informed by ancient and contemporary philosophy, science, and the relationship between art and life.[1]

Biography

Tullio DeSantis began his career as a conceptual artist/writer by creating his regular column titled MINDSTREAM, which appeared in the underground press periodical, The Rip Off Review of Western Culture. The publisher of this magazine was the Rip Off Press located in San Francisco in the early 1970s.[2][3] In 1975 he entered the San Francisco Art Institute, where he graduated with a Master of Fine Arts in 1977.

Studio view with, New World 2012, mixed-media sculpture, by Tullio DeSantis, 2009

Career beginnings

Tullio's career as an exhibiting artist began before his graduation and continued in San Francisco through 1979, after which he moved back to the East Coast. During his years in San Francisco, DeSantis' artwork was exhibited by ADI Galleries in San Francisco and Tokyo, Japan. A work on paper by Tullio from this period was exhibited in Paper as Medium a series of national tours by the Smithsonian Institution[4] Traveling Exhibition Service. His work from that time is represented in both public and private collections.

1980s

DeSantis moved back to the East Coast and took up dual residencies in Reading, Pennsylvania, and New York City, where he maintained a studio in Chelsea. In New York his work was exhibited at the Katherine Markel and Getler Pall galleries. Also in 1980, his work was exhibited by the New York Museum of Modern Art's Lending Service in a traveling exhibition titled Maps.

In 1981 DeSantis began exhibiting his work in the Reading and Berks County area. Among the local and regional exhibitions of note are the shows titled Local Color and Paper Pieces at the Freedman Gallery of Albright College. During the 1980s his work was represented by Marion Locks Gallery in Philadelphia.

In 1982, DeSantis was co-producer of the large-scale multimedia exhibit at the Reading Public Museum titled Mushroom Magic. DeSantis's work from that exhibit included a series of color photographs and artifacts documenting the process of growing mushrooms for the commercial market, artworks on paper and a large acrylic-and-sand painting.

DeSantis mounted his first one-person show in New York City, titled New Worlds at the Tradition 3000 gallery in 1988.

1990s

The artist's exhibits from the 1990s include 1992's his Reading Lies part IV: Across the You-Niverse, a multi-media installation and performance piece hosted by the Freedman Gallery of Albright College. This was followed another gallery-size multimedia installation, DeSantis' one-person show at the New Arts Program gallery in Kutztown, Pennsylvania, titled The Missing Link.

Tullio's gallery-size installation work was continuously on view at the artist's studio from 1995 to 2004. This magical-realist environment contained, among many interactive components, miniature reconstructed and painted electric trains, papier-mâché landscapes, and a multicolor and infrared light show recreating scenes seen during morning, afternoon, sunset, and night. The long-running work-in-progress was titled The Project and was a tribute to both DeSantis' friend and collaborator, Keith Haring and DeSantis' paternal grandfather, Francesco DeSantis.

From 1982 through 1990 Tullio Francesco DeSantis wrote on art exhibitions and aesthetics for the New Art Examiner, Chicago and at the same time served as art critic for the Reading Eagle/Reading Times newspapers in Pennsylvania. It was in this period that the artist met and worked with Keith Haring. In 1984 DeSantis received a Pennsylvania Council on the Arts Fellowship for his ongoing collaborative conceptual work with Keith Haring. In 1998 and 1999 DeSantis published the first four chapters of this work in the Terminal Journal under the title, Reading Lies Dreaming, published by Eschaton, Chicago. In 2016, the title was changed to "Nothing Dies" and the web site was moved to www.nothingdies.com.[5]

Other writing

Tullio DeSantis' internationally published writing includes a magical-realist story recounting the life of the Francesco DeSantis family and also the art, science, and craft of growing mushrooms for market. Tullio's "Life on a Mushroom Farm", appeared in the book Dreamstreets, Harper and Row, 1989,[6][7] and has since been reprinted several times.

Tullio's personal and spiritual creative relationship with poet Allen Ginsberg yielded a number of works including a Ginsberg poem dedicated to Tullio DeSantis.[8] and a Ginsberg drawing published at www.poetspath.com.[9]

Teaching

DeSantis' higher-education art-teaching career has spanned the period from 1987 to the present. In 1987 he served as assistant professor of art at Alvernia College, Reading, Pennsylvania. He has continued his teaching as an adjunct professor of art at Albright College, University of St. Francis, Joliet, Illinois, the MFA program of Vermont College, Norwich University, and currently at Reading Area Community College.

In 1990 the American Association of University Professors found and reported in The Chronicle of Higher Education that Tullio DeSantis had been improperly dismissed by Alvernia College (now Alvernia University) because of his criticism of the administration and that his rights of academic freedom had been violated. This incident provoked the resignation of the college president, board chair, and the academic dean. DeSantis' suit with the college was eventually settled out of court. The settlement resulted in his being rehired.[10]

Tullio Francesco DeSantis continued exhibiting his art in the early 1990s in a selected group of galleries including the Freedman Gallery of Albright College and the Reading Public Museum, Reading, PA.[11]

Internet art

From the mid-1990s through the mid-2000s, the artist executed the major portion of his work anonymously on the Internet. The anonymous work was often conducted collaboratively and from 1998 through 2005 he created and worked as part of www.artelevision.com, a three-person online Digital Performance group. This endeavor was analyzed and interpreted by Nick Mamatas in the NYC newspaper, the Village Voice in October, 2000, in an article titled All Hands Off The Keyboard.[12]

This collaborative Internet project is also represented online in the Irish Museum of Modern Art Net Open exhibitions from 2002 and 2003.[13]

The artist's collaborative work is referenced by the New York new art foundation, Franklin Furnace and the CYBERARTS99: International Festival of Digital Media. The artist's collaborations with other Internet artists have included Ana Voog, of anacam.com, and performance artist, Frank Moore, whose site hosts artelevision.com's archives. Addtionally, Tullio DeSantis contributed a statement to Frank Moore’s book, The Uncomfortable Zones of Fun: The Temescal Period 2009-2013, which can be found on page 701.[14]

"Veil of Illusion", Ink on Paper Drawing, by Tullio DeSantis, 2009

ARTology and ARTologyPOD

In 2005, Tullio created ARTology, his online blog for the Reading Eagle newspaper web site.[15] In 2006, the artist executed the initial work in a series of identity-based conceptual projects for the new millennium at The New Arts Program in Kutztown, Pennsylvania,. [3] His monoprints are travelled and collected as part of the New Arts Program Print Editions, which includes artist prints by John Cage, Steve Reich, Keith Haring, and Bill T. Jones.

ARTologyPOD, the artists' regular series of conceptual podcasts, appears on www.readingeagle.com, www.weeu.com, and Apple iTunes. DeSantis' discusses his conceptual work and his relationship with Keith Haring in a series of YouTube videos, produced by Ron Schira.

In 2013, Tullio retired ARTologyPOD podcasts and moved his ARTology blog from the Reading Eagle Online to its own domains at[16] www.tulliodesantis.net and [17] www.artology.tv.

Recent and current work

Tullio DeSantis is referenced in Keith Haring's official biography[18] the Rizzoli illustrated edition titled Keith Haring (2008), and the 2008 film, The Universe of Keith Haring.

The collaborative project between Keith Haring and Tullio DeSantis is the subject of a documentary project being executed by Canadian filmmaker and collector, Victor Lallouz.[19] Filming for this project began in 2009 with locations in Berks County, PA and New York City. Filming for this project resumed in New York City in 2017.

DeSantis and Haring initiated this collaborative project in 1985. DeSantis describes the project in an introductory video that has been posted on YouTube in raw footage. These videos contain a recent lecture in which DeSantis introduces the purpose of the project. He has continued this work in various media since the day Keith Haring died, February 16, 1990.

Tullio's conceptual work is referenced in the art historical text: The Symbolist Roots of Modern Art, Michelle Facos, ed., 2015, Ashgate pub. ltd., England and USA, p. 92. “In 2006 the New York artist Tullio DeSantis (b. 1948) exhibited Nothing as Art – a text, displayed in black inkjet toner on a sheet of white photocopy paper push-pinned to the gallery wall, which declared that not only was the formal manifestation of an idea unnecessary, but so was the idea itself.” – Andrew Marvick [Andrew Kent-Marvick], Un Coup de dessin: Looking at the Blanks in Mallarme and Khnopff.[20]

2010 and beyond

In the new decade, Tullio has increased his online presence, continuing his aesthetic interest in the evolutionary potential of the Internet. Presentations of his multimedia work in 2010 include "The Facebook Show"[21] at The Detroit Museum of New Art, and Volume 1 of the "International Email Audio Art Project"[22] hosted by the Internet Archive.

2016 - Exhibition at Point. B Studio, Unique Impressions “More Love Now”. Tullio creates drawings on paper, then digitizes the original to create one light and one dark variation.[23]

Brain and Mind

2012 DeSantis' "Brain and Mind" was first exhibited in the Brain Art Competition Online Exhibition at neurobureau.org This piece is composed of hand-drawn and computer-generated images superimposed over digitally altered image of human brain and EEG map of artist's brainwaves. [24] In 2016, Tullio's artwork - "Brain and Mind" serves as the Cover Illustration for Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging Volume 1, Issue 1 [25] The cover image can be seen here: [4]

Tullio's collaborative projects

Tullio's collaborative projects in the new decade include working with artist George Blaha,[26] artist/musician Heidi Harris, MaCu(Susanne Hafenscher),[27] writers Jan Walls,[28] Leanne Ogasawara(Tang Dynasty Times),[29] and Robert Burton(Awakening Arts Network).[30]

In 2011, Dr. Tom Fink and Tullio DeSantis created MindReflector Technologies, LLC to produce neurofeedback software and mind-training applications. Their first product, the MindReflector C-1 Neurofeedback Training System, utilized low-cost EEG-headsets produced by NeuroSky, Inc. MindReflector software utilized state-of-the art algorithms created by Dr. Fink to train the brain for optimal performance and functioning, using audio and visual cues. DeSantis managed MindReflector development and composed the audio track for MindReflector training. He collaborated with contemporary artists and engineers to extend MindReflector technology and multimedia. The MindReflector® Neurofeedback Training System was sold by NeuroSky and distributed internationally.[31] In 2021, MindReflector stopped marketing software and continues as a psychology and neurofeedback research organization.

April 2012, Tullio DeSantis and Pery Burge have collaborated on multimedia projects that involved narrative readings, music by Tullio and visual fluid imagery created by Pery Burge.[32][33]

2014 - The Art of Collaboration: Dee Shapiro and Tullio DeSantis - Heckscher Museum of Art, Huntington, NY [34]

2016 - More Love Now - Point.B Studio, Point Orford, OR

2010 – 2020 – Image, audio, and Video collaborations with Barbara Schedl[35]

2019 – The Art of Music with Dick Boak – Goggleworks, Reading, PA[36]

2018/2019 – Hadron Collider of Love w Dick Boak, 273 Bleecker St. NY, NY[37]

2021 – Tullio's digital artwork appears as NFT crypto art on Rarible

2024 - Tullio begins artistic collaboration with UK artist, Scarlet Monahan [5] . Their work includes mixed-media audio and video, artwork, photography, and digital art. Scarlet and Tullio are working on a collaborative project under the name, "Coup de Tete".

Book: Limited Edition Catalog:

  • DeSantis, Tullio; Lallouz, Michaela (2019). The project of Keith Haring and Tullio DeSantis. Montreal. ISBN 978-2-9818327-0-2. OCLC 1158985556.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

References

  1. ^ Hartigan, Philip (23 August 2011). "Artist-Writer-Artist: Tullio DeSantis".
  2. ^ Rip Off Review.Retrieved 2009-09-15.
  3. ^ Rip Off Review from Comics Journal.Retrieved 2009-10-07
  4. ^ Smithsonian Institution; Paper as Medium (1978). Retrieved 2009-09-14.
  5. ^ Freedman Gallery-1992
  6. ^ Dreamstreets listing at Amazon.com; Life on a Mushroom Farm(1989) Retrieved 2009-09-22.
  7. ^ Big Book of Italian American Culture(paperback release of Dreamstreets) Retrieved 2009-09-22.
  8. ^ Ginsberg Poem Dedicated to Tullio DeSantis Archived 2011-07-15 at the Wayback Machine(Published in The Reading Eagle)[]Retrieved 2009-10-08.
  9. ^ Allen Ginsberg Drawing Retrieved 2009-10-08.
  10. ^ Blum, Debra E. "AAUP Members to Vote on Censuring 5 Administrations Accused of Violating Professors' Academic Freedom", "The Chronicle of Higher Education", 13 June 1990.
  11. ^ The Freedman Gallery of Albright College and the Reading Public Museum. Retrieved 2009-10-21.
  12. ^ All Hands Off The Keyboard Retrieved 2009-10-22.
  13. ^ Irish Museum of Modern Art Net Open exhibitions from 2002 and 2003, [1] [2] Retrieved 2009-10-20.
  14. ^ Moore, Frank (October 20, 2022). The Uncomfortable Zones of Fun: The Temescal Period 2009-2013. Inter-Relations. p. 701. ISBN 978-1734685039.
  15. ^ Reading Eagle ARTology Blog by Tullio Archived 2007-03-04 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 1 August 2012
  16. ^ TullioDeSantis.net Retrieved 28 January 2013
  17. ^ Artology.TV Archived 2013-05-22 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 28 January 2013
  18. ^ Keith Haring's Official Biography Archived 2008-09-21 at the Wayback MachineKeith Haring (2008).Retrieved 2009-09-14.
  19. ^ Victor Lallouz Productions Retrieved 18 August 2010
  20. ^ COMMENTARY: Getting inside conceptual art Ontelaunee Township artist Tullio Francesco DeSantis brings his experiments with conceptual art into the 21st century, embracing the technology of the age to expand its meaning and parameters. Writer: Ron Schire on 09-09-2007, Reading Eagle News, Reading PA
  21. ^ Facebook Show Retrieved 29 November 2010
  22. ^ International Email Audio Art Project, Volume 1 (November 3, 2010) Retrieved 29 November 2010
  23. ^ Point B. Studio, More Love Now Retrieved 30 October 2016
  24. ^ Brain Art Competition Retrieved 2 May 2016
  25. ^ Biological Psychiatry CNNI Retrieved 2 May 2016
  26. ^ George Blaha and Tullio Retrieved 23 January 2012
  27. ^ MaCu and Tullo, Retrieved 23 January 2012
  28. ^ Jan walls and Tullio, Retrieved 23 January 2012
  29. ^ Leanne and Tullio, Retrieved 23 January 2012
  30. ^ Robert Burton and Tullio 23 January 2012
  31. ^ MindReflector Technologies, LLC Retrieved November 25, 2012
  32. ^ Tullio and Pery Burge Archived 2012-04-27 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved April 29, 2012
  33. ^ "Artist in Residence", Pery Burge Archived 2013-12-14 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved June 8, 2012
  34. ^ The Art Collaboration: Dee Shapiro and Tullio DeSantis 4 November 2014 Retrieved October 22, 2016
  35. ^ https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=tullio+desantis+barfbara+schedl Video Collaboration with Barbara Schedl
  36. ^ Art of Music with Dick Boak
  37. ^ Hadron Collider of Love with Dick Boak