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Title: Flavio Costantini
Author: Stuart Christie
Date: 1976
Language: en
Topics: biography
Source: Retrieved on 16th May 2021 from https://www.katesharpleylibrary.net/t4b9k9
Notes: Originally published in ‘Illustrators 50‘ (1976), published by the Association of Illustrators theaoi.com [Updated May 2013 after Costantini’s death.]

Stuart Christie

Flavio Costantini

More often than not it is the artist, writer or poet, rather than the

historian or sociologist, who succeed in capturing the spirit of an age;

in so doing, they make an important contribution to our understanding of

society.

Flavio Costantini is such a person. Born in Rome in 1926, his earliest

ventures into art were motivated more by intellectual frustration than

by artistic masters. “I started to draw because I read the Kafka books…

it was impossible to write like Kafka, so I began to draw”. Other

writers followed, but it was the human condition as portrayed by Kafka

which was to remain the dominant influence in Costantini’s world.

Retiring from the navy in 1955, Costantini returned to Italy to begin a

new career as a textile designer and commercial graphic artist.

Fascinated by structures, Genoa, his chosen home base, provided him with

an antidote to what had been for Costantini the Kafkaesque nightmare of

New York.

The ancient Mediterranean port offered him visual inspiration in so many

ways-the detail of an archway, a balustrade or the geometry of a piazza.

Colour also came to play a more important part in Costantini’s work.

After a brief flirtation with oils in the early 1960s, tempera became

the chosen medium.

The period between the early 1960s and mid 1970s coincided with a flood

tide of intense democratic hopes for large numbers of people. Costantini

had been a communist until 1962, but a month long visit to Moscow caused

him to reconsider his beliefs. In Moscow he saw “an endless stream of

tourist peasantry who were strangely silent, neither sad nor happy, but

were canalised in a disenchanted, unconscious pilgrimage … The

revolution had ended… In the squalid vertical squares of New York or in

the equally squalid horizontal squares of Moscow, reaching beyond the

languid reminiscences of old Europe, this was perhaps an alternative, an

isolated but insistent voice, an ancient Utopia which, however, had

nothing in common with the Fabian longings of HG Wells. Since then,

since 1963, I have tried, within the scope of my possibilities, to

publicise this uncompromising alternative.”

He reread a book he had disliked some years previously, Memoirs of a

Revolutionist by Victor Serge. Serge’s description of the heroic period

of French anarchist activism which highlighted the end of the last

century provided Costantini with a social theme which was to be his

inspiration for the next two decades. He felt, like Serge, that although

shot through with contradictions, the French anarchists were “people who

demanded, before anything else, harmony between words and deeds”. They

were very often lonely and isolated individuals, sensitive in their own

way, whose reaction to confusion and alienation was to act, to refuse to

submit.

Costantini’s work during these two decades is a documentation of this

dramatic period in mankind’s odyssey towards a free society based on the

principles of social justice described by Bakunin over a century ago:

“It is the triumph of humanity, it is the conquest and accomplishment of

the full freedom and full development, material, intellectual and moral,

of every individual, by the absolute free and spontaneous organisation

of economic and social solidarity as completely as possible between all

human beings living on the earth.” Like a sun-illuminated stained glass

window in a cathedral, the impact of Costantini’s work is immediate.

Events are captured without perspective and on a single plane in a

startlingly innovative manner.

There is irony here, too: the faces of the policemen, for example,

firing on strikers in Chicago, 1886, are those of four US presidents.

Another tempera, depicting the capture of Ravachol, has Toulouse-Lautrec

as the arresting officer.

Costantini’s haunting faces, drawn directly from contemporary sources,

provide an element of photographic realism which contrasts starkly with

the decorative backdrop. Whether it is in the faces of the protagonists,

the architectural or stylistic minutiae, there is a lovingly researched

detail, harmony and structural perfection.

The ebbing of revolutionary hopes and expectations in the mid 1970s gave

Costantini the sensation that he was witnessing the end of an era. he

came to believe that the act of revolution, as a cathartic means of

achieving the good society, was no longer possible without serious risk

of sinking into a sea of anomie.

His disenchantment with the apparent hopelessness of the human condition

in late capitalism is expressed in the final tempera in the

revolutionary series with Kafkaesque symbolism. The painting depicts the

room in which the Tsar and his family were murdered. the furniture has

been removed and the room is empty: only the bullet-torn wallpaper

indicates something irreversible has occurred. Most of the paintings in

this series were reproduced in the now out of print The Art of Anarchy.

Perhaps with the intention of cushioning himself from the effect of this

radical shift in his outlook, in 1980 Costantini began to immerse

himself in a series of light-hearted portraits of the authors who had

contributed most to his understanding of the world.

Each is accompanied by rebus-like objects associated with the subject,

or which provide an important theme in their work. Thus, Kafka is shown

with his beetle; Poe with a bottle of Jack Daniel’s whiskey; Stevenson

with a seagull, lifebelt and a kilted figure; Conrad with a compass and

a photograph of a steamer, and so on.

By the mid 1980s, another theme had emerged from this period of

introspection, a more deeply allegorical one, also in the Kafkaesque

tradition-the sinking of the Titanic. The year in which this criminal

tragedy occurred, 1912, was a portentous and pivotal year, in the

artist’s view, in the history of the contemporary world.

The original scene setting picture depicts the ship foundering of a

peaceful evening with the great stern rising like a squat Leviathan and

the lights from a 1000 empty portholes glittering on a calm sea. Even

after the collision with the iceberg the passengers showed little

concern for their safety-had it not, after all, been declared

unsinkable- and continued to dance to the strains of numerous orchestras

while others played poker.

Costantini is not a painter like all the rest; he is not prolific. His

output these days may be two paintings a year, but in 1996, for example,

he produced no work whatsoever. He earns a living out of his few and

very select band of fans. His most recent commission has been to

illustrate Dostoevsky’s Letters from the Underworld and these tempera

paintings are currently being exhibited throughout Italy.

Apart from The Art of Anarchy (Cienfuegos Press, London, 1975), Flavio’s

inspired graphic insights have visually enhanced a number of literary

classics in Italian, including Il Cavallino di Fuoco by Vladimir

Mayakovsky (Emme Edizioni, n.d), The Shadow Line, by Joseph Conrad

(Edizioni Nuages, 1989) and Dostoevsky’s Letters from the Underworld

(Edizioni Nuages, 1997). Flavio’s work has been exhibited all over the

world, including at the prestigious 1972 Xth Rome Quadriennale and the

1984 Venice Biennale exhibitions.