artist mario eremita's house

The artist’s Mario Eremita house

The artist’s “casa picta” in Merlengo of Ponzano Veneto ( Treviso ).

The artist Mario Eremita purchased the property in 1983. It is a very old house, the central part probably dates back to 1200. It was remodeled over time, finally becoming part of the neighboring Venetian Villa of Queen Cornaro of Cyprus where Giovan Battista Tiepolo painted his magnificent frescoes including the famous “Flora” , now preserved at the “Bailo” Museum in Treviso. The house was in a state of complete abandonment and Eremita intended to carry out a recovery that would keep the structures and openings intact but which would allow the interiors to be completely rethought so that they were suitable for hosting his contemporary art inserts. Inside, Eremita has freed his imagination by creating a personalized environment. The following were performed:

  • wall paintings with the theme of the seasons and apotropaic symbols;
  • wall and ceiling bas-reliefs in plastic stucco with the theme of musicians, cupids, fruit, female figures, amazons, flamenco;
  • Ceiling bas-reliefs in painted concrete with the theme of dancing female figures;
  • floor mosaic “opus incertum” technique with the use of marble and granite of various colors, with the marine theme of octopuses and mermaid;
  • outdoor plastic stucco bas-reliefs with the theme of cupids and musicians.

This creation is a free expression of the imagination of the Artist who created an environment that is an expression of his art. The life lived inside an artist’s house is not comparable to that lived in a conventional home. The artistic embellishment of the premises offers a very stimulating dialectical perspective and makes the aesthetic experience a natural part of everyday life, allowing the enrichment of the mind, reflection and contemplation; experiences with high added value.

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    studio primo piano painting sculpture by mario eremita

    Primo Piano Studio Treviso

    Paintings, sculptures and bas-reliefs for Primo Piano Studio in Treviso

    The studio has been entirely enriched with art inserts, works by Mario Eremita and his son Michelangelo Eremita. The name of the place itself has been interpreted and inserted into a bronze sculpture.

    There are: a plastic stucco bas-relief measuring 2 meters in length and 1.2 meters in height with the theme of musicians and the cornucopia; paintings on wood dedicated to mythological themes such as “the birth of Venus”; “Venus”; “Apollo and Daphne”; “Endymion”; “Venetian Lagoon”.

    The works and themes performed are the result of philological research which aimed to associate the classic cultural references of aesthetic beauty with body care. Greek mythology was chosen for these inserts. The works were created between 1999 and 2001.

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      consumism monuments concept and projects by mario eremita

      Monument concept consumerism

      premise

      The associated artists of CAOS propose themselves for the design and creation of celebratory and commemorative monuments. The theme is the result of consultation with the client and an in-depth philological examination aimed at identifying the formal, symbolic, allegorical and content charactheristics of the work.

      The predilection for figurative themes, which therefore give centrality to the human figure, does not preclude the possibility of abstract creations, in particular thanks to the collaboration with the architect-artist Michelangelo Eremita who developed this particular genre of formalism.

      About the appropriateness of art in everyday life

      In history, beauty is a relative aesthetic attribute or value, linked to human civilizations in their evolution. It is not an absolute value.

      In art, beauty underlies the artist’s ability to build a coherent system of abstract meanings, concepts and values and also underlies the ability to transmit them intact and with extreme synthesis and effectiveness such as to directly reach those who are able to grasp them.

      Art does not need to be explained, it does not need to be translated or interpreted; art can be read, understood, welcomed, loved; but in it, beauty is an absolute value.

      Art does not transmit subjective values, it is not ethical; it refers to basic and fundamental, mysterious rules, linked to illusion, lies, dreams, perhaps to our ancestral fears.

      For this reason, beautiful expressions of art contain messages that can be grasped at any time and everywhere, assuming traits of absoluteness or giving the illusion of it.

      The questions we must ask ourselves and ask our children today are the following:
      “how much art knowledge is there in us?”;
      “how much of this knowledge is at the service of mankind?”

      A real reflection is needed on the need to conquer a human society based on knowledge ad art; therefore an objectively beautiful society.

      Attention towards art from early age must be cultivated in our children. We must take children to museums, to art galleries, we must demand that schools provide teachers od Art History and not just Drawing; we must expect these teachers to transmit a love for art.

      Understanding art means knowing how to see and knowing how to see is a difficult goal to achieve; sometimes one life is not enough. We must therefore show the way to young people so that they can choose.

      Hypotheses and projects for a renaissance of the arts

      Today, not only Religious Institutions of Private Collectors but also and perhaps above all, Public Administrators, play an important function in developing people’s sensitivity towards art. They have the possibility of mending a huge fracture that has been created between the people and contemporary art since the 20th century.

      Art must return close to people to lay the foundations for its rebirth. In the planning of master plans, residential areas and in the future redesign of the disheartening industrial areas, recently discouraged by natural disasters, we must return to placing man and humanity at the center and this also passes through careful research and selection of artists capable of carrying out artworks that make the community cohesive. Artworks around which the human community can rally, exactly as happened in our Renaissance with the contribution of the Church but also of enlightened and aware Dominants, such as Federico Da Montefeltro os Sigismondo Malatesta or Lorenzo Dei Medici.

      Such work has strong political underpinnings; whoever wants to take in this pleasant and exciting responsibility will get the history. Whoever is able to enrich the community with what is created for it and not what is built for a claimed honor to the “art” itself will have created a thousand possibilities for his fellow citizens.

      In these pages we wanted to present some sketches of great artworks for the sole purpose of giving an idea of the possibilities offered by the imagination of the artist Mario Eremita and the architect-artist Michelangelo Eremita.

      Consumerism

      A controversial topic is that of consumerism. A concrete column in which bronze elements are inserted that tell of the discomfort of the consumer society, represented by the lower part; while in the upper part the children embody hope in the future in which they themselves will be bearers of development as well as progress, and they will look with irony at that past on which they will also pour water, symbol of the rebirth of life.

      monuments concept consumerism by mario eremita

      The artworks of authentic artists are always linked to the human community that appreciates them and makes part of the references of everyday life. When things are like this, the foundations have been laid for a comparison with history, with time and with the possibility of social and cultural development of a community.

      monuments concept consumerism by mario eremita
      monuments concept consumerism by mario eremita

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        italian playing cards drawing by mario eremita

        Italian playing cards

        The classic forty italian playing cards interpreted by Mario Eremita

        The forty italian playing cards, have inspired great artists because they are rich of mystery and history and they are rooted in the tradition of civilizations. They were imported from the East and their first intepreter was Andrea Mantegna. That first edition was published by venetian typographies.

        Mario Eremita interpreted in four versions the playing card suits, fascinated by those which are on all the gaming tables. These are four collections of forty original drawings, three in india ink and one in color. All four works are unpublished.

        He therefore imagined ancestral characters, dreams frequenters, suits bearers that are transformed into spectacular artworks.

        Collection 1974a india ink

        It is the first collection of the forty playing cards interpreted by Mario Eremita. It is from 1974 and is made by india ink on paper. You can appreciate the refine stroke and the powerful imagination that reworked the suits looking at these two samples taken from the collection, the seven of coins and the and the horse of clubs.

        Collection 1978b mixed technique

        It is the second collection of the forty plyaing cards interpreted by Mario Eremita. It is from 1978 and is made by mixed techinque on paper oil colors. Here there are two samples from the collection, the three of swords and the seven of cups. You can appreciate the delicate use of colors with the nuances the graphic drapery and the brand new imagination that revisited the classic iconography.

        Collection 1984c india ink

        Here is the third collection of the forty playing cards interpreted by Mario Eremita. It is from 1984 and is made by india ink on paper. Here two samples by the collection, the king of coins and the jack of cups. These two give the idea of the style, already different from the previous one of 1974 due to the stroke speed. The classical inconography is completely abandoned.

        Collection 2000d india ink

        The fourth collection of the forty italian playing cards intepreted by Mario Eremita closes the series. It is from 2000 and it is made by india ink on paper. Here two samples from the collection, the king of cups and the ace of cups. These two gives the idea of the style really different from the 1984 one. Here there is a more refined formal need and the addition of the frame. The classic iconography is partially recovered.

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          major arcana of the tarot drawing by mario eremita

          Major Arcana of the Tarot, drawing

          The Major Arcana of the Tarot intepreted by Mario Eremita.

          The Major Arcana of the Tarot, have engaged great artists because they are rich in mystery and history and are rooted in the tradition of civilizations. They were imported from the East and their first intepreter was Andra Mantegna. That first edition was published by venetian typographies.

          The mysterious sequence of numbers and symbols, which enchants with its load of irrationality and which clashes with our society of programming, of calculation, of the strict rationality of the rejection of the otherworld, of superstition, of the supernatural, becomes the ideal territory for the artist always looking to innovative and reshape what is under the sun.

          Mario Eremita has interpreted the Tarot in various editions which, although dedicated to cultural traditions, are completely original in terms of style, stroke and also for some formal solutions. The editions are in oil color or india ink.

          Collections
          Egyptian Tarot oil and chalk mixed technique, 1976

          Here you can admire some examples of the collection of Egyptian Tarot made in 1976 on paper mixed technique oil and chalk.

          Neapolitan Tarot oil and chalk mixed technique, 1978

          Here you can admire some examples of the collection of Neapolitan Tarot enamel on plywood made on 1978.

          French Tarot oil and chalk mixed technique, 1985

          Here some examples of the collection of French Tarot made on 1985.

          Neapolitan Tarot india ink, 1990

          Here you can admire some examples of the collection of Neapolitan Tarot india ink made on 1990

          Erotic Tarot india ink, 2000

          Here you can admire some examples of the collection of Erotic Tarot india ink made on 2000.

          Venetian Tarot india ink, 2000

          Here you can admire some examples of the collection of Venetian Tarot india ink made on 2000

          Baccus Tarot india ink, 2017

          Here you can admire some examples of the collection of Baccus Tarot india ink made on 2017

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            rummy playing cards harvest and vine drawing by mario eremita

            Rummy cards grape harvest and wine, drawing

            Rummy playing cards intepreted by Mario Eremita tribute to wine and the grape harvest

            The fifty four Rummy Cards, india ink and pastel drawings on paper, made on 2015, artwork by the artist Mario Eremita.

            Here we can appreciate the delicacy of the graphics and color of these drawings, which subtly revisit the cards of the Texan Rummy, now widespread throughout the world and made famous by the Casinos and the 007 James Bond films.

            Eremita interpreted the 54 Rummy cards with bucolic figurative subjects, to pay homage to the italian winemaking tradition and the cultivation of the vineyard.

            A drink that represents one of the most important excellens of Italy, wine is linked here to a playful, positive activity that requires the use of the best strategic and mnemonic qualities.

            Celebration of happy living, of evenings spent with friends playing an intelligent game and sipping quality wines.

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              palaces and churces of venezia on grand canal drawings by mario eremita

              Palaces and Churches of Venezia, drawing

              Collection of the Venezia’s Palaces and Churches on the Gran Canal, drawings by Mario Eremita

              The artist Mario Eremita made this collection of more than fifty india ink drawings during two years of work.

              They are the the front elevations of the architectural works that ovelook the Venezia’s Gran Canal. These drawings reproduce these true monuments with the artist’s unmistakable style, each with its own history and mysteries.

              The Gran Canal and its architecture e la sua architettura are certainly among the most important riches of italian culture and civilization.

              Mario Eremita has graphically reconstructed all those works that were once the business cards of important and wealthy families of venetian merchants and nobles, emulating the spirit of Renaissance artists who were all fascinated by architecture. This architecture was also the symbol of the military power and Christian loyalty of its inhabitants.

              Even though they look alike, each one architecture reveals, thanks to the artist’s style, its particular and unique energy which originates from the talent of ancient architects, master stonecutters and carpenters who built them, enhancing the beauty of this immortal city.

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                masks comedia de l'arte drawings by mario eremita

                Masks of Comedia de l’Arte, drawing

                Masks of the Comedia de l’Arte interpreted by Mario Eremita

                Original color drawings mixed technique oil on paper. The artist dedicated to the philological research of the origins of carnival masks de la Comedia de l’Arte which has ancestral roots.

                Note the freshness of the execution, the refined aesthetic sense, the plasticity of the shapes and the chromatic valuer of the colours.

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                  the seasons drawing by mario eremita

                  Seasons of the year, drawing

                  The seasons of the year interpreted by Mario Eremita

                  Following a centuries-old artisti tradition Mario Eremita interprets the seasons of the year using oil colors on paper. The artist made this collection, as always anthropomorphic or figurative, which celebrates the passage of time and the climates of the year with the beautiful things that each of them has in store for us.

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