Attilio Pusterla

Attilio Pusterla (Milan, Italy, 1862 – Woodcliff, New Jersey, United States, 1941) was an Italian painter.

Alle cucine economiche di Porta nuova (1886-7). Galleria d'Arte Moderna, Milan

Biography

By 1880, he attended the Brera Academy alongside Filippo Carcano, Emilio Longoni, and Angelo Morbelli. He allied himself to the style and subjects of Vittore Grubicy, and resided in Milan.[1]

He was a resident of Milan. In 1883 in Milan and Rome, he exhibited Effetto di sole. Also in Rome, he displayed another canvas depicting Motterone sul Lago Maggiore. At the 1886 Promotrice (and in 1887 in Venice) he sent Vecchio pescatore, La questua dei poreri, and Dopo una predica (After the Sermon). At 1886 in Milan, he sent Portrait of his father and Portrait of painter Gustavo Macchi. He then began painting genre figures of contemporary working class life, including Cucine Economiche, An English Marriage in a Cemetery, and the Bevitrici di Sangue.[2]

His social content did not gain him economic success, and by 1900 he had moved to the United States. Among his works in North America were some of the frescoes on the Astoria Column in Oregon, as well as frescoes in the Senate Banking & Commerce Committee Room and in the House of Commons in Ottawa.[3][4] Pusterla, as part of WPA-sponsored projects employing artists, directed much of the frescoes for the New York County Supreme Courthouse on Foley Square.

gollark: I did get it to be somewhat faster by running xapian-compact on the index, which mostly brings it to 20 seconds a query, which is *usable*.
gollark: It might just not be optimized for the HDDs my server runs on.
gollark: Maybe. I'm not sure how inherently.
gollark: I can't find any information on performance tuning for it.
gollark: Does anyone know of good personal search engine-type things? Right now I use Recoll, but it's taking entire decaseconds on my ~4GB index and this is too much.

References

Media related to Attilio Pusterla at Wikimedia Commons


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.