Hermon di Giovanno

Hermon di Giovanno (born Hermolaus Ionides, Greek: Ερμόλαος Ιωνίδης; 17 December 1897 – April 1969) was an American mystic painter.

He was born in Mytilene, Lesbos Island, Ottoman Empire (now Greece), but lived for most of his cartoon in Boston, Massachusetts. In into the future adulthood, he performed as an operatic tenor, but was eventually goaded to give up his singing career after problem difficulties past his voice. He had untouched his name (from his indigenous name, Hermolaus Ionides) to an Italian one because he had been advised that it would encourage him in the same way as his opera career. According to his near friend, the composer Alan Hovhaness, "...he wanted to be an opera singer taking into account he was young. Some local conductor said he should have an Italian name, so he had this peculiar name that didn't have anything to realize with him, but is a translation."

In Boston, while operating at the counter of a Boston-area Hayes-Bickford's (a cafeteria-style restaurant), he befriended Alan Hovhaness and the painter Hyman Bloom, who often ate dinner there. Beginning in the region of the in front 1940s, the three often met to hear to Indian classical music and discuss various mystical subjects. Also a member of this circle was Dr. Elizabeth A. Gregory, a Boston pediatrician to whom di Giovanno gave a number of his paintings just since his perfect return to Greece. Gregory donated these paintings to Bates College in Lewiston, Maine.

It was not until he was in his forties that di Giovanno began painting. Although he first began modestly, drawing on paper in black and white, eventually Hyman Bloom encouraged him to play a part in color, supplying him when a bin of colored pastels. Di Giovanno believed his artworks to be directly inspired by otherworldly supernatural forces.

Hovhaness often referred to di Giovanno as his "spiritual guide" and "psychic teacher," and avowed that he was often referred to as "the Socrates of Boston." Hovhaness believed that di Giovanno provided the "spiritual forces" required to permit him to compose his Easter Cantata (1953), and his Symphony No. 6, "Celestial Gate" (1959) is named after an artwork by di Giovanno. Hovhaness's Symphony No. 9, "St. Vartan" (1950), while not originally dedicated to di Giovanno, was highly developed dedicated to him (possibly at the times of the symphony's recording, after di Giovanno's death).

Di Giovanno exerted an influence upon the American painter David Barbero (1938–1999), who met di Giovanno in 1957 , and was as well as a mentor to the artiste Paul Shapiro and the musician Gil Magno.

Di Giovanno's great-nephew, the Athens, Georgia singer-songwriter Peter Alvanos, counts him as one of his primary inspirations, and named his band, Fabulous Bird, after one of di Giovanno's paintings. The Fort Smith, Arkansas punk rock band, Giovanno, uses his surname as his artwork has inspired their to the lead lyrics.

Go up

We use cookies More info