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Pietro di Donato

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pietro di Donato
BornPietro Di Donato
(1911-04-03)April 3, 1911
West Hoboken, New Jersey (now Union City)
DiedJanuary 19, 1992(1992-01-19) (aged 80)
Stony Brook, New York
Occupation
Notable worksChrist in Concrete, Immigrant Saint: The Life of Mother Cabrini

Pietro di Donato (April 3, 1911–January 19, 1992) was an American writer and bricklayer best known for his novel, Christ in Concrete, which recounts the life and times of his bricklayer father, Geremio, who was killed in 1923 in a building collapse. The book, which portrayed the world of New York's Italian-American construction workers during The Great Depression,[1] was hailed by critics in the United States and abroad as a metaphor for the immigrant experience in America,[2] and cast Di Donato as one of the most celebrated Italian American novelists of the mid-20th century.[1]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Bramante, Tempietto
  • 18 Settembre 1944 - Processo a Pietro Caruso e il linciaggio di Donato Carretta
  • Premio Pietro Di Donato Servizio TGR Abruzzo

Transcription

(jazzy music) Female: We're high up on a hill overlooking Rome, one of the seven hills of Rome, the Janiculum hill, in a small courtyard looking at Bramante's small but important building, the Tempietto. Male: This is one of the treasures of Rome. It's actually one of my favorite buildings in the entire world. It's tiny. In fact, I'm not even sure I feel comfortable calling it a building. It's a marker. Female: The Tempietoo marks the site of the crucifixion of St. Peter. Male: Or what Bramante and the Church thought was the site of the crucifixion of St. Peter. Female: Right, and in fact, if you go inside, there's a hole that marks the spot in the ground where the cross was placed. St. Peter was crucified upside down. By marking the site, by making such a beautiful structure here, the Church is, in a way, saying the office of the Papacy goes back to St. Peter, the very first Pope who got that job from Christ himself. Male: It's interesting that it's Bramante who's designing this space because Bramante will also be one of the principle architects responsible for the other major site in Rome that is associated with St. Peter, the Basilica of St. Pietro in the Vatican, the site where Peter was buried. Both of these become markers, but this is a tiny little structure where, of course, St. Peter's is enormous. Female: This looks back to a kind of early Christian building called a martyria, or a marker of the site associated with an early Christian martyr. Male: Those were round buildings. It's interesting that Bramante's borrowing both from that early Christian tradition but also borrowing directly from Antiquity. In fact, in Rome itself, if you go to the Forum you can see a small round temple to Vesta, which is not so dissimilar from this. In fact, it's surrounded by columns. Female: That's right. Both the ancient Greeks and the ancient Romans employed the circular plan. Bramante's very consciously going back to those, He's consciously going back to the ancient the ancient Roman writer, Vitruvius, who wrote a great treatise on architecture and on correct proportions in architecture, which Bramante is really following here in the Tempietto. Male: Bramante really is in love with the ideal geometries of Antiquity, especially of ancient Greece. This building is a radial building. It's a round structure. It's very much unlike the traditional cruciform church which is based on the ancient basilica. It's interesting because Bramante also used a kind of ideal geometry in the other building we were talking about, in St. Peter's Basilica, which was originally a perfect cross. Female: Right. It was Greek cross, employing the circle and the square. This interest in pure geometric forms is something that we really see in the High Renaissance. Male: Let's talk about that relationship between ideal ancient geometry and the divine because I think that was really important at this moment that we call the High Renaissance. If you draw a circle, no matter how good an artist you are, it's always going to have some imperfections. But looking at that circle, we can be prompted to imagine something where there's no deviation, where there's no imperfection. So geometry was thought by the ancient Greeks, and again in the Renaissance, to be a vehicle by which we could imagine the perfection of heaven. Female: So Bramante, like many other artists of the High Renaissance, is really interested in this pure circular plan. Here, of course, the focus of this circle is that important site of the crucifixion of St. Peter. As we look up at this building, we have the steps from the stylobate that lead us up toward the circular colonnade, the cylinder or the drum, and then the dome on top. We really have this focus on a center and that would have been even more true if Bramante had designed the courtyard as he wanted to with a colonnade around it. Male: One can imagine the amplification if this was surrounded by yet another colonnade with a series of radial niches, that would have been a kind of conversation between the space around the building and the central structure itself that I think would have been unprecedented. All of those elements that you mentioned: the stylobate, the steps, the colonnade, and of course the dome, are all elements that come from Antiquity. The artist was really careful to get these things right. If you look at the columns themselves, this was the Doric order. It's not the Doric that we see from ancient Greece; not what we would see on the Parthenon. This is a Roman variant instead. It's called the Tuscan order. We can see columns like this embedded in the side of the first level of the Colosseum where, unlike the Greek Doric order, these columns are not fluted. They have even more of a sense of mass and solidity. Female: And true to the Doric order, we see triglyphs and metopes in the frieze just above the columns. Bramante's really capturing an authentic Doric order here. Male: Although he does sometimes allow for some variation. For instance, the Greeks and the Romans would not have, inside their colonnade, put plasters that pair with the columns. These were maximizing the radial quality by aligning the true columns with the false columns. Female: So there's a real rhythm that Bramante's creating here. What makes this so High Renaissance to me is its grandeur. Even though it's so small, there's a real sense of monumentality. In a way, this is the architectural equivalent of Michelangelo's figures in the Sistine Chapel; a real sense of the heroic, looking back to Classical Antiquity, and celebrating a kind of humanism. Male: There is a kind of self assurance in the High Renaissance; this idea that man can actually produce exemplars on earth of the perfection of the heavenly. Even though this is such a small building, I think its monumentality comes from its great ambition. (jazzy music)

Early life

Di Donato was born April 3, 1911, in West Hoboken, New Jersey (now Union City) to Geremio, a bricklayer, and Annunziata Chinquina. He had seven other siblings. His parents had emigrated from the town of Vasto, in the region of Abruzzo in Italy.[2][3]

On March 30, 1923, Geremio Di Donato died when a building collapsed on him, burying him in concrete. Pietro, who was twelve at the time, left school in the seventh grade to become a construction worker in the trade union in order to help support his family. He retained his membership in the union his entire life. His father's death and his life growing up as an immigrant in West Hoboken were the inspiration for his writings. When his mother died a few years later, Pietro assumed full responsibility for providing for his family. Though he had little formal education, during a strike in the building trades he had wandered into a library and discovered French and Russian novels, becoming particularly fond of Émile Zola. He also took night classes at City College in construction and engineering. The family was eventually able to move to Northport, Long Island, where he continued to work as a mason, and was inspired by Zola's work to write about his own experiences in the Italian immigrant community.[2][3]

Career

Christ in Concrete was published as a short story in the March 1937 issue of Esquire magazine, and was subsequently expanded into a full-length, blue-collar proletarian novel with an introduction by Arnold Gingrich.[3] The book remained on best-seller lists for months, and was eventually chosen for the Book of the Month Club main selection, edging out John Steinbeck's The Grapes of Wrath, which was published the same year. According to Allen Barra in an interview for Salon.com, the novel became an instant classic, and standard reading for second-generation Italian-Americans. Screenwriter Ben Barzman, who wrote the screenplay into which the novel was adapted, called it "the first of its kind", and The National Italian American Foundation called it "rare." Charles Poore, writing in The New York Times on Sept. 15, 1939, described the book as "eloquent" and "Italian to the core...by turns operatic, lyrical, ferocious and hilarious",[2] and commented, "It was something rare, a proletarian novel written by a proletarian."[1] It was included in Edward O'Brien's Best Short Stories of 1938.[3]

The novel was adapted into the 1949 film Give Us This Day (U.S. title: "Christ in Concrete"), written by Ben Barzman, and directed by blacklisted filmmaker Edward Dmytryk. It won awards at festivals across Europe, such as the 1949 Venice Film Festival,[3] though it was effectively banned from the United States at the time, and was only shown in a single theatre.

In 1958 Di Donato wrote his second novel, a sequel to Christ in Concrete called This Woman. It continued the story of di Donato's life following his father's death, and focused on his spiritual conflict and obsessive sensuality. In 1960 a third book in the same tradition called Three Circles of Light, focused on Di Donato's childhood in the years prior to his father's death.[3] That same year, Di Donato published The Immigrant Saint: The Life of Mother Cabrini, a fictionalized account of Frances Xavier Cabrini, the first United States citizen to be canonized. It was well-received, and named a main selection of the Catholic Book Club and Maryknoll Book Club in 1961. Though critics felt that Di Donato's later works never achieved the quality of Christ in Concrete,[2] Immigrant Saint became a cult classic.[1]

The following year Di Donato published The Penitent, an account of contrition and spiritual rebirth of the man who killed the twelve-year-old St. Maria Goretti. His last book-length publication was Naked as an Author, a collection of reprinted stories from his longer works.[3]

In 1978 his article on the kidnapping and murder of Aldo Moro (president of the Christian Democratic Party of Italy), titled "Christ in Plastic", appeared in Penthouse magazine, and won an award from the Overseas Press Club. Di Donato later adapted the article into a play entitled Moro.[1][3]

Personal life

Following the death of his father, Di Donato became the breadwinner for his mother and seven siblings. He joined the Young Communist League in response to the execution of Sacco and Vanzetti.[4] In 1942, after registering as a conscientious objector to World War II, Di Donato, while working as a forester in a Cooperstown, New York Quaker camp,[3] met former showgirl Helen Dean. They were married in 1943, in a ceremony performed by New York City's Mayor Fiorello H. La Guardia, and moved to Setauket, Long Island. They had two sons, Peter and Richard, and a stepdaughter, Harriet Mull.[2]

Death and legacy

Dedication of Pietro di Donato Square in Union City, New Jersey, May 22, 2010. Holding a copy of Christ in Concrete in front of the plaque is di Donato's son, Richard. At right is Union City Mayor Brian P. Stack.

Di Donato died of bone cancer January 19, 1992 in Stony Brook, Long Island, with his last unfinished novel, Gospels, unpublished.[2][3]

He is the subject of the book Pietro DiDonato, the Master Builder by Matthew Diomede, published by Bucknell University Press in 1995.

Keeping Pietro Di Donato's legacy alive, his son Richard is now maintaining a comprehensive website, detailing events not prior published, at www.PietroDiDonato.com.

The town of Union City, New Jersey dedicated Pietro Di Donato Square on May 22, 2010. The Square, which is located at Bergenline Avenue and 31st Street, where Donato once lived, includes a plaque commemorating his life and work. Di Donato's son, Richard, was present at the ceremony.[5]

Bibliography

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Rosero, Jessica (February 12, 2006). "Native sons and daughters: Tragedy Led Italian Novelist in UC to Pen Literary Classic; Christ in Concrete". Hudson Reporter. Archived from the original on January 31, 2018. Retrieved March 4, 2023.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Severo, Richard (January 21, 1992). "Pietro di Donato Is Dead at 80; Wrote of Immigrants' Experience". The New York Times. Archived from the original on November 11, 2012. Retrieved March 4, 2023. "Mr. di Donato was born on April 3, 1911, in West Hoboken, N.J. His family had immigrated to the United States from Vasto, in the Abruzzi region of Italy.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Pietro Di Donato: Acclaimed American Author; Union City Historical Marker Dedication Ceremony Program; May 22, 2010
  4. ^ Strickland, Carol (1990-10-14). "An Immigrant's Pain in Concrete". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-02-17.
  5. ^ "UC recognizes history with dedication and marker" Hudson Reporter; May 23, 2010

External links

This page was last edited on 25 March 2024, at 00:40
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