Beniamino Bufano's Madonna
protects the children of the world, Great Meadow, Upper
Fort Mason. Detail I |
Sculpting giant
Beniamino Benvenuto Bufano, who was only five feet tall, was born
in 1898 in San-Fele, Italy. Bufano spent his childhood in New York, where
he was privately educated before attending the Arts Student League as
a pupil of James L. Fraser, Herbert Adams, and Paul Manship. Bufano came
to San Francisco in 1915 before traveling for four years in Europe, India
and China. After his tour, the free spirited Bufano returned to the City
and remained a San Franciscan for the rest of his life. He was fired as
an instructor at the San Francisco Institute of Art in 1923 for being
a radical. Bufano severed his finger and sent it to President Wilson to
protest World War I. Henry Miller wrote, "[Bufano] will outlive our civilization
and probably be better known, better understood, both as a man and artist,
five thousand years hence." Bufano died in San Francisco on August 16,
1970. His work is characterized by its use of smoothly rounded granite
and steel and by its monumental iconography. St. Francis is a frequent
subject of Bufano's art.
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