Barbiero, Joseph
Italy, 1901 - 1992
Joseph Barbiero was born near Padua in 1901. Fleeing Mussolini’s Italy as a young man, he settled in a village nestled in the shadow of the Auvergne volcanoes in 1923. He worked as a stonemason until 1965, using the local Volvic stone in his restoration projects, which included many local churches.
He grew so accustomed to handling the volcanic rock that he started imagining the stories his chisel could carve out of it. The way he gave shape to the stories was doubtless purely intuitive: some, like the fossilised Casanovas, originated in his home region of Veneto, while others drew on the visual vocabulary of gargoyles or seemed to summon up long-forgotten pagan deities. As his strength faded later in life, he turned to drawing as a way of extending his fervent celebration of a life that was simple and joyous – in a word, elementary. Rock represents immutability, drawing movement, but in his hands, both were shot through with boundless vigour. His sculptures are the boundary stones of a land of exile where he made his home; his drawings are a dancing imitation of life as it grows fainter, budding for the last time.