Clement Renzi (born as Clement Edward Joseph Peter Renzi) was an American sculptor whose figurative
bronze and
terra cotta works depict people, human relationships, animals, and birds. His work has been popular with collectors in
California's Central Valley and is placed in more than 60 public venues, primarily in that region.
Childhood and family
Clement Renzi was the third of seven children, born to parents Clemente Renzi and Luisa Guastaferro. The couple had been drawn to Central California's
Tulare County because of its resemblance to the landscape of Clemente's native village of
Dugenta, Italy. After the family lost their prune orchard in the
stock market crash of 1929, they moved to
Farmersville, California, where Clemente worked managing a ranch.[1]
Beginnings as a sculptor
Clement Renzi's first drawing, at about age seven, depicted a cow on his family's farm.[1] He resolved to become a sculptor during a family trip to
San Francisco's
Palace of the Legion of Honor. During that visit, he encountered the sculptures of
Auguste Rodin and had difficulty keeping his hands off them, despite admonitions of a security guard.[1]
At the end of
World War II, while serving as a naval officer in
Hawaii, Renzi worked in a lumberyard, where he began to experiment with woodcarving.[2]
Later, while at
U.C. Berkeley studying business administration through the
G.I. Bill, he took art classes with
Jacques Schnier and Richard O'Hanlon. After he had graduated in 1947 and was working as an accountant for Standard Oil, a fellow student urged him to attend a lecture by art educator Henry Schaefer-Simmern. The lecture was an epiphany for Renzi, who said, "It was just like I had walked into daylight from darkness."[3]
"It was that kind of an experience and it had a profound effect on me. Here was Henry saying that art cannot be imposed upon you. You have to make your own judgments. I had thought that the teacher alone played that part and made all the judgments, but Henry said, 'No, you are perfectly free to do it your own way. The most important thing is that you do what you can do, in the way that you feel it, and the way you can express it. It has perfect validity as a work of art when you do it your own way.' That enormous sense of freedom gave me an exciting license to advance along my own path."[3]
At age 27,[4] Renzi enrolled as a charter member of Schaefer-Simmern's Institute of Art Education and continued his studies there for five years.[5] He later said that Schaefer-Simmern provided a “course to guide my whole life work.”[5]
Although Renzi experimented with drawing, painted
needlework,
mosaic, and
block printing,[4] Schaefer-Simmern observed that his work all seemed to resemble
sculpture and encouraged him to focus on that medium.[6]: 9
In 1950, Renzi married Dorothy Ohannesian, a
classically trained singer from
Fresno, California.[2] When Renzi complained to Dorothy that his accounting job at
Standard Oil felt increasingly unsatisfying, she persuaded him to seek part-time jobs that would allow him to focus on his art.[6]
Following their return to the United States, Clement completed his first major commission, The "Fourteen Stations of the Cross", for a
Christian Brothers retreat center in
St. Helena.[7]
In 1957, he and Dorothy moved to
New York City to accommodate Dorothy's recording contract with
MGM records.[6] Renzi studied anatomy at the Art Students League,[8] and before long, he had secured a workspace at New York's
Sculpture Center.[2] Clement offered a large tapestry, Eat, Drink and Be Merry, for sale at the gallery at an audaciously high price, not fully wanting to part with it. When, to his surprise, the work was sold, Dorothy encouraged Clem to devote himself full-time to his sculpture.[5] P. 16. With the Sculpture Center, he participated in several New York exhibits, was featured in shows traveling nationwide,[9] and held a one-man exhibit in 1960.[10]
In a brochure for the 1960 exhibit,
Sculpture Center's founder,
Dorothea Henrietta Denslow [
Wikidata] commented, “These little people with their long noses, big eyes, and chubby figures live in a far-away land. They are friendly, warm and at peace with themselves, enjoying their unimportant happy moments. We do not know them or their country, but Renzi does, as you can readily see by this show. Through his sculpture, we watch them as they work and play in close harmony, concerned only with the miracles of their simple world.”[citation needed]
Fresno, California
In 1963 the couple moved to Dorothy's hometown of Fresno, to raise their daughter in a quieter environment.[6] Although he had intended to continue shipping his work to the Sculpture Center in New York,[2] his work quickly proved appealing to Fresno collectors.[11] Within a year, Renzi had secured a commission for a large bronze, The Visit, for the City's new
outdoor mall.[11]
Renzi taught in the art department at
Fresno State College for three years, but left when it seemed to be taking too much attention from his work.[1] Renzi had built a studio in his backyard in Fresno's
Fig Garden neighborhood, and travelled periodically to cast his larger bronze works through the
lost wax process in
ItalyItaly and
Spain.[12] As costs rose in Europe, he turned to foundries in
Mexico City and California. His terra cotta works, made from locally derived clay, were often cast in a kiln on the premises of his home.[13] Most of the completed works were unique or cast in editions of two or three.
Renzi continued to receive almost uninterrupted commissions for large bronzes for area hospitals, banks, churches, schools, colleges, the Fresno library, entertainment centers, civic buildings, parks, malls and businesses. In addition, he produced hundreds of smaller works, which he sold from his home and through local galleries. He also continued to offer works through the Lillian Kornbluth gallery in
Fairlawn,
New Jersey; the William Beattie Gallery in
Chicago, and
Sculpture Center in
New York City.
Controversy about Brotherhood of Man
In 1969, one of Renzi's sculptures, Brotherhood of Man, drew attention to his work when a group unsuccessfully contested its placement at the
Fresno County Courthouse, asserting that its subject matter violated the
separation of church and state.[14]
The Brotherhood of Man (1969), Courthouse Park, Fresno, California.
Style
Renzi's style sometimes resembles the work of
Ernst Barlach, reflecting the influence of
German expressionism in his training,[2] and has also been compared to
folk art. However, Renzi did not identify with any particular style or movement and considered the character of his work to have evolved through an introspective, self-directed process of trial and error. "I try to find something completely my own within me and try to enlarge on the concepts that come out of inner search," he said in a 1974 interview. "I search within and get ideas from within."[1]
Renzi's early work often featured tall, slender forms. In the early 60's his sculptures could be characterized as “fat and flat”. Later works assumed a more rounded, friendly aspect[5] (P 13) with cherubic children making a frequent appearance, although he also experimented with other kinds of forms, such as a series of bird-like boats with abstract human passengers, and with weightier themes, such as heroic figures from the Old Testament.
[2]
Legacy
Although Renzi's art was well received by critics and collectors during his New York years, and he continued to market smaller pieces through galleries in the Chicago[8] and the New York area, the demand for his work was so strong in Fresno and its surrounding communities that as time went on, he gave little attention to promoting his work in major urban centers. He remains best known in California's Central Valley.
Exhibitions
One-man exhibitions
The Sculpture Center, New York New York. 1960 and 1973[15]
St. Mary's College, Moraga, California
University of Virginia Gallery, Charlottesville, Virginia
Fresno Art Center (Clement Renzi: The Fresno Years, 1989.[2] Renzi: Art, Life, Legacy, 2012)
Kings Gallery, Hanford, California
L'Entrepreneur Art Gallery, Fresno, California. December 1965 – January 1966. Bronze and Terra Cotta sculptures.[16]
William Rogers Gallery, Fresno, California. Renzi: A showing of bronze and terra cotta sculptures completed during 1977, 1977.
Couvier Gallery, Fresno, California
Other shows
San Francisco Museum of Art
Notre Dame University (permanent collection)
University of Virginia Museum (permanent collection), Charlottesville, Virginia
St. Mary's College Museum, Moraga, California
Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts
Kornbluth Gallery, Fairlawn, New Jersey
Benjamin-Beattie Gallery, Chicago, Illinois
Wilson Gallery, Fresno, California
Plum's Gallery, Fresno, California
Public works by Clement Renzi
1958 The Fourteen Stations of the Cross. Carmelite House of Prayer, Oakdale, California (Relocated from Christian Brothers Retreat Center in Hellendale, California)
1962 Stations of the Cross. Bronze. Location unknown.
^
abcdeMelikian, S. (January 23, 1974). "Former Visalian Ignored Skepticism to Study Art". Visalia Times-Delta: 1B.
^
abcdefgThe Fresno Bee, March 12, 1989. Sculptor Renzi and his 'children'. By Ken Robison. P F16
^
abHis figure and his ground: An art educational biography of Henry Schaefer-Simmern. (Volumes I and II) Berta, Raymond C., Ph.D. Stanford University,1994 (UMI 300 N. Zeeb Rd. Ann Arbor, MI48106), p. 233
^
abDie Gestalt, 1/1977. Kuenstlerische Entwicklung einer erwachsenen Laien.By Henry Schaefer-Simmern. Pp 18-22
^
abcdeMcAfee, D. The Renzi Style: Sculpting the Spirit. Fresno City College RAM, 1976-77. Pp 12-19
^
abcdeDorman-Stubbs, L (March 12, 1998). "Making a Mark on Fresno's Culture". The Fresno Bee Neighbors Section.
^
abCasparian, B (January 17, 1965). "Clement Renzi is a People Sculptor". The Fresno Bee/The Republican.
^
ab"Renzi Sculpture to be Dedicated". The Hanford Sentinel. April 3, 1986.
^Bowen, M. (November 5, 1997). "Family Themes Prominent in Valley sculptor's Bronze Works. The Visalia Time-Delta.".
Fresno City College RAM, 1976–77. The Renzi Style: Sculpting the Spirit. By Darlene McAfee. Photos by G. Kim Vargas. pp 12–19
Davenport, William. W.; The Editors of Sunset Magazine. Art Treasures of the West. Menlo Park, Ca: Lane Magazine & Book, 1966.
His figure and his ground: An art educational biography of Henry Schaefer-Simmern. (Volumes I and II) Berta, Raymond C., Ph.D. Stanford University,1994 (UMI 300 N. Zeeb Rd. Ann Arbor, MI48106)