Richard Ciccimarra
Richard Ciccimarra was born in 1924 in Vienna,
Austria. He was largely a self-taught artist, but the early influence
of Moritz Daffinger, the Austrian botanical watercolourist, is discernible
in some of his work, particularly the “finger exercises”
or realistic depictions of flowers and dry fly fishing lures that
he made. The artist also acknowledged the influence of the Swiss
artist, Julius Bissier.
Ciccimarra immigrated to Canada in the early
1950’s and made Victoria his home. The handsome and sophisticated
artist soon established himself in the fledgling art scene. A number
of local and expatriate artists banded together in a group called
the “Limners” which remained a force for more than 20
years. Besides being known for his fine artistic abilities, he was
internationally respected as a master fly fisherman and guide.
His art evolved over the years, revealing a melancholy
and pessimism that belied his outwardly sociable nature. He committed
suicide on a trip to Greece.
His art is highly prized by collectors knowledgeable
about him. In particular his large, tissue collages on wood panels
covered in beeswax are distinctive, haunting forays of a compelling
nature. His very best and major works are in the collection of the
Art Gallery of Greater Victoria. Ciccimarra committed suicide on
a trip to Greece in 1973.
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