Description
These are the only known drawings from that historic day. Drawn in pencil and pen, in a gritty, realist style, the images depict heavily burdened infantrymen trying to stay afloat in seawater, crawling on the beach, and dead among the ruins of a bombed-out village. The illustrations, interwoven with Ugo's letters to his family and girlfriend, portray the horror of war in a deep and personal way. Abstract paintings at the end of the book, composed forty years later, make a powerful statement of the enduring power about war on an artist-soldier's psyche.
Author: Ugo Giannini, Maxine Giannini
Publisher: Dover Publications
Published: 04/17/2019
Pages: 192
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 2.50lbs
Size: 11.10h x 8.60w x 0.80d
ISBN13: 9780486832425
ISBN10: 0486832422
BISAC Categories:
- History | Military | World War II
- Art | Art & Politics
- History | United States | 20th Century
About the Author
Ugo Giannini studied at the National Academy of Design in New York. His education was interrupted by WWII, during which he served with the Army's 29th Infantry Division and was among the first wave of soldiers to land on Omaha Beach on D-Day. After the war, he continued his studies at the Art Students League in New York, as well as with Fernand Léger in Paris, and he was a professor of art at Caldwell College in New Jersey.
Maxine Giannini (née Yellin), was raised in Newark, New Jersey, and studied art at the Newark School of Fine and Industrial Arts and the Brooklyn Academy. At the same time, she studied piano privately, and became a student of Clara Husserl who herself had been taught by T. Leschetizky. She continued her piano studies with Robert Goldsand, Mitchell Andrews, Genia Robinor, and Seymour Bernstein, and studied composition, theory, and music history at NYU. She became a piano teacher in New Jersey. In 1955 she married Ugo, and together they raised two children. She was inspired to compile this book, combining the letters, the drawings, and the late war paintings of her husband to fulfill his dream of becoming a writer. Through her work, Maxine is recognized as "an accidental historian" of the 29th Division and of WWII.
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