BY ADAM PARKER
The Post and Courier
The Post and Courier
Don ZanFagna is an adventurer,
a climber of the mind’s mountain peaks, a man who skydives through the
imagination.
He is the inventor of the “Dome
of Ultimate Possibilities,” the “Echo-Locator of Splendor,” the “Pillar of Life
Retro-Erecto.”
He is a true visionary, said
Mark Sloan, director of the Halsey Institute of Contemporary Art. His work pushes
boundaries, probes big questions. It’s not meant to serve as explicit
blueprints for a sane new world, Sloan said. It is ZanFagna’s way of channeling
profound concerns.
“I would say it’s
metaphorical,” Sloan said.
It’s also beautiful. Big ideas
might be embedded throughout, but many of the works stand on their own
aesthetically as well-composed expressions of color and form. They can be
appreciated individually as well as collectively.
A portion of ZanFagna’s massive
output, the Pulse Dome series, is now on display at the Halsey through Dec. 8.
The story of ZanFagna’s life
and work — as told by his wife, his niece, his art advocate and his local
curator — is astonishing in its scope and achievement. It began in athletic
glory, reached the pinnacle of academic success, then subsided into the confusion
and darkness of dementia. Along the way, art was made and sometimes displayed
at institutions such as the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Los Angeles
County Museum of Art and the Art Institute of Chicago.
Pulse Domes
By the late 1960s, ZanFagna was
growing especially concerned about society’s trajectory. It was clear to him
that radical change was needed if the human species was going to live in
harmony with nature.
So he applied his formidable
mind to the invention of a new social landscape, a conceptual expanse occupied
by “pulse domes” that emerged from the Earth, informed by ancient structures
and lost ideas.
He kept filling his large
notebooks with ideas expressed visually. He drew sketches, assembled collages,
created long lists. His beautiful mind processed information, categorized it,
labeled it and invented whole dimensions and domains in which nature provided
the ingredients for every solution and human invention the formula.
It seemed his mind went a mile
a minute. He stayed up late at night creating visual representations of these
fantastical ideas, signed them with a degree of pride, then tucked them away,
with little sense that they might have commercial value.
The Pulse Dome series was
exhibited a year ago at the Aspen Art Museum; and the Cyborg series had a
showing at the Tampa Museum of Art the first part of this year. After more than
two years of consultation, the Halsey is ready to introduce its patrons to
these imaginative renderings of the world. The rediscovery of Don ZanFagna is
underway.
Today, ZanFagna, his mind
dimmed by dementia, still spends hours among his thousands of books, continues
to make long to-do lists and enjoys the company of those close to him, his wife
Joyce ZanFagna said. The couple, married 55 years, lives in Mount Pleasant now,
and will soon move to Summerville. They followed their nephew Everett White and
his wife Joanna to the Lowcountry after the younger couple came in 2005 and opened
an art gallery on Sullivan’s Island.
His immense body of work,
mostly intact after all these decades, is now being catalogued and evaluated by
his family and by Allison Williamson, founder and director of the Charleston
Artist Collective and curator at the recently formed ZanFagna Foundation.
Hundreds of notebooks,
intricately filled with complex visual ideas, and hundreds of sketches, prints,
paintings and collages, part of various series of thematic works, are being
prepared for posterity.
Precocious
beginnings
It all began in Rhode Island.
Don ZanFagna was born in Providence and grew up in Saunderstown, not far from
Newport, part of a sizable Italian-American community. His family hails from
the hills north of Naples, in the Campania region, a hamlet called Vairano
Patenora, famous for its medieval Norman fortress, which juts from the hill
overlooking the town.
The young ZanFagna oriented
himself to the sea from an early age, his wife said. “He grew up on the water,
he loved everything about the water. He was definitely an ocean dweller.”
He was also an ambitious,
precocious young person of little means. He enrolled at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y., in 1947, when he was 17 years old, because tuition was paid for, and
because it could put him on a fast track to a salaried position. After a year, though, the cadet
left for the University of Michigan. Following other people’s rules had proved
to be a little tough.
Don and Joyce met at the
University of Michigan in 1951. He was an engineering student and the star
quarterback of the football team. He also played baseball (which he liked
best). She studied art.
While he was there, he met the
iconic designer-theorist Buckminster Fuller, who was visiting campus to give a
lecture. The famous futurist and the future futurist met and spoke and began an
occasional correspondence.
Fuller would remain an
influence on ZanFagna throughout his career. The younger thinker was especially
taken by Fuller’s idea of tensegrity (a contraction of tensional integrity),
which is the engineering principle of tension and compression among polyhedrons
that create self-supporting structures. (It was this concept, and other related
ideas, that led Fuller to perfect the design of the geodesic dome.)
Meanwhile, his athletic prowess
caught the attention of the scouts. The San Francisco 49ers wanted to sign him.
The Brooklyn Dodgers invited him to join the team. The Boston Red Sox wooed
him. The New York Yankees reached out to him.
But before he launched a
baseball career he had a change of heart. The Korean War was on, and he wanted
to go as a commissioned officer, not a grunt, and he wanted to be a fighter
pilot. To achieve that he had to have at least three years of college under his
belt
A football teammate and artist
at Michigan familiar with ZanFagna’s visual and mathematical inclinations
encouraged his friend to hone his skills, so the quarterback signed up for a
course meant for amateur artists. His teachers “were just blown away by him,”
Joyce ZanFagna said.
His family was disappointed.
They had hoped to ride the coattails of a baseball star. They didn’t understand
Don’s obsessions with geometry and design or appreciate his fanciful efforts to
calculate nature’s phenomena.
When he was 9 years old, he was
briefly fixated on the undulation of ocean waves in which he discerned
patterns. But when he tried to share his enthusiasm with his family at the
dinner table, he was met with blank stares. “Eat,” they responded.
Opening horizons
In 1953, ZanFagna finished at
Michigan and joined the service. The war was winding down and fighter pilots
were not in high demand, so he trained radar technicians. While he was in the
service, stationed in Columbus, Miss., his career as an artist officially
started. He had a solo show in a gallery, displaying woodcuts and other
pictures that reflected the terrible poverty and oppression of the Deep South.
Always a moral and honest
person, his sense of justice was challenged by his experiences in Mississippi,
his wife said. “Whatever he’s been exposed to he’s going to tell you about it,”
Joyce ZanFagna said. The artwork is about observation and feeling, not
political messages, she said. And it’s just one way — the main way — he
expresses his swirling ideas. “He always says, ‘I’m an artist in spite of
myself.’ ”
Because Don ZanFagna is also a
musician: he played trombone well enough to sit in Al Green’s band back in the
day, when they were both stationed at Webb Air Force Base in Texas. And he
became a respected teacher and outspoken environmentalist.
After Don and Joyce married in
1957, they traveled to Italy. Don had received a Fulbright grant and backing
from the Italian government to study art. They spent a year marveling at the
works in Florence’s Uffizi galleries and at the user-friendly density of
Tuscany’s urban centers.
They procured a little Fiat
convertible and drove it across Europe, stopping to visit Cezanne’s studio in
Aix-en-Provence, France, and making a point of seeing El Greco’s works in
Spain.
They loved Europe and didn’t
want to return, Joyce ZanFagna said. But duty called.
Don ZanFagna enrolled at the
University of Illinois, but felt out of place, too old compared to the
inexperienced teenagers who populated his courses. So after a semester, he
transferred to the University of California-Los Angeles.
There the iconoclast thrived.
The couple’s only child, Robert, was born.
Passing the famed Comara
Gallery one day, ZanFagna entered on a whim and invited the owner to have a
look at some of his artworks, which happened to be in the car. On the spot he
was invited to join the gallery. His collectors and admirers included Carol
Channing, Vincent Price, Jane Wyatt, Edward G. Robinson, Dean Martin and Frank
Sinatra, Joyce ZanFagna said. He began to make some money.
On the move
But the commercial art world
did nothing to attract him, and soon he was theorizing on paper with no serious
intention of selling his works. Notebooks of ideas filled up, one after
another. ZanFagna became increasing concerned about environmental degradation,
and soon was researching ancient structures such as Stonehenge, Mesopotamian
ziggurats, Carnac stones, insect colonies, natural shelters like caves and
earth mounds.
His interests in mythology,
human behavior, design and science converged in his art. He started the Pulse
Dome series, and then the Cyborg series. He pursued many projects, some
simultaneously. He was searching, questioning.
At the start of the 1970s,
ZanFagna’s father fell ill, and the family moved to the New York City area.
ZanFagna taught art at Rutgers University and was visiting eco-architecture
professor at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn.
He started a new company called
CEASE (Center for Ecological Action to Save the Environment), which provided
consulting services to numerous individual and institutional clients. He was a
speaker at the first Earth Day in 1970, a wildly popular mass demonstration that
reached millions of Americans and played a role in the establishment of the
United States Environmental Protection Agency and the passage of the Clean Air,
Clean Water, and Endangered Species acts.
Meanwhile the Pulse Domes piled
up. ZanFagna was interested in discovering ways to build sustainable living
environments that leveraged nature without exploiting it. Membranes could be
grown from brain coral, or clam shell enzymes. Power could be derived from
trees. This was heady stuff, much of it theoretical, much of it artistic. And
it was all informed by a refined aesthetic sensibility, a penchant for sublime
beauty.
In 1989, the ZanFagnas lost
Robert to Hodgkin’s lymphoma, a blow that shook them to the core and
reprioritized their lives. Nephew Everett White, with whom they had always been
close, became like a son.
Two years later, Don and Joyce
ZanFagna left the northeast for Marietta, Ga., to be near Everett and Joyce’s
family. They remained there for 15 years. Don ZanFagna continued his visual
experiments, turning from Pulse Domes and Cyborgs to a series called “Waiting
for Memory,” which explored dreams, myth and death.
By 2009, Everett had married
Joanna, and the ZanFagnas had relocated to the Lowcountry. In recent years,
Everett has spent hours talking to his uncle about all these years of making
art, only to discover amazing things, Joanna said. Don ZanFagna never was one
to boast, and the work he created — the sketches and collages in those hundreds
of notebooks — often disappeared from view.
Now a foundation has been
created, a few works sold, and the family, with help from Allison Williamson,
is working hard to introduce Don ZanFagna to new audiences.
Mark Sloan of the Halsey
Institute said the Pulse Dome series in particular captured his imagination.
“When I first saw this work I
was gob smacked,” he said. “I was like, this is it.”
This is environmentalism fueled
by concern mixed with fantasy; this is nothing like what we think of as “green
building,” Sloan said. ZanFagna isn’t interested in LEED certification,
recycling and conservation. “That’s just making a bad idea slightly less bad.”
It’s better to start over.
“In a way, he is looking for a
wholesale overhaul of the architectural enterprise itself,” Sloan said.