Lucio Amelio (13 September 1931 – 2 July 1994) was an Italian art dealer, curator, and actor. For decades he contributed to make Naples an international art centre encouraging the dialogue between European and American contemporary arts.[1]
Biography
Lucio Amelio was born on 13 September 1931 in Via dei Tribunali in Naples.[2][3] He had four sisters – Marisa, Giuliana, Lina and Anna.[citation needed] Due to the Second World War, his family moved several times and settled in 1944 for twelve years in Resina.[citation needed]
After graduating in 1949 from Liceo scientifico, Amelio enrolled in architecture studies at the University of Naples.[citation needed] Amelio quickly established himself as a leading figure in the international contemporary art market from the mid-sixties to the mid-nineties.[citation needed] In 1965 he opened the Modern Art Agency,[4] a gallery in Parco Margherita dedicated to experimental art. In 1969 he opened the Galleria Lucio Amelio in Naples’ Piazza dei Martiri, which hosted exhibitions of artists such as Robert Rauschenberg, Mario Merz, Jannis Kounellis, Keith Haring, Cy Twombly, Dieter Hacker.[5][6]
In 1980 Amelio introduced Joseph Beuys to Andy Warhol, and later that year he organized the exhibition of portraits "by Beuys, Warhol".[7][8]
In 1988, Amelio co-founded an art gallery, Galerie Pièce Unique, in Paris in the middle of Saint-Germain-des-Prés neighborhood.[10][11][12]
Death
Amelio had been HIV positive since 1987.[13] He died in his hometown of Naples as a result of AIDS on 2 July 1994, aged 62.[14][13]
Tomb on Capri
Lucio Amelio's grave is located on the Cimitero Acattolico, the non-Catholic cemetery, on the island of Capri.[15][16] Many international writers and artists are buried there, such as the writer Norman Douglas and the French Baron Jacques d'Adelswärd-Fersen – whose house on Capri, the Villa Lysis, Amelio wanted to restore in the last few years of his life had. Amelio's gravestone, a large rectangular plate made of black Belgian marble was designed Amelio himself with the help of the art critic Michele Bonuomoa year before his death. In the middle of the marble slab, under the name of "Lucio Amelio", a circle is engraved, the interior of which, at the highest level of the sun, causes an intense light through a mirror effect; below is the inscription L'isola del Sonno (Isle of Sleep), which cites the title of a small object created by Joseph Beuys in Capri in the summer of 1974.
Acting
Amelio was also an actor and worked with director Lina Wertmuller in four films.
^Notte, Riccardo (1991). "Conversazione Fra Lucio Amelio e Riccardo Notte" [Conversation between Lucio Amelio and Riccardo Notte]. Artleo.it. Med Arts Review. Retrieved 7 October 2020. ...anzi 13 settembre 1931, da quando è nato.
^ ab"Ein Leben unter dem Vulkan" [Interview: Life Under the Volcano]. FOCUS Online, No. 7 (1994) (in German). 14 February 1994. Retrieved 5 March 2020.