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trinity fine art ltd - Milton Gendel

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6. CAPOSTAZIONE<br />

Amerigo Tot, nato in Ungheria e naturalizzato<br />

italiano, era uno scultore eccezionalmente<br />

dotato che aveva il suo studio in via Margutta a<br />

Roma.<br />

Era così abile nelle tecniche classiche acquisite<br />

durante la sua formazione accademica, che<br />

riusciva a modellare a mano libera, a rovescio,<br />

il negativo del calco che avrebbe usato per<br />

riprodurre le sue figure.<br />

Tra i primi ad aggiungere disegni astratti alla<br />

gamma delle sue raffigurazioni, Tot fu ingaggiato<br />

per decorare il frontale della pensilina<br />

della stazione ferroviaria di Roma, la Stazione<br />

Termini, completata in stile contemporaneo<br />

per l’Anno Santo del 1950. È sua la fascia,<br />

lunga una cinquantina di metri, che corre<br />

lungo il bordo della tettotia ondulata che i<br />

romani chiamano il “Dinosauro”.<br />

Oltre alla sua carriera come scultore, Tot, giovane<br />

bello e forte, era un uomo di mondo, p<strong>art</strong>icolarmente<br />

popolare con le donne straniere<br />

in visita a Roma. In questa foto è seduto sulla<br />

scalinata di Trinità dei Monti con l’americana<br />

Jean Purcell, un’abile fotografa dilettante,<br />

nota per le sue improvvise performance di<br />

cancan. Era sposata a Victor Purcell, un funzionario<br />

inglese che per qualche anno godette<br />

del titolo di Protector of the Chinese to the Malay<br />

Government, ed era l’autore di un dizionario<br />

Anglo-Cantonese.<br />

Roma, 1949<br />

24<br />

STATION MASTER<br />

Amerigo Tot, born in Hungary and naturalized<br />

Italian, was an extraordinarily gifted sculptor<br />

whose studio was in the Via Margutta, Rome.<br />

He was so adept in the techniques acquired in<br />

classical academic training that he could model<br />

freehand, in reverse, the negative casts he used to<br />

produce his figures.<br />

Among the first to add abstract designs to the<br />

gamut of his figuration, he was engaged to<br />

decorate the front canopy of the main railway<br />

station in Rome, the Stazione Termini, when it<br />

was completed in contemporary style in time for<br />

the Holy Year of 1950. His is the fascia, some fifty<br />

meters broad, that runs along the edge of the<br />

cantilevered loopdeloop the Romans call the<br />

“Dinosaur”.<br />

Besides his career as a sculptor, Tot, a handsome<br />

muscular fellow, was a man about town,<br />

p<strong>art</strong>icularly popular with women visitors from<br />

abroad. Here he sits on the Spanish Steps with the<br />

American Jean Purcell, an accomplished amateur<br />

photographer, who was known for her impromptu<br />

performances of the cancan. She was married to<br />

Victor Purcell, the British civil servant who<br />

rejoiced for some time in the title of Protector of<br />

the Chinese to the Malay Government, and was<br />

the author of an English-Cantonese dictionary.<br />

Rome, 1949

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