โIf you want to sell something, donโt put it on the wall,โ warns local artist Joe Salvaggio.
Salvaggio has a habit of mounting new works on his living room wall. Trying them out for size. Seeing how they fit.
โYouโll get stuck with it,โ he adds with a resigned chuckle.
It isnโt so much that Salvaggio is short on buyers. But the sale of a painting, it seems, just doesnโt lend as much satisfaction as the conversations and contemplative time the painting inspires when itโs up there on his wall. And besides, Salvaggio has his most thorough criticโSylvia, his wife of 52 yearsโon hand in his in-home gallery.
โShe doesnโt like this one,โ says Salvaggio of a quiet, luminescent Nevada landscape piece. โShe doesnโt like the owl.โ
โI donโt like the owl,โ Sylvia agrees.
โShe thinks itโs too small,โ Salvaggio explains.
Salvaggio, a retired engineer and a Rochester, N.Y., native, got the first hints of his artistic side as a child, when he โused to draw all over the backs of books.โ After high school, Salvaggio got a stint doing window design for one of New Yorkโs most posh clothing outfitters.
โThat was a very sophisticated kind of art,โ he says of window design and signing. โSigns were not like ordinary signs. [They had] a lot of fancy script.โ
Salvaggio dabbled in art off and on during his years as an engineer, working predominately in oils. He began working in watercolor in the late 1970s, and the switch in medium marked a turning point in his artistic career. Today, watercolor and gaucheโan โopaque kind of watercolor”โare his two favored mediums, although many of his works are done in oils, acrylics or with mixed media. His works, no matter the medium, all have an impressionistic softness about them, but also a shadowy ambience suggestive of the darker side of life. One, a portrait of his wifeโs childhood doll, is strangely haunting.
Two of Salvaggioโs favorite subjects are wildlife (especially wolves) and landscapes, although variations on and deviations from these themes are fairly common. One, which he calls a surreal space scene, shows one of Jupiterโs moonโs looming large, with a satellite sailing past the moonโs gleaming edge.
Salvaggioโs favorite workโand probably mine as wellโshows a safari landscape. An African elephant dominates the foreground. In the background, a clouded sky glows orange, illuminated by the setting sun.
Impressed by the paintingโs colorful exoticism, I ask its title. Salvaggio scratches his head.
โI title [paintings] when I get to the gallery, but when I get back home, I sort of forget,โ he admits.
In the in-home gallery, where spectators are few, titles cease to matter. Itโs the artistic contentโand the lively conversation it sparks between husband and wifeโthat are paramount.
