• November/December 2022

    Notiziario Goes Exclusively Online in 2023

    By Nancy DeSanti, 1st Vice President-Programs


    Beginning with the January/February 2023 issue, the Notiziario will be published and distributed online only.  As is currently the case, the newsletter will reside on the AMHS website.  Notification of new issues and links to the online version will continue to be disseminated by email to members of the Society.

    Readers may recall that the AMHS ceased publishing a print version of the Notiziario for nearly a year during the early stages of the pandemic.  We returned to a print version in 2021.  However, the lingering effects of new variants of the Covid-19 virus made the process of producing and mailing a print version more labor intensive.  Coupled with the recent rising costs of postage and materials, the Executive Committee of the AMHS voted unanimously to publish the Notiziario exclusively online.  

    This is the latest step in the modernization of the Society’s online operations.  In recent times, members became able to renew their membership, register for events, purchase merchandise, and contribute to our scholarship program online.  This continues the process of making the AMHS a future-facing organization that uses technology to serve its members.

    There will be no change in the quality and variety of the newsletter.  Our readers will still enjoy the same excellent articles by the same writers (and, hopefully, more in the future).  Focusing on our web-based publication will enable us to provide more interactive content and, if anything, increase the amount of information we share with our members and friends. We are constantly seeking ways to improve our communications program, and this change will enable our volunteer writers and editors to devote more time and energy to the creative use of our communication tools.


    As always, readers are encouraged to contribute articles to the Notiziario.  All of us have stories to tell, experiences to share and knowledge to impart to our fellow members.  Whether it be recounting a trip to Italy, marking personal milestones or discussing cultural topics, we want to hear from you.  Together, we will continue to learn about and love “all things Italian.”

    November/December 2022

  • November/December 2022

    Art Expert Highlights Works of Venetian Renaissance Masters

    By Nancy De Santi, 1st Vice President-Programs

    Tintoretto’s Miracle of St. Mark, also known as the Miracle of the Slave, painted in 1548. Credit: Wikipedia

    AMHS members were treated to a fascinating lecture by one of America’s leading experts on Italian art, Dr. Eric Denker, who spoke to an appreciative audience at Casa Italiana on September 18, 2022.

    The luncheon program was co-sponsored by the Casa Italiana Sociocultural Center and the Casa Italiana Language School.  

    Dr. Denker was the long-serving Senior Lecturer of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., and the author of seven books and catalogues.  His deep knowledge of Italian art and culture has made him a popular lecturer in Europe, for the Smithsonian Institution and for the Scuola Internazionale di Grafica in Venice. 

    Dr. Denker studied in Bologna in the 1970s and is currently the only American honorary member of the Scuola Grande di San Rocco in Venice.  One of his grandparents came from a town in Lazio, so that may help explain his love of Italian art and culture.

    His topic was undoubtedly of interest to all art lovers—the “Four Titans of the Venetian Renaissance: Bellini, Giorgione, Titian and Tintoretto.” Their paintings in the 15th and 16th centuries were characterized by the use of color and mood.

    Bellini’s famous paintings include St. Francis in the Desert, which is in the Frick Gallery in New York City.    One of his masterpieces, the massive San Zaccaria Altarpiece, is 16 feet tall and 8 feet wide.

    Giorgione, as Dr. Denker noted, painted “in a truthful way,” as real people looked. His famous painting of the Nativity, the Adoration of the Shepherds, is in the National Gallery of Art. Unfortunately, Giorgione died of the plague when he was only in his 30s.

    Dr. Eric Denker
    Credit: Sam Yothers

    Titian defined the Venetian style for the better part of the era. He painted some of the finest portraits and nudes of his time, including the Venus of Urbino.  Dr. Denker said that the subject of the painting was actually a bride who married into the family of the famous Duke of Montefeltro in Urbino, which at that time was one of the most refined and elegant cities in Italy.  The Dresden Venus is traditionally attributed to Giorgione but Titian completed at least the landscape.    

    Tintoretto was a renowned and prolific artist who created spectacular altarpieces as well as religious narrative scenes, portraits, and mythological subjects.  One of his best-known paintings is the Miracle of St. Mark (also known as the Miracle of the Slave). His enormous Crucifixion has been called one of the most dramatic versions of the Crucifixion in the history of Christian religious art. He also painted a huge Last Supper which measures 12 feet by 18 feet.   

    The years 1475-1575 may have marked Venice’s political decline but the arts thrived during this period.  With the passing of Titian and Tintoretto, the Venetian Renaissance’s artistic prominence came to an end, but as Dr. Denker showed the audience, it was a glorious period. So glorious in fact that unfortunately Napoleon Bonaparte stole works of art by Titian, Tintoretto and Giorgione and took them to France as the “spoils of war.” Apparently, he was trying to fill up the new Louvre museum in Paris.

    Dr. Denker dedicated his lecture to the memory of his long-time friend and our Holy Rosary parishioner Diego D’Ambrosio, who was represented at the event by his sons Marco and Fabrizio and his nephew Giovanni. Diego was known to the world as the “celebrity barber” of Washington, D.C., whose clients included three American presidents, foreign leaders, ambassadors and Supreme Court Justices.  But to members of our community, he was a humble, kind-hearted gentleman, always elegantly dressed, and a friend to many who miss him dearly.

    The intrepid members of the Hospitality Committee (left to right) Elisa DiClemente, Joann Novello, Joe Novello and Lynn Sorbara.
    Credit: Sam Yothers

    A delicious lunch was catered by Osteria da Nino. Afterwards, a raffle drawing was held which raised $125 for the Society. Thanks to all those who donated raffle prizes and who bought tickets.

    At the end of the program, AMHS Immediate Past President Maria D’Andrea-Yothers gave a special thank you on behalf of AMHS to Lynn Sorbara, Joann and Joe Novello and Elisa DiClemente, the members of the Hospitality Committee who have worked so hard over the years to make our programs successful.  The Society also extends a big thank you to Lourdes Tinajero for helping to coordinate the program with Dr. Denker and the D’Ambrosio family.

    November/December 2022