Harvard Shield masthead element Harvard University Gazette
Search the Gazette
HOME : Arts ARTS Prev issues | Contact us | Harvard News Office
Current Issue:
August 22, 2002


News
News, events, features

Science/Research
Latest scientific findings

Profiles
The people behind the university

Community
Harvard and neighbor communities

Sports
Scores, highlights, upcoming games

On Campus
Newsmakers, notes, students, police log

Arts
Museums, concerts, theater

Calendar
Two-week listing of upcoming events

 

 


HARVARD GAZETTE ARCHIVES

Science Center's Nivola vibrant again

By Ken Gewertz
Gazette Staff

The 70-foot "sandscape" mural that decorates the main corridor of the Science Center is looking brighter these days, thanks to a retouching of the original colors by the artist's daughter and grandson.
Claire Nivola and Anther Kiley
Claire Nivola, daughter of original artist Costantino Nivola, and her son, Anther Kiley, touch up the sandscape gracing a wall of the Science Center. Staff photo by Jon Chase

Claire Nivola '69 ('70) and her son, Anther Kiley, spent a week in July going over the faded colors with latex-based pigments matched to the originals. If anyone knows what those colors used to look like, it's Nivola. She helped her father install the mural in 1972. Today, she writes and illustrates children's books.

The brilliant yellows, reds, and greens make the mural a lot harder to ignore, which is exactly what the artist, Sardinian-born Costantino Nivola (1911-1988), intended.

Originally housed in the New York display room of the Italian typewriter manufacturer, Olivetti, the mural was designed to be seen from farther back. When the showroom closed, Nivola, who had taught at the Graduate School of Design, offered the work to Jose Luis Sert, designer of the Science Center. To make the shapes stand out more clearly in the narrow corridor, Nivola added color.

"The mural was so badly faded, it was hard to figure out where the colors were," his daughter said, dabbing a loaded brush on the rough surface. "It took a little bit of guesswork, but we tried not to go too far afield."

ken_gewertz@harvard.edu









Copyright 2002 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College