Originally
from Italy, Maria Carosi started learning more about art by taking
a part-time evening class at Humber College, and then by graduating
from the Ontario College of Art. She says that she likes to paint
anything that inspires her, driven to create through various mediums.
The main content of her works are landscapes and figures, all
described in many colours.
Exhibiting at Artway and in a few group
shows, Maria has also been commissioned by St. Patrick's Church
of Brampton and was published in the Region of Peel's County to
Keystone- Reflections of Peel commemorative book.
Her works have been reproduced as VAB art
cards and in our Sesquicentennial Floral Calendar. In 2002, Maria
had a solo exhibit in the Brampton City Hall Atrium.
TO CONTACT
She can be contacted through
VAB, by phoning (905) 453-9142, or by e-mailing visualartsbrampton@gmail.com.
Summer
is blooming at city hall
KATHARINE SEALEY, Staff Writer, The Brampton Guardian, Originally
published on Friday, August 2nd, 2002
|

The paintings of local artist Maria Carosi will be on display
throughout the month of August at the Brampton City Hall.
|
Growing up in the small rural town of Celano in Italy, Maria
Carosi dreamed of being an artist, but instead was apprenticed
to a dressmaker to learn how to sew and embroider like all the
other girls her age.
Now, at the age of 62, Carosi is finally living her dream; a
collection of her vibrant landscape and figure paintings can be
seen until Aug. 30 in the atrium of city hall.
The shows main focus is Carosis passion for flowers.
"They always inspire me," she said. "Everything
about nature inspires me, and the brighter the colours, the better."
Carosi said a bad back, earned during her years as a dressmaker,
has forced her to give up gardening, but she still finds ways
to fill her paintings with greenery.
"If you are an artist, you can make one flower look like
a huge garden," she said, with a laugh. "I like to work
on one theme at a time and I think Ive done about 12 or
13 sunflower pictures."
Other pieces in the collection depict still-lifes, as well as
portraits of her granddaughter at a dance recital, and images
inspired by her trip to a vineyard in Niagara-on-the-Lake.
"Whenever I go somewhere, I dont have to look all
around at everything," she said. "I can just sit in
one place and look to the left and look to the right and find
something interesting to paint."
A piece she created during a vacation in Cancun won her the 1991
League for Innovation Award at Humber College. Carosi said she
didnt set out to create an award-winning piece, it was just
a way to pass the time.
"The water was too rough to go in," she said. "So
I decided to paint instead of swim."
Carosi, who emigrated to Canada in 1967, took a variety of one-off
art courses throughout the 70s, but decided to make a bigger
commitment to her art in 1991, after taking 20 years off to raise
her son and to help establish the family business, Carosi Construction.
"Once the company got to the point where I didnt have
to be there all the time, I enrolled in Humber for some part-time
evening classes," she said. "I decided it was time for
me."
After Humber, she was accepted at the Ontario College of Art
and Design, where she earned her diploma in April 2000. Since
then, she has displayed her work in a variety of group and solo
shows across the GTA.
These days, she does the majority of her painting at home, in
her walk-out studio.
"Its my refuge," she said, with a smile. "You
can almost always find me in there."
Right now, she said, shes feeling inspired by something
new.
"Lately Ive been getting up early in the morning to
paint the sunrise," she said. "Luckily, Im a morning
person, so I enjoy it. I usually go to bed with the chickens.
You still have to work quickly though, because you cant
run after the sun and it moves too fast to take your time."
Next, shes thinking about painting the landscape in Chinguacousy
Park or maybe a study of water. Whichever she chooses, you can
be assured shell be live on the scene to capture the images.
"No photos for me," she said. "You dont
get the spirit from a photo. Sometimes I have to take notes or
sketches, but I always like to work from real life. Real life
is so interesting."
Carosi can be contacted at maria @ carosi.com