Biography

Brajo Fuso was born in Perugia on the 21st of February 1899.
He studied in boarding school and then at the Mariotti High School in Umbria. In 1917, he was sent as a lieutenant to fight by the Carso River during the First World War, where he was awarded the Bronze Medal of Military Valour.

Official historic documents report the motivation for Brajo’s reward. He received a bronze medal of military valour because he engaged in hand-to-hand combat with his enemies to save the lives of his soldiers between 17 and 20 June 1918 in Fosso Spinolosa.

Foto di un giovane Brajo Fuso con uniforme militare, immortalato dalla vita in su e girato di tre quarti.
Tessera medica di Brajo Fuso. Nella parte alta c’è scritto “Ordine dei Medici di Perugia”, sotto c’è la firma di Brajo Fuso e la data di rilascio (Perugia, luglio 1931). In basso a sinistra, una sua immagine di profilo in formato fototessera, affiancata da un timbro dell’Ordine dei Medici di Perugia.

In 1923, Brajo Fuso graduated in Medicine and Surgery from the University of Rome. At the end of 1927, after the specialisation, he opened a dental clinic in the centre of Perugia. At the same time, he taught at the University of Perugia as an assistant professor until 1934. Brajo Fuso registered many medical patents, for example, “il riunito”, the dental chair that can be found in a dental clinic. The first prototype in the world was installed at his clinic.

From the autobiography of Brajo Fuso:

“I achieved numerous patents in medical, odontostomatological and pharmaceutical fields. In 1957, I published my own study on “dental roots implants” that could have been done, I wrote, in three different ways. I could be defined as the father of bone implantology!”

In 1929, he married Elisabetta Rampielli (called Bettina), a Bolognese academic artist who spent the rest of her life with him and was fundamental for his artistic education.

Read the autobiography of Bettina Rampielli Fuso

 

 

Foto in posa di una giovane Bettina Fuso, seduta su una sedia, con le gambe accavallate, una spalla lasciata leggermete scoperta dal vestito e la mano sinistra che sorregge il mento. Il braccio destro è disteso e appoggiato allo schienale della sedia su cui è seduta.
Copertina del libro Occhiopino di Brajo Fuso. Sulla destra c’è una figura immaginaria con orecchie a punta, maglietta e pantaloni lunghi, a sinistra il titolo “Le avventure di Occhiopino” e il sottotitolo “Storia di un ragazzo di gomma”

In 1931, Brajo Fuso wrote his first literary works, such as “Occhiopino, Storia di un ragazzo di gomma” (“Occhiopino, The tale of a rubber boy”). From 1942 to 1945, he wrote “Cinematografo del cervello” (“Cinematograph of the brain”) and “Carnevale dei centri nervosi” (“Carnival of nerve centres”), tales for teenagers that he also illustrated. “Il Chinchibatte” and “L’uovo rosso” (“The red egg”) were two books with blank pages that could be drawn by kids. During the Second World War, in which he took part as a captain doctor, he wrote a diary: “Col bisturi all’inferno" (“With the scalpel in hell”); then the novel “Gostro frate castro”.

Read the literary works of Brajo Fuso

In 1935, he became professor of Dentistry and Dental Prosthesis in Rome. Between 1938 and 1943, he taught at the University of Perugia, except during the war period. As a professor, he represented dentists of the Dental Clinic of the Polyclinic of Perugia, of which he also held the position of Director. Since 1944, as a professor, he gave extra classes to the 5th and 6th year students.

 

Fuso in età matura, con il camice aperto da cui si intravedono camicia e cravatta, è seduto sul mobile da dentista nel suo studio. Alle sue spalle, appeso alla parete, uno dei suoi quadri.
Foto a mezzobusto di Brajo Fuso con uniforme militare.

In 1940, he was enlisted again and sent as a captain doctor to Albania for the Italian military campaign in Greece during the Second World War. He stayed there for three years. During that period, he was awarded the Military Cross for having assisted soldiers wounded during enemy attacks. In 1941, he was severely injured and forced to remain immobile for several months.

 

 

He came back to Perugia for recovery. Supported by Bettina, his wife, he started painting as an autodidact on small wooden panels that he would display in a personal exhibition in Rome at the Gallery “Il Cortile”, presented by Leonardo Sinisgalli, Nicoletta Ciarletta and Libero De Libero.

 

Opera di Brajo Fuso dalle linee spesse e i colori forti che rappresenta un complesso di edifici, composto da un arco centrale e un torrione a sinistra, più altri palazzi stratificati a destra e sullo sfondo. Nel complesso, l’immagine richiama l’Arco Etrusco di Perugia.
Ceramica smaltata di Brajo Fuso dai colori vivaci posta su un piedistallo. Ripropone una figura umana, con dei baffi dipinti sul viso. I motivi geometrici lungo il busto ricalcano un completo giacca e cravatta.

The year 1946 marked the beginning of his artistic career.
With experimental applications of colour on canvas, he began the process of abstraction culminating in the Straticromie in 1947, followed by the Cromoscolature. In 1949, he exhibited his ceramic artworks for the first time in the Sala della Leva in Perugia.

Look at the artworks of Brajo Fuso

From the autobiography of Brajo Fuso:

“One day I came across a tube containing yellow paint… I grabbed the tube and dropped rivulets and trickles of paint on a wooden panel: I dropped it far and wide, in circles. The day after, I procured other tubes: a red, a black, a green, a light blue. I improved the distribution of colour by dropping it from a pointed stick on the yellow from the day before. I started with the red, then the green and the black. I waited for one hour before dropping the light blue… I made a lot of these panels and small panels that I later largely destroyed and used their pieces to make figurative art. I later called them STRATIKROMIE, those coloured artworks.”

In the 1950s, in Ansedonia, he created his first personal outdoor exhibition space. In 1960, with the support of Bettina, he took up this idea again and started the most important creation of his life: the Fuseum. It is an art park built on the hill just outside Perugia, where the couple lived for some periods, and today it collects most of Brajo’s artworks.

From the autobiography of Brajo Fuso:

“In 1961, on the hill of Montemalbe, five kilometres from Perugia, in the middle of the green of holm-oak trees, I created the Fuseum, my personal gallery, a wooded park scattered with sculptures”

Scultura di forma circolare, vuota al centro, da cui si affaccia Brajo Fuso con gli occhiali da vista in mano, che si appoggia alla sua superficie irregolare.
Opera di Brajo Fuso fatta con tondini, fil di ferro, tappi di metallo e stecche sottili di legno fissati su un fondo monocromatico. In basso, a destra, si riconosce la firma dell’artista e l’anno di realizzazione, il 1968.

In the 1960s, he continued experimentations in the informal and material fields: he made the Acidocromi, Metalloplatiche and Legni collections. These artworks, characterised by a highly expressive simple style, were made with objects of common use at the end of their destined lives. Brajo Fuso took these objects and relocated them in a different context. Between the 1960s and 1970s, he exhibited in Milan, Venice, Rome, Terni and Spoleto during the Festival dei Due Mondi (Festival of the Two Worlds), an international showcase for arts.

Read more about the techniques of Brajo Fuso

In 1976, Editalia published the first monography of Brajo Fuso in a series dedicated to contemporary art, with critical essays of Giulio Cargo Argan, Italo Tomassoni and André Verdet. In 1980, the Umbria Region and the City of Perugia organised the first anthological exhibition on Brajo Fuso. In the same year, he attended the Fiera del Levante in Bari.

Read about Brajo Fuso according to the critics

Copertina dell’omonima opera monografica su Brajo Fuso. In alto a sinistra, i critici autori dell’edizione (Giulio Carlo Argan, Italo Tomassoni, André Verdet); sullo sfondo un assemblage in legno e lana di vetro, nel tipico stile dell’artista.
Quadro astratto di Brajo Fuso realizzato con fil di ferro, rete metallica, inserti in legno e rifiuti di vario genere.

Brajo Fuso died on the 30th of December 1980 in Perugia. He entrusted the Fuseum, his most beloved creation, to the Fondazione Sodalizio di San Martino to preserve it and turn it into a place open to artistic experimentation.