Monday, September 15, 2025

Wine imitating art: Salvo Foti's Mt Etna through the lens of Art History

In a recent interview (11/9/25) with Gambero Rosso, Salvo Foti, the pillar of tradition in Mt Etna winemaking, described a Renaissance in Mt Etna winemaking and I could not help but place the entirety of his discussion within the context of the art history of that period. 

Salvo Foti and Author

The charts below (created for use in my art blog EverythingElse 238) illustrate the art historical period preceding the Renaissance as well as the sub-groupings into which the Renaissance itself is further divided.



In his interview, Foti describes the Renaissance in Etna winemaking as beginning in the early 1990s. In art historical terms, events before this would fall into the Gothic period. In this period, tagged by Foti as the late 80s - early 90s, there was "little interest in Sicily's native grape varieties and typical agriculture in general." Etna winemaking was not viewed favorably  and the wine that was made was primarily sold in bulk at the "cellar door." Only Villagrande and Murgo bottled consistently, with most producers selling-on their grapes.

"At the beginning of the 15th century, Italy experienced a cultural rebirth, a renaissance that would massively affect all sectors of society. Turning away from the preceding Gothic and Romanesque periods' iconography, Florentine artists spurred a rejuvenation of the glories of classical art in line with a more humanistic and individualistic emerging contemporary era. Based in this flourishing new environment that empowered people to fully immerse themselves in studies of the humanities, Early Renaissance artists began to create work intensified by knowledge of architecture, philosophy, theology, mathematics, science, and design. The innovations that emerged in art during this period would go on to cause reverberations, which continue to influence creative and cultural arenas today" (theartstory.org). 

There is no common agreement as to the trigger(s) of the Renaissance of the 15th century but Foti is declarative as to the Renaissance driving forces in the case of Etna winemaking: (i) Benanti's desire to become a quality wine producer (1988) and (ii) his (Salvo's) "historical and technical-scientific research in collaboration with Professor Rocco Di Stefano, Director of the Experimental Institute of Oenology in Asti."

Key artists of the Early Renaissance include such notable names as Masaccio, Donatello, Filippo Brunellschi, and Fra Angelico. Early players in the Etna Renaissance were, according to Salvo, Alice Bonacorsi, Valcerasa, Ciro Biondi, i Vigneri, and Il Cantanta.

"The High Renaissance, subsequently coined to denote the artistic pinnacle of the Renaissance, refers to a thirty-year period exemplified by the groundbreaking, iconic works of art being made in Italy during what was considered a thriving societal prime. A rejuvenation of classical art married with a deep investigation into the humanities spurred artists of unparalleled mastery whose creations were informed by a keen knowledge of science, anatomy, and architecture, and remain today, some of the most awe-inspiring works of excellence in the historical art canon (theartstory.org)." The notables of this period include, Raphael, Michelangelo, and Leonardo da Vinci.

And then Salvo pivoted to talking about the role of "foreigners" in the Etna wine story. There is an underlying tone here that the rest of the world has gotten the narrative wrong. That the world sees the Renaissance in Etna winemaking as being synonymous with the arrival of Andrea Franchetti, Frank Cornelissen, and Marc de Grazia. As shown above, Salvo has gone to great lengths to place the Renaissance in a prior period. What they brought, he stipulates, was an enormous burst in production, promotion, and sales.

Having spent time with all three of these named producers, I am of the opinion that they also contributed to the fabric and scope of winemaking on the mountain. Regardless, this was a step forward for Mt Etna, one which I equate, in art historical terms, to the High Renaissance.

Mannersism emerged at the end of the High Renaissance and manifested as a "stylized twist" on Renaissance classicism. The name derives from the Italian word maniera which translates as "style" or "manner." Mannerism is viewed as a bridge between High Renaissance and Baroque. The chart above shows both the context and geographic distribution of the Mannerist school. As stated by the Tate Museum,

Rather than adopting the harmonious ideals associated with Raphael and Michelangelo, Mannerists went a step further to create highly artificial compositions which showed off their techniques and skills in manipulating compositional elements to create a sense of sophisticated elegance.
And this is the fear that Salvo has for Etna wines. He is concerned about those who come to Etna not to produce "Etna wines" but only "wines made on Etna." Salvo points out that the environment supports natural wines. luxury wines, artisanal wines, technological wines, and industrial wines. His fear is that "the exponential and sudden growth that is crossing the Etna wine will give space to improvisation, uncontrolled and without programming ..."


©Wine -- Mise en abyme

No comments:

Post a Comment