EVIDENCE AMAZON WARRIOR WOMEN EXISTED

Die Amazonen #1051-365 Capt. Charles Wight 60x70cm

Diego Voci; “Die Amazonen” #1051-365 70x60cm

At least the Amazonen existed in Diego’s dream which he transferred to this canvas “Die Amazonen”. The ancient parchment illustrated is only the second known tribute to the Amazon warrior woman by internationally collected artist Antonio Diego Voci (1920-1985). Help us find this one.

The other is the Picassoesque “Amazonni”, a masterpiece in the collection of Coop Cooprider Diego Voci Historian since (1973)*. Link https://www.artifactcollectors.com/diego-voci-painting-of-the-week-5154118/Page9.html#87210

*Sold to him on his 1973 trip to #Colorado by Marsha Largent Piper, daughter of Dr. Ogden Brown, who was Diego’s exclusive USA representative.

C87-3 Le Amazzoni 31 x 39

Diego Voci; “Le Amazzoni” #83 851 oil on canvas; Private Collection 

#Picasso #Cooprider #Amazonen #LaborDay #Guns #DiegoVoci #Warrior #Women

Visit www.diegovociproject.com

#AMAZON WOMAN WARRIORS “MYTH OR REAL”??

Le Amazzoni 31 x 39

1973 “Le Amazzoni” 31 ½” x 39 ½”

#WOMEN IN #FAUVE. LOOK AGAIN! THE FIGURES ARE #WOMEN!

What is FAUVE?

  1. Original meaning, “Wild Beast”
  2. In art, “Early 20th Century group of French artists used vivid colors in marked contrast to the actual color of the area defined”.

COLOR ABOUNDS IN THIS #DIEGO MASTER PAINTING

“I paint wild woman in wild color” Diego 1973

In the spirit of the masters of “Fauve”, Matisse, Derain and others, Diego Voci holds nothing back in “Le Amazzoni”.  This action packed canvas made its premiere performance, painted exclusively for Diego’s first ever USA exhibition held at the Broadmoor Hotel, November 1973 (Curated by Dr. Ogden Brown’s daughter Marsha Largent – Piper).

TRUTH ABOUNDS IN THIS PBS REPORT.  YES, THEY WERE REAL!

CASE FILE: Amazon Warrior Women

THE SCENE: Russia and Mongolia

LEAD DETECTIVE: Dr. Jeannine Davis-Kimball

The myth of the Amazons, a tribe of bloodthirsty blond women thundering across arid battlefields to the horror of their male foes, has lingered for centuries. Their exploits seized the imagination of the Greek scribes Homer, Hippocrates, and Herodotus. But proof of their existence had always been lacking. Now, a 2,500-year-old mystery has been solved, cracked by an American scientist whose ten-year odyssey led her tens of thousands of miles in pursuit of the truth. After unearthing evidence of a culture of ancient warrior women in the Russian steppes, Dr. Jeannine Davis-Kimball followed a trail of artifacts to a remote village in Western Mongolia, where her quest for a living link to a long-imagined tribe ended with a startling discovery. There, among the black-eyed Mongols, Davis-Kimball found a blond child, a 9-year-old girl named Meiramgul. Through DNA testing, Davis-Kimball finds that the DNA sequences of the warrior women and those from the girl of Mongolia are identical.

http://www.artifactcollectors.com/diego-voci-painting-of-the-week-5154118/Page9.html#245

AC P of W #244 12/8/2014