
Restored mural, 2008. 9' x 18.5' oil on canvas. View a very large image here.
In 1934, Buffalo artist Angelo Charles Scibetta (1904-1989) was commissioned by the PWAP (Public Works of Art Project), a works program
of the Depression,
to create
a mural for Hamburg High School. Born in Italy, Scibetta painted a scene on the beach in the Mediterranean. He was additionally commissioned to create four large murals painted on boards (5' x 10') with artist cousin Pascal Scime for the same school. |


| The mural remained in the school until the building was renovated after 1980. Esther Kowal, Town Historian, oversaw the retrieval of the mural in 1981 and rolled it onto a carpet tube. The Town accepted ownership of the mural and two of the other paintings. |

In 2004, the mural was rediscovered in storage in the Hamburg Historical Society barn. It was determined to be in good condition and a committee was formed to pursue restoration and reinstallation in the school, now called the Union Pleasant Elementary School. |

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Stages of restoration of a face from the mural. Image credit: Kevin Gleason, ConservArt LLC
Raising the necessary $32,000 restoration costs took three years; the final $1,000 was contributed by the Hamburg School District and the Hamburg School Foundation. The placement of the restored mural was determined by environmental testing and identification of a more suitable location for viewing the mural than the original stair landing. Angelo Charles Scibetta received other commissions for paintings in Buffalo public buildings and then moved to California where he worked in the movie industry as a set decorator and art director. View the booklet from the restored mural's unveiling November 14, 2008 here. The committee continues its fundraising so that the mural can be augmented by a plaque, protective ropes, and a viewing bench. |
Special thanks to Mural Restoration Committee Co-Chair Amy Low, art teacher at Union Pleasant Elementary School in Hamburg
for her assistance with this pictorial.
And thanks to Kevin Gleason of ConserArt LLC for his assistance with this and permission to use images of the restoration.