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Vincent Giannetto, III
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In
2004, Hunting & fishing Collectables Magazine
called Vincent Giannetto, III,
the custodian of the Delaware River gunning
style decoy, writing: “since
the early 1970s he has been… defining (its)
style, taking it to new levels of both form and
function”. It is
praise that Giannetto never looked for but wears
as easily as the title that carving and hunting
for over five decades has earned him: the last
of the legendary Delaware River Hunter-Carvers.
He earned this reputation
as a teenager, falling in love with the river
and mixing in with men that were back then
thought of as simple river rats – men
that made their living entirely from the river
itself. Vince admired these
men and aspired to live their life-style, but
forced to learn the craft completely on his own,
it took him time learn the trade.
As a result, his work has taken on a look
and feel that is uniquely his own, and has been
called carving “born from a love of the
outdoors, from respect and affection for game,
and from a recognition that nature’s beauty is
something worth preserving.”
Five
decades later he is one of a dying breed, one of
the last true hunter-carvers that make a living
solely from the river and its craft.
His decoys and country collectables have
traveled a long way from the banks of the
Delaware. He has become one
of today’s most collectable carvers, winning
ribbons at nearly every carving competition in
the country and been displayed in
private collections, museums, the Christmas
windows of Rockefeller Center, New York City,
the Smithsonian Museum in Washington D.C. and
our nation’s White House. In
2005 his life story and over one-hundred of his
decoys were displayed in a year-long exhibit at
the Maryland Upper Bay Museum entitled: “Carving
the Delaware River Tradition.”
As further recognition, in
early-2010 Giannetto’s life story will be told
in the upcoming novel, The Decoy Artist, The
True Story of America’s Last Hunter-Carver, being
released nationally by Pelican Publishers.
It will be the first major novel set
along the Delaware River, using Giannetto’s life
as a means to tell of the outdoorsmen who became
legendary, the roots of decoy carving, the
destruction of the region where these
distinctive traditions were born and the loss of
this uniquely American way of life.
Today
Giannetto spends most of his time “out back” on
his 60 acres of protected wetlands along the
Delaware Bay, hunting, fishing, carving or
simply enjoying the land. He
rarely competes these days, selling his decoys
as he makes them and hunting over the ones he
likes best. But, if you
scrape off the mud and look closely you’re
likely to find the next best-of-show bird, and
certainly one of tomorrow’s most collectable
decoys.
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