Nassos Daphnis
Nassos Daphnis | |
---|---|
Born |
Krokeai, Greece | July 23, 1914
Died |
November 23, 2010 96) Provincetown, Massachusetts, U.S. | (aged
Nationality | Greek-American |
Known for | Painting |
Movement | Geometric abstraction, Hard-edge painting |
Nassos Daphnis (b. July 23, 1914, Krokeai, Greece – d. November 23, 2010, Provincetown, Massachusetts, U.S.) was a Greek-born American abstract painter and tree peony breeder. Originally a florist, he brought the sensitivity he cultivated in that profession as well as a profound sense of natural geometry to his new discipline of painting.
As a painter Daphnis was considered to have worked in the Hard-edge and Geometric abstraction style looking back towards the opus of Piet Mondrian. He was categorized as an abstract imagist a term which arose from a 1961 exhibition in the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, called American Abstract Expressionists. For many years his artwork was represented by the Leo Castelli Gallery and then in his later years by the Anita Shapolsky Gallery.[1]
In 1938 he met William H. Gratwick of Linwood Gardens, New York, a prominent breeder of tree peonies. Daphnis eventually became a partner with Gratwick in the business and art of hybridizing tree peonies, creating many beautiful cultivars and naming them after artists and figures in Greek mythology.
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