Gregorio Prestopino

Gregorio Prestopino
Born (1907-06-21)June 21, 1907
New York City
Died December 19, 1984(1984-12-19) (aged 77)
Princeton, New Jersey
Nationality American
Known for Social Realism and New York Figurative Expressionism

Gregorio Prestopino, (19071984) was an American artist, according to the art historian Irma B. Jaffe:

one of the major American painters who refused to reject the image, has devoted his career to depicting the human condition with a warmth tempered only by honesty.[1]

Biography

Prestopino was born in New York City's Little Italy. He was the second of three children born to Antonino Prestopino (1877-1937) and Letteria Rando (1866-1962), immigrants from Messina, Sicily, Italy. At the age of 14 he was awarded a scholarship to the National Academy of Design, with Charles Hawthorne. Early in his career he came under the influence of the French Impressionists, but was soon drawn to the American realists of the Ashcan School painters, whose work led him directly to the study of urban life. He won the 1972 Rome Prize.

Variation of style and the influence of the MacDowell Colony

As a young man Prestopino set up his first studio in Harlem. During the 1930s his social realist paintings had an anecdotal quality in their description of everyday incidents of the working class, depicting the grit of city life – docks, laborers, vendors, Lower East Side streets. He moved to Roosevelt, New Jersey in 1949.[2]

By the mid-1940s and the 1950s he concentrated on large, solid images that were able to function as universals with heightened drama while preserving their qualities as specific expressionistic images. His more realistic studies are largely black and white and detail poor urban suffering. Exemplifying this style is the series of paintings done in 1957 for “Life” magazine in connection with an article on Green Haven, a New York state prison.[3][4] During this time Prestopino received high recognition along with Ben Shahn and Philip Evergood, well-known social realist painters. In the late 1950s Prestopino used Harlem as his subject. He created paintings that inspired the well-known American movie makers, John Hubley and Faith Elliot. During the filming they never took the camera off the paintings. The film, "Harlem Wednesday", with a jazz score by Benny Carter, won first prize at the First International Festival of Art Film in Venice.

In 1954, he became a director of the MacDowell Colony, beginning a lifelong association that profoundly influenced his art. In the MacDowell Colony he made friends with the painters Milton Avery, Sally Avery, Giorgio Cavllon, Linda Lindeberg and many others who were among the Fellows of MacDowell Colony.[5] In 1958 Prestopino's landscape paintings were showing abstract tendencies. There is a noticeable cubist influence in his work as well. Much of his more cubist work uses brightly contrasting colors and involves human forms. Wet, sensuous color areas appeared on his canvases. Mythological figures, woods, brooks, fields, islands, mountains were joined-on powerful canvases that showed Prestopino’s new vitality. According to the celebrated photographer Russel Lynes “the sound of the city…gave way to the sounds of the country, the relentless of bricks and pavement and steel to the happy disorder of dappled things.”[6]

Retrospective exhibitions

A series of Gregorio Prestopino paintings entitled "Harlem Wednesday" toured the USA in the 1960s. A watercolor painting from that series entitled, "The Family" is held by the Art and Artifacts Division of the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture.

Permanent collections

See also

References

  1. Art USA Now 2 Luzem Bucher (1963) p.167
  2. Staff. Gregorio Prestopino (1907-1984), Stockton University. Accessed February 14, 2011. "In 1949 the artist and his family moved to Roosevelt, New Jersey, a town known for its artist-residents."
  3. The life of Gregorio Prestopino
  4. Keene State College - Thorne-Sagendorph Gallery
  5. McDowell Colony Fellows
  6. Gregorio Prestopino with painting
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