While still in high
school, he attended art classes at the Syracuse Museum, where
he was provided with a private room where he could paint independently.
In addition to his early studies with etcher Ralph Pearson, he
had the good fortune of studying under two of the 20th century’s
leading colorists: first with Joseph Albers at Black Mountain
College (1940), and later with Hans Hofmann (1941-42).
His work reflects his
extensive training with these masters, as well as a strong reverence
for the French avant-garde painters who influenced them. The long
broken brushstrokes of Derain, the boldlyrical contours of Matisse,
and the modernist non-perspectival compositions of Bonnard are
each clear inspirations in De Niro’s best works.
While studying with
Hofmann at his Provincetown summer school, De Niro met painter
Virginia Admiral, whom he married in 1942. The couple moved into
a large, airy loft in New York’s Greenwich Village, where
they were able to paint. Their illustrious circle of friends included
writers Anais Nin and Henry Miller, playwright Tennessee Williams,
and actress and famous Berlin dancer Valeska Gert who modeled
for Hofmann’s classes. Admiral and De Niro separated shortly
after their son, Robert De Niro, Jr. was born in December of 1943.
A perfectionist, De
Niro Sr. often painted and repainted his canvases, completing
hundreds of studies of the same composition until he was pleased
with his work. He was meticulous with his choice of pigment, always
searching for the perfect colors and rarely satisfied.
De Niro Sr.’s
first solo exhibition was held at Peggy Guggenheim’s Art
of this Century, New York, in 1946, when he was twenty-four years
old. He exhibited frequently throughout the 1950s at the Charles
Egan Gallery, where his work hung alongside de Kooning, Kline,
and Guston.
In the early 1960s,
De Niro Sr, looking for fresh inspiration, abandoned New York
for Paris. As his work continued to evolve and mature, he sold
fifty oil paintings and works on paper to the collector Joseph
Hirshhorn, and received much critical praise, as well as a Guggenheim
Fellowship in 1968.
The political and cultural
climate began to change in the mid-60s, however, and Pop Art eclipsed
many artists working in a more traditional vein. Though the mainstream
success of his contemporaries eluded De Niro Sr., he continued
his brilliant exploration of color and form until he passed away
in 1993, leaving behind a vibrant oeuvre that is included in museum
collections such as: the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden,
and the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the Museum
of Modern Art, New York, among others. In 1995, his son, award-winning
actor Robert De Niro, Jr., along with his mother, Virginia Admiral,
honored the late painter by supporting an exhibition of his works
at the Salander-O’Reilly Gallery in New York.
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