Born in
Muro Lucano, near Naples, Italy, Joseph Stella is
best known for his "Brooklyn Bridge",
1919 a futurist work that is an icon of the Industrial
Age.
He arrived
in the United States in 1896 and studied medicine
and pharmacology and then attended the Art Students
League under William Merritt Chase. From 1900 -1909,
he was an illustrator, especially interested in
immigrant life in New York. One of his assignments
was in Pittsburgh to do a series of industrial drawings,
and this experience seems to have begun his interest
in the subject of cities and the way industry affected
people's lives.
From
1909 to 1912, he was in Europe, particularly France
and Italy, and associated with modernists including
Matisse and Modigliani. He exhibited at the 1913
Armory Show and from then on was associated with
the avant garde including Duchamp, Man Ray, etc.
He lived primarily in New York City and did a series
of Futurist paintings of the city including "Coney
Island Battle of Lights" that he exhibited
at the Armory Show.
From
1927 to 1934, he was in Rome and Paris, and in 1940
traveled to the West Indies. Although most of his
Futurist paintings were done between 1912 and 1923,
he continued to reinterpret those subjects until
his death in 1946.