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Nicolas CaroneWhite Black, 1959Oil on canvas70 1/2 x 80 1/2 inches,
Framed: 73 x 82 1/2 inchesSigned: Carone lower right
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Nicolas CaroneGesture, 1957Oil on paper laid onto masonite25 x 35 inches,
Framed: 33 1/2 x 43 1/2Signed: Carone lower right
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Nicolas CaroneUntitled, 1956Oil on canvas20 1/4 x 26 1/4 inchesSigned: Carone lower right and N Carone and Nicolas Carone (verso), Marked: 1956 (verso)
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Nicolas CaroneAbstraction, 1948Mixed media on paper laid down on linen46 1/2 x 55 1/2 inches,
Framed: 55 1/4 x 64 inchesSigned: Carone lower right
Overview
A member of the New York School of Abstract Expressionists, Carone was influenced by Surrealism, poetry, and Jungian psychology. Believing that every moment and experience contained inspiration, Carone once posited: "if you look at the sidewalks on a rainy day, study all the marks, you see great paintings."
Born on the Lower East Side and raised in Hoboken, Carone began his study of art at the Leonardo da Vinci School at St. Mark's Church at age eleven. He studied at the National Academy of Design under Leon Kroll-whom he would assist with the creation of the WPA Worcester War Memorial Mural from 1939-1941-then at the Art Students League of New York, Hans Hofmann School of Fine Arts, and the Rome Academy of Fine Arts. The '40s marked a period of success for the artist, who won the rome Prize in 1941 and a Fulbright Fellowship in 1949, both of which gave him the opportunity to study in Italy.
By this time the artist was a close friend of Jackson Pollock, and like the latter Carone opted to set up full-time residency in The Springs on Long Island. In the city, he showed at the Ninth Street Exhibition in 1951 and subsequently at the Stable Gallery. He was also represented by the Anita Shapolsky Gallery and Staempfli Gallery. He taught at Yale, Columbia, Brandeis, Cornell, the Cooper Union, the School of Visual Arts, and the Skowhegan School, later going on to help found the New York Studio School of Drawing, Painting, and Sculpture as well as the International School of Art in Montecastello, Italy.
A revived interest in Carone's work took place as a result of a 2005 show of his drawings at Lohin Geduld Gallery. He lived to the age of 93, dying in 2010. The artist is remembered for his talent for brushwork and fluency in the language of abstraction. His collage-like works juxtaposed jagged edges and viscous contours with fine lines, curvilinear contours, and lightweight patterning. Of the lyricism present in his abstractions, the artist stated in a 2006 interview:
"Don't be fooled by technique or paint quality… Fuck it! It's the imagery that goes on. It's metaphoric and it's poetry in a jazz sense. It's symbolic and it's on another dimension. It's not an order like Picasso but it's another dimension, the rhythm of mass."
—Nicolas Carone
Solo Exhibitions
1949 Cortile Galleria, Rome
1951 Galleria Nazionale dâArte Moderna, Rome
1952 Frumkin Gallery, Chicago
1954 Stable Gallery, New York, also 1956
1958 Stadler Gallery, Paris
1958 Staempfli Gallery, New York, also, 1959,1962
1978 Carone Gallery, Fort Lauderdale, also 1993
2003 Butler Institute of American Art, Youngstown
2005 Lohin Geduld Gallery, New York, also 2007, 2009
2008 Washburn Gallery, New York, also 2009, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014
2010 Watson MacRae Gallery, Sanibel Island
2013 Pollock Krasner House and Study Center, East Hampton
2016 Loretta Howard Gallery, New York
Awards
1941 Prix de Rome
1949 Fulbright Fellowship (Rome)
1955 William N. Copley Award
1956 National Council of the Arts
1964 Longview Foundation
1966 National Council on the Arts Grant
1970 Creative Arts Public Service Program
1971 New York State Council on the Arts Grant
2005 Andrew Carnegie Prize, National Academy Museum
2007 Inglis Griswold Nelson Prize for Painting, National Academy Museum
2009 Lee Krasner Award for lifetime achievement
Museums and Public Collections
Baltimore Museum of Art
The National Academy of Design, New York
Getai Group, Japan
Heckscher Museum of Art, Huntington
High Museum of Art, Atlanta
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.
Kalamazoo Institute of Arts Museum
Lowe Art Museum, Coral Gables
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Museum of Art Fort Lauderdale
Norton Museum of Art, Palm Beach
Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University, Waltham
Sheldon Museum of Art, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York
Syracuse University Art Galleries
Tate Modern, London
Union Carbide Corporation, Danbury
The University of New Mexico, Albuquerque
Walker Art Center, Minneapolis
Weatherspoon Museum of Art, University of North Carolina, Greensboro
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York