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Francis Di Fronzo
In 2004, Philadelphia painter
Francis Di Fronzo was awarded one of twelve Pew Fellowship in the
Arts. During this pivotal moment in his artistic career, landscape
painting became “a stage for everything in life. Anyone who
looks at a landscape painting can identify immediately.” In
his paintings, Di Fronzo depicts highly realistic scenes of the
natural world, which are both beautiful and poetic, but also deeply
mysterious, and at times ominous and foreboding.
Di Fronzo’s
painting technique has helped to underscore his outlook. He works
with a “comb brush”, of his own design, comprised of
60-80 individual hairs attached to a wooden stick. Using this comb,
he creates images of open fields and rolling hills by tapping the
hairs onto a toned panel. After many layers, the result is an infinite
expanse of individual blades of grass, rich in tone, detail and
hue. Di Fronzo has also experimented with a new technique to paint
seascapes, creating sweeping scenes of open water that are rich
and complex in color and depth.
Born in California in 1969, he
received his B.F.A at the University of California, Fullerton.
He then came east to study at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine
Arts, where he earned his M.F.A. in 1998. Di Fronzo was also awarded
the Liquitex, Art in America University Award in 1993, and the
Stobbart Foundation Fellowship in the Arts Award in 1998.
In 2007,
Di Fronzo was featured in the June issue of Fine Art Connoisseur.
Magazine’s article “Making Their Mark: Three to Watch”
American
Art Collector interviewed Di Fronzo in the March 2008 issue editorial
article “Dreaming the Impossible”.
Born November 15,
1969 in San Pedro, California
EDUCATION
1998 MFA, Painting. Pennsylvania
Academy of the Fine Arts.
1994 BFA, Painting. California State
University, Fullerton.
AWARDS
2004 Pew Fellowship in the Arts,
Painting.
1998 Stobart Foundation Fellowship in the Arts.
1993
Liquitex/Art in America University Award.
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