Norman Narotzky

Last updated

Norman Narotzky (born 1928, Brooklyn, New York City) is an American and Spanish artist living in Barcelona, Spain. His work addresses social issues and the style varies from abstractionism to figurative painting and transitional styles.

Contents

Biography and work

Narotzky's father, Harry Aaron Narotzky migrated to the US from the village of Kabylnik (now Narach, Belarus) in 1907. Almost all family remaining in Kabylnik perished during WWII, massacred by the Nazi. Narotzky's mother was an immigrant from Ukraine and worked as a seamstress. [1]

At the age of thirteen, Narotzky was accepted into the High School of Music and Art in New York City from which he graduated in 1945. [2]   During this time, he studied on weekends in the studio of Moses Soyer, together with a group of classmates: Harvey Dinnerstein, Burton Silverman, Murray Stern and Herbert Steinberg. He continued his art education at Brooklyn College, where one of his professors was Ad Reinhardt, receiving his BA in 1949. At the same time, he attended the Art Students League of New York. [3] Subsequently, he began working at a Graphic Design Studio and studying at the Cooper Union Art School. [4]

In 1953, Narotzky was drafted into the US Army. [1] He was assigned to the Graphic Arts Section of the Medical Field Service School, in Texas, where he made illustrations. At the end of his service, in 1954, he won a Woolley Foundation Grant to study art in Paris where he worked at Atelier 17, a renowned printmaking space. [1]

He spent the summer of 1955 painting in the village of Cadaqués in Spain and then continued his stay in Paris for a second year with a French government Fellowship. [5] In 1956 a Fulbright Program Fellowship brought him to the Academy of Fine Arts, in Munich. In 1957, he returned to New York City to paint and study art history at the New York City Graduate School. In 1958 Narotzky moved to Barcelona. [1]

Topics and styles

Narotzky works mostly in painting but has also created prints throughout his career, one of which earned the Philadelphia Museum of Art Purchase Prize in 1956. In the late 1950s, his work was a form of abstract expressionism, inspired by the light and colors of the Costa Brava. In the early 1960s, his brushstrokes fused into large areas of color suggesting the human figure. These paintings were exhibited at the VI São Paulo Art Biennial, Brazil, in 1961, and one of them was included in "Recent Painting USA: the Figure” at the MOMA, New York, in 1962. In the mid 1960s the images became more concrete, representing historical and popular figures of the US and Spain.  In a solo show in 1967 at the Galería René Metras in Barcelona, he exhibited a double portrait of Queen Isabella I of Castile and King Ferdinand II of Aragon, known as “Los Reyes Católicos", criticising their support of the Spanish Inquisition.  These paintings were a protest raising awareness about all religious, racial, and political persecution throughout history, taking the Spanish Inquisition as a point of departure. [6] [7] [8] When news of this reached the authorities in Madrid, it created an uproar in the Franco government, which considered it to be a direct attack on its ideology. [9] [10] [11]

In the 1970s, Narotzky created a series of paintings entitled "Images of Life and Death", provoked by the Vietnam War, the civil rights movement, and the anti-war protests. The images denounce violence and destruction and celebrate the hope for life and love. Following this, in the 1980s he returned to nature for inspiration.  "Living Landscapes" portray the Catalan mountains and coastal landscapes as potent living forms. He continued this search by painting the cityscapes of Barcelona and New York, focusing on the anthropomorphic architectural details which are frequently overlooked by the passers-by.  In the series "Chimeneas de l’Empordà" he focused on the expressive physionomy of chimneys in the old buildings of the region. [12]

In 2014, Narotzky began his latest series of paintings, "Ocaso" ("sunset" in Spanish).  It also means decadence, decline, end and death. It is a figurative warning to humanity about the fragility of existence and the threat of self-destruction through wars, terrorism and the continuing damage to the earth and the environment. [13]

Narotzky has had over 60 solo shows and numerous group exhibitions. His works are included, among others, in the collections of the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Mills College Art Museum, the Cincinnati Art Museum, the Stavanger Museum in Norway, the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía ("Queen Sofia National Museum Art Centre") in Madrid, the National Art Museum of Catalonia and the James A. Michener Collection in the Blanton Museum of Art in Austin, Texas. [12]

Family

Narotzky's wife Mercedes Molleda is a retired geography and history professor and an art critic. The couple has two daughters and two grandsons. [2] [3]

External images

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joaquín Torres-García</span> Spanish Uruguayan artist (1874-1949)

Joaquín Torres-García was a prominent Uruguayan-Spanish artist, theorist, and author, renowned for his international impact in the modern art world. Born in Montevideo, Uruguay, his family moved to Catalonia, Spain, where his artistic journey began. His career spanned several countries including Spain, New York, Italy, France, and Uruguay. A founder of art schools and groups, he notably established the first European abstract-art group, Cercle et Carré, in Paris in 1929 which included Piet Mondrian and Kandinsky. Torres-García's legacy is deeply rooted in his development of Modern Classicism and Universal Constructivism.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Julio González (sculptor)</span> Spanish sculptor and painter

Julio González i Pellicer, born in Barcelona, was a Spanish sculptor and painter who developed the expressive use of iron as a medium for modern sculpture. He was from a lineage of metalsmith workers and artists. His grandfather was a goldsmith worker and his father, Concordio González, a metalsmith worker who taught him the techniques of metalsmith in his childhood years. His mother, Pilar Pellicer Fenés, came from a long line of artists.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Enrique Tábara</span> Ecuadorian painter (1930–2021)

Luis Enrique Tábara was a master Ecuadorian painter and teacher representing a whole Hispanic pictorial and artistic culture.

Manolo Millares was a Spanish painter.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jordi Pagans i Monsalvatje</span> Spanish painter

Jordi Pagans i Monsalvatje was a Catalan and Spanish painter.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Juan Ballester Carmenates</span> Cuban painter

Juan Pablo Ballester is a Cuban-born artist who works mainly with photography and video art, although he has also worked with installations and performance art. He has also developed activities as a curator, assistant curator and cultural manager.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Antoni Taulé</span> Spanish painter, architect, and performer

Antoni Taulé is a Spanish painter, architect, and performer. A street artist during the sixties, his art has been labelled as part of hyperrealism and a representative of the “new figurative” movement. He paints classical empty buildings and interiors: ballrooms, office receptions, halls of the Louvre museum, chambers of the Prado, the Palace of Versailles, monumental spaces that fuse reality and fiction under a fleeting atmosphere of light.

The building is actually just like a person. It has a heart, lungs, a nervous system, intestines, and eyes ... I am fascinated with what one can see, with the reason why does one look at it or avoid looking, and how one reflects upon what he sees. In one word my work is about how a man functions.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Manuel Carnicer Fajó</span>

Manuel Carnicer Fajó was a Catalan painter who throughout his life he cultivated different kinds of painting, but what happened to posterity by his hyper-realistic style, full of sensibility, made with watercolour crayons, being in this sense is unique in its genre.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Albert Ràfols-Casamada</span> Spanish painter, poet and art teacher

Albert Ràfols-Casamada was a Spanish painter, poet and art teacher involved in the vanguard movements of his time. He is considered one of the most important, multifaceted Catalan artists of his time. His artwork began in the post-expressionist, figurative sphere but soon developed into his own abstract style grounded in a poetic rendering of everyday reality.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eduardo Arranz-Bravo</span> Spanish Catalan painter (1941–2023)

Eduard Arranz Bravo was a Catalan Spanish painter.

<i>The Spanish Wedding</i> Painting by Marià Fortuny

The Spanish Wedding or La Vicaría (1868–1870) is a masterwork by Marià Fortuny i Marsal, also known as Marià Fortuny or Mariano Fortuny. La Vicaría exemplifies genre painting of the 19th century. The use of jewel tones, contrasts between light and dark, and the virtuosity of the work attest to Fortuny's talent. It resides at Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya in Barcelona, Spain.

Gino Rubert is a Spanish artist. He lives and works in Barcelona, Berlin and Cuernavaca (Mexico). Rubert has worked in the media of painting, video and installation art.

Rosario de Velasco Belausteguigoitia Spanish painter. Born in Madrid, in her early years she started an active painting career. "Pupil of Fernando Álvarez de Sotomayor y Zaragoza, developed a neo-traditional style imbued with Magic Realism. Her favourite subjects were seascapes, portraits and landscapes. In 1932, she obtained second prize at the National Fine Arts Exhibition with Adam and Eve, showing a fully-clothed man and woman lying in a meadow. In 1936, she took part in the Jeu de Paume exhibition “Contemporary Spanish art. Painting and sculpture”, where she presented Carnaval". Member of the female branch of the Falange Española, she take active part in many cultural events. During the Spanish Civil War she was sentenced to death in Barcelona but she escapes with the help, among others, from his future husband, Xavier Farrerons-Co, a MD. They both got married during the war in their own house and run away to France from the Catalan-French border to re-enter again from the French-Navarra border. They live in a small town in the Burgos province. In 1938 Rosario de Velasco delivered her only child in San Sebastian, a girl called María del Mar Farrerons de Velasco. At the end of the war the 3 of them return to Barcelona.

Alberto Porta y Muñoz is a Catalan artist who has been known by the pseudonyms Zush (1968–2001) and Evru (2001–present). Porta is known for his early use of digital technology within his works and his style often presents art as a cathartic and therapeutic process, accessible to all. He was a forerunner in the implementation and normalization of art therapy, having coordinated workshops for mental patients in public institutions of fine art such as Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Xavier Corberó</span> Catalan artist

Xavier Corberó i Olivella was a prominent Catalan artist, best known for monumental public sculpture and his palatial house complex in Esplugues de Llobregat near Barcelona. He has been described as "widely considered the most important Catalan artist since Gaudí," as "one of Spain’s most celebrated sculptors" and as having "perhaps influenced Barcelona more than any artist since Gaudí."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Galeries Dalmau</span> Spanish art gallery operating from 1906 to 1930; best known for introducing avant-garde art to Spain

Galeries Dalmau was an art gallery in Barcelona, Spain, from 1906 to 1930. The gallery was founded and managed by the Symbolist painter and restorer Josep Dalmau i Rafel. The aim was to promote, import and export avant-garde artistic talent. Dalmau is credited for having launched avant-garde art in Spain.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jesús Carles de Vilallonga</span>

Jesús Carles de Vilallonga i Rosell was a Spanish/Canadian figurative artist who worked primarily in the medium of egg tempera. He is best known for his richly textured paintings in an intricate, highly colored style that is not easy even though everything is readily intelligible: male and females characters, beasts, forests, architectural structures and artifacts. Vilallonga's iconography draws from a broad and complex painting tradition ranging from Romanesque art, the Renaissance, and Surrealism, while maintaining his own contemporary style. His work is sometimes related to Symbolism and his production is always enhanced by the contributions of abstraction. He works with the "inner eye" which Freud described as the most profound and the most intelligent, in a sojourn through nature and man's hidden interior.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Antoni Llena</span> Spanish artist

Antoni Llena is a Spanish artist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mini Print International of Cadaqués</span> International printmaking contest

The Mini Print International of Cadaqués is a print competition open to all printmaking techniques and tendencies in which artists from all over the world participate. The contest is held every year and it annually brings together about 650 artists from around 50 countries of the world. Apart from the annual exhibition held at the Taller Galeria Fort in Cadaqués, since 1992 the Mini Print is also presented in England and France.

Pascual Fort Pascual son of writer Jaume Fort i Prats, was a Catalan enameller, printmaker and gallery owner.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Berniakovich, Ina (August 18, 2020). "Man of world from Kabylnik". Zvyazda .
  2. 1 2 Berniakovich, Ina (August 19, 2020). "Norman Narotsky: I am happy to connect with homeland". Narachanskaya Zara: 6.
  3. 1 2 Maria Lluïsa Borràs i González (August 11, 2007). "Narotzky, un americano en Cadaqués". La Vanguardia .
  4. Norman Narotzky. Catalogue for the exhibition of N. Narotzky in Centre d'Art Santa Monica . Barcelona: Generalitat de Catalunya. 1999. p. 48.
  5. "Web". Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya. February 5, 2020.
  6. Shore, Joan (October 16, 1969). "Gallery Hooping". The Brussels Times. N220: 7.
  7. Del Arco (October 18, 1966). "Norman Narotzky". La Vanguardia : 29.
  8. Torroella, Santos (October 19 – November 8, 1966). "Narotzky, en Galeria Rene Metras". El Noticero Universal.
  9. Wilson, H. G. (June 11, 1967). "New pressures on the new Spanish Painting". The New York Times.
  10. Narotzky, Norman (February 4, 1996). "Arte y poder durante el franquismo". La Vanguardia : 25.
  11. James A. Michener (1968). Iberia . Random House. p. 587. ISBN   0-394-42982-6.
  12. 1 2 Raigorodsky, Santiago (March 3, 2022). "Norman Narotzky: un pintor comprometido". October 1, 2010. Tarbut Sefarad.
  13. "Ocaso by Norman Narotzky". Barcelona-Metropolitan. February 26, 2019.