Nicolas Carone (1918 – 2010)
Nicolas Carone received the
Prix de Rome at the age of 25 and in 2009 at 91, received the
Lee Krasner Lifetime Achievement Award from the Pollock-Krasner
Foundation. In the interim years Carone studied with Hans
Hoffman; apprenticed with Leon Kroll; taught at Columbia, Yale,
Cooper Union and New York Studio School; exhibited at the Venice
Biennale and the Brussels World’s Fair; and, lived at the
Springs with fellow painters and friends Lee Krasner and Jackson
Pollack and the de Koonings. Of local note Fort Myer’s native,
Hollis Jeffcoat studied with Carone at New York Studio School
and as the first Director of the famous Stable Gallery, Carone
gave Bob Rauschenberg his first New York show.
Carone has long been an important and influential artist in the
New York art scene. In the 40’s and 50’s Carone, working closely
with Hans Hoffman, Matta and Jackson Pollock was at the center
of the New York School of artists who changed the way we think
about art. As a founding faulty member at the New York Studio
School and teacher for 20 years, his exuberance and passion for
art-making influenced and inspired several generations of
artists. And the re-discovery of Carone in the last five years
gives new audiences an opportunity to be stirred and impressed
by his masterful paintings.
Carone started studying and painting at eleven and at 92 still
had the fire to paint. The Landscapes in this exhibit were
painted in 2000. While Carone was a second generation Abstract
Expressionist, his academic training and three years studying in
Italy during his formative years greatly influenced his work.
The paintings in this exhibit are an extraordinary combination
of modern and old master and epitomize Carone’s life-long
fascination with the use of metaphor and imagined imagery in art
making.
Carone’s work is in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum
of Art, Whitney Museum, the Hirshhorn Museum, the Baltimore
Museum of Art, National Academy of Art and the High Museum and
in numerous private collections. Carone is represented by the
Joan Washburn and Lohin Geduld Galleries in New York City. The
artist passed away in July 2010, but leaves behind a legion of
students who carry on his legacy of making meaningful art.
