Romolo Del Deo
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- Sculptor
- artist
- educator
Josephine Couch Del Deo
Romolo Del Deo | |
|---|---|
| Born | January 1, 1959 |
| Education | Harvard University (BA) Accademia di Belle Arti di Firenze |
| Occupations |
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| Parent(s) | Salvatore Del Deo Josephine Couch Del Deo |
Romolo Del Deo (born January 1, 1959) is an American sculptor, artist, and teacher. Best known for his bronze sculptures that put a “contemporary spin on the classical,” Del Deo’s art primarily explores two aesthetic themes: the debris that washes up on the shores of his native Provincetown, MA, and the archeological ruins of Italy.[1] Del Deo is founder of the “Long Art” movement, and his work attends to the contemporary crisis surrounding sustainability and production while expressing, through touchstones in the mythological and classical, “the eternal.”
Del Deo was born on January 1, 1959, in Provincetown, Massachusetts to Italian-American painter Salvatore Del Deo and American writer and historian Josephine Couch Del Deo, who co-founded the Fine Arts Work Center.[2][3] In his youth he studied in the studio of his father and with sculptor Joyce Johnson. At 18 he travelled to Pietrasanta, Italy, where he apprenticed in stone carving and bronze casting.[4] He returned to the US to earn a BA from Harvard University in 1982.[5] While he was an undergraduate, he was the studio manager for Harvard’s Professor of Sculpture, Dimitri Hadzi.[6][7] Del Deo studied abroad at the Academy of Fine Arts in Florence and prepared his honors thesis on polychromatic sculpture during his time there.