John D'Antonio

Born in Trenton New Jersey in 1954, John
D’Antonio is considered by many in the art world
as one of the top ten representational artists
in America today. John was schooled at the Rhode
Island School of Design, the Arts Student’s
League in New York and Lehigh University,
Pennsylvania. D’Antonio’s art and philosophy
have been shaped by a diverse group of
influences, from Impressionism and Academicism
to the Photorealist development of the 1970s. It
was while residing in Hockessin, Delaware near
Wilmington, from 1983-86 that D’Antonio became
inspired by the subject matter and techniques of
the Brandywine School of landscape- portrait
painters, particularly through the influence and
guidance of George Weymouth, President of the
Brandywine River Museum in Chadds Ford
Pennsylvania. This association led Mr. D’Antonio
to his decision to interpret traditional
landscapes in his unique dramatic, idealized
manner.
John D’Antonio’s paintings reveal a remarkable
eye for telling detail united to a virtuosic
facility with color and light. D’Antonio’s work
maintains echoes of late 19th Century American
and French landscape painters, while his
precision and clarity give the work a
contemporary feel. Mr. D’Antonio’s subjects
include the pastoral landscapes of his home in
Washington’s Crossing, New Jersey, the canals
and countryside of Holland, the brilliant light
of Taos, New Mexico and sailing on the high
seas. Whether amidst a peaceful bucolic American
landscape or rounding the Horn through stormy
waters, D’Antonio has a rare talent for
capturing the essence of his surroundings and
making us feel and experience them with
startling immediacy.
The artist did not arrive on the contemporary
art scene without the impact of some of the most
prominent artists in modern time. Early in his
career at the Hun School of Princeton (1970),
John was introduced to a classmate’s father, Roy
Lichtenstein, one of the most widely known pop
artists in the world. D’Antonio immediately got
a sense of how creativity and interpretation of
stereotype subjects could be used in
extraordinary ways. Mr. D’Antonio then attended
the Rhode Island School of Design, (1971), where
as a student, he was exposed to the techniques
of noted graphic designer Richard Merkin, shown
in the crowd scene in Peter Blake’s design or
the Sgt. Peppers Lonely Hearts Club Band album
cover (1967). At RISD, D’Antonio met with
internationally acclaimed sculptor Louise
Nevelson, pioneer of environmental sculpture and
one of the most important American sculptors of
the twentieth century, who visited with him
during classroom instruction. She left a lasting
impression of how scale could be used to effect
of aura of mystery that captured the public
imagination for years. It was also at RISD, he
painted with colleague David Savage, grandson of
Man Ray, internationally acclaimed Cubist,
Dadaist, and Surrealist. After seeing a private
collection of Man Ray’s work, D’Antonio was
immediately struck by the artist’s lack of
concern with the traditional and “Craft”. Man
Ray is the most significant maker of camera-less
photographs in the 1920s and 1930s. D’Antonio
graduated from Lehigh University in 1976. He
attended the Art Students League where he
studied under Xavier Gonzales a leading
instructor known for his large mural paintings;
as well as mentoring past students and friends,
including Jackson Pollack and Leroy Neiman,
(1980).
Many of these artists had an impact on
D’Antonio’s attitude, point of view, and general
philosophy regarding creativity. Yet, it was
while residing in Hockessin, Delaware near
Wilmington, (1983-86), that D’Antonio was
inspired by the subject matter and techniques of
the Brandywine School of landscape- portrait
painters. These included in particular, N.C. and
Andrew Wyeth, and George Weymouth. Unknowingly,
D’Antonio had been using Andrew Wyeth’s framer
in Chadds Ford, PA who recognized the caliber of
John’s art and introduced him to Carolyn Wyeth -
Wyeth’s sister who then contacted D’Antonio and
recommended that he meet other members of the
artist’s family. The influence of Wyeth’s hidden
abstract composition within a realistic
interpretation of ordinary subjects became an
important component to D’Antonio’s approach to
composition.