JORGE LUIS SICRE-GATTORNO

"THE BASSIST"

OIL ON CANVAS, SIGNED

CUBAN-AMERICAN, DATED 1982

36 X 24 INCHES

The following is from Sean Poole of the Gattorno Foundation:

Jorge Luis Sicre-Gattorno was born in Havana, Cuba on April 15, 1958. He is the grandson of the Cuban sculptor Juan Jose Sicre, and the cousin of Cubas premier Vanguardia painter Antonio Gattorno. His father, Jorge Sicre, was a cellist with the Cleveland Symphony Orchestra and currently teaches at Julliard. His mother is a psychiatrist, Dr. Candida Gattorno-Sicre. Another cousin was the late Jose Gomez-Sicre, the Cuban art critic and longtime director of the Museum of the Organization of American States.

Forty-two year old Jorge Luis is a graduate of the University of California in Santa Barbara. He displays a bold and uniquely original style as a Neo- Symbolist. Working in oil, watercolor and collage he has produced a large body of work which has been exhibited in a wide variety of locations throughout the U.S., including the Nexus Gallery and the Afro-American Museum in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; The Walt Whitman Center for the Arts in Camden, New Jersey; The Martello Museum in Key West, Florida; Galeria Vanidades in Coconut Grove, Florida; The Bedford Stuyvesant Center for the Arts and Culture in Brooklyn New York; as well as the Cayman Gallery (now the Museum of Contemporary Hispanic Art), also in New York.

His work is included in museum collections at the Housatonic Museum of Art in Bridgeport, Connecticut, the Museum of Modern Latin American Art in Washington, DC, and the Bass Museum in Miami Beach, Florida.

In January 2000 he participated in the exhibit, "Cuban Art: Past&Present", at the Catalina Gallery in Coral Gables, Florida. In the fall and winter of 2,000, he was featured at the Roberto Savedra Gallery in Los Angeles, California.
J.L. Sicre taps into a myriad of sources as diverse Afro-Cuban shamanism, classical Egyptian, Greek and Roman mythology and the current fascination of popular culture with things cosmic and extraterrestrial. His use of figurative allegory works much like the mythology that serves as its inspiration, metaphorically illustrating otherwise abstract concepts.

Although raised in the United States, Sicre-Gattorno remains innately Cuban at heart and in his creative esthetic. He recently paid homage to the influence of his artistic heritage, to his grandfather Juan Jose Sicre, and to his cousin Antonio Gattorno, in a group of paintings he calls, "La Leyenda Suite", that deals with different myths and legends of Cuba. A watercolor from this suite, titled, "La Cubita" was selected by the City of Los Angeles Cultural Affairs Department for use on the 1999 Los Angeles Cuban Cultural Festival poster.

J.L. Sicre-Gattorno currently divides his time between Long Beach, California and Miami Beach, Florida, where he is producing his latest group of paintings.