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Throughout
his 40 year career as an artist, Frank Romero has been a dedicated
member of the Los Angeles arts community. As a member of the
1970s Chicano art collective, Los Four, Romero and fellow
artists Carlos Almaraz, Beto de la Rocha and Gilbert Lujan,
helped to define and promote the new awareness of
La Raza through murals, publications and exhibitions. Los Four's
historic 1974 exhibition at the Los Angeles County Museum of
Art was the country's first show of Chicano art at a major
art institution.
Since then, Romero has successfully balanced a
career in both the public and private arenas. He has completed over 15 murals
throughout the city, and was
a key contributor to the 1984 Olympic Arts Festival with “Going
to the Olympics,” a large scale mural which adorns one of
Los Angeles’ busiest freeways
(Highway 101). He recently restored this mural with a
grant by the Amateur Athletic Foundation, as well as working
on new murals for SPARC (Ritchie Valens Park in Pacoima)
and North East Trees (along the Los Angeles River) and
in Silverlake.
Romero has shown extensively
in the United States, Europe and Japan. Notable exhibitions
include: "Chicanarte" (L.A.
Municipal Gallery), "Hispanic Art in the United States" (Corcoran
Gallery, Washington D.C. and national tour), "Le Demon des
Anges" (Nantes, France; Barcelona, Spain; Lund Sweden and
Brussels, Belgium), and "American Kaleidoscope" (National
Museum of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington
D.C.). His work is featured in many permanent collections,
including the National Museum of Art in Washington D.C.,
the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and the Carnegie
Museum in Oxnard, CA.
Frank Romero was a recipient
of the prestigious 2001/2001 COLA Award Grant In addition, his
work is included in two current traveling shows: Cheech Marin’s
Chicano Visions: American Painters on the Verge and Arte Latino,
Treasures from the Smithsonian American Art Museum. Romero’s
works can be seen at the Patricia Correia Gallery at Bergamot Station
in Santa Monica and his newly created 44’ mural, The L.A.
River, is currently on display at the Natural History Museum in
Los Angeles’ L.A.: Light/Motion/Dreams
exhibition. |
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