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R I C O   L E B R U N

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Rico Lebrun

1900 - 1964

  Rico Lebrun, christened Frederico, was born on December 10, 1900, in Naples, Italy.  He was the youngest of three children.Rico Lebrun in studio

     Lebrun served in the Italian army during the last year of  World War I (1917-1918) after which he spent two years in the Italian navy and studied at the Industrial Institute and the Naples Academy of Fine Arts. He worked with fresco painters Cambi and Albino in Naples.

    As  a designer for a stained glass factory in Naples, Lebrun was sent to the factory's new branch in Springfield, Illinois, in 1924 as  foreman and instructor in stained-glass technique.

     By 1925, Lebrun moved to New York where he became a highly successful commerical artist for such publications as Vogue, Harper's Bazaar, and the New Yorker. During this time, he married and together with his wife made several trips to Italy, where he studied fresco painting with Galimberti in Rome, and researched  the Signorelli frescoes in Orvieto, Italy. 

     Returning to New York in 1933, Lebrun worked with Louis Rubenstein on a mural at Harvard University's Fogg Museum (the mural was later walled over).  He received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1935/36 for a proposed mural project "Story of the Mines" (which was never executed) and worked on a WPA mural "River Flood" at the Pennsylvania Station Post Office Annex in New York.

    Two California artists Gridley Barrows (who later became an architect) and Santa Barbara painter Channing Peake assisted Lebrun on the WPA project and were instrumental in persuading Lebrun to leave New York and go west to California, which he did after conflict with the WPA caused the abandonment of the mural  and the breakup of his marriage.

     Moving to Santa Barbara, CA,  in 1938, Lebrun accepted a teaching  job at Chouinard Art Institute in Los Angeles, met and married Elaine Leonard in 1940, and taught animation at Walt Disney Studios. Donald Bear, director of the Santa Barbara Museum of Art organized the first  exhibition of Lebrun's work at the Faulkner Memorial Art Gallery in Santa Barbara.

     During the 1940's Lebrun's work  was shown in New York at  the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art (which  purchased his painting  "The Bull Ring") and the Julian Levy Gallery gave Lebrun his first one man show.  During this period of escalating artistic recognition,  Lebrun suffered a personal loss as his wife Elaine died. Continuing to live and work in Southern California, Lebrun was appointed  artist-in-residence at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art and became an instructor, and later director,  at the newly formed Jepson Art Institute in Los Angeles.

    In 1948, he married Constance Johnson, daughter of Pasadena architect Reginald Johnson and later adopted her son, David. During the ensuing years, he produced his most powerful work -- much of it based on his preoccupation with man's inhumanity to man --  including the Crucifixion series, the Buchenwald series, and the Genesis mural at Pomona College in Claremont, CA.  His work was exhibited at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the De Young Museum in San Francisco, and the Museum of Modern Art in New York. The Crucifixion Triptych is in the permanent collection of Syracuse University in New York.

In the years before his death of cancer in 1963, Rico Lebrun   received many honors and awards for his work, such as the Temple Gold Medal from the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, the Award of Merit from the American Academy in Arts and Letters and was elected a member of the National Institute of Arts and Letters.  

     Lebrun enjoyed communication not only as an artist, but as a teacher and as a friend. He  found time to teach at the Instituto Allende in Mexico (1953), as Visitng Professor at Yale University (1958), and as artist-in-residence at the American Academy in Rome (1959). His letters to other artists and friends have been gathered together in a recently published book , The Meridian of the Heart, from which the following manuscript fragment is taken:
    "When I get Home it will be noon, and the sand, puma color, will have motionless flocks of ruffled gulls thinking very quietly about being gulls.  The rocks will be pulling up their short shadows so the tide can wash around them. No one will ever mock this time, nor demand anything from me.  Not even I, my dumb friend.  From the depths of my being I mean to be without master. And without hours.  And without skill.  And without me.
     You, who made the sand I walk on, help me see how it is that it does not try to change the footprints of the gulls any more than it does mine; that it can bear the evidence of both without love or hate..."
          Rico Lebrun, 1960
                        

In the Meridian of the Heart
Selected Letters of Rico Lebrun
Edited by James Renner and David Lebrun
Publisher: David R. Godine, Boston, MA
Available in hardcover; 52 duotone illustrations.

Contact Information

A number of Lebrun's works are available for sale and/or exhibition.  For more information regarding the work of Rico Lebrun, or to order of a copy of the book  "In the Meridian of the Heart, Selected Letters of Rico Lebrun"    please contact the Lebrun estate's representative :
Koplin Gallery
464 N. Robertson Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90048

TEL: 310/657-9843            FAX: 310/657-9849  
 

No permission is granted to produce any of the images found on this web site.  Permission for reproductions should be obtained directly from the representative or exhibitor for each artist. 

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