James Rizzi

James Rizzi
Born (1950-10-05)October 5, 1950
Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
Died December 26, 2011
New York City, New York, U.S.
Nationality American
Alma mater University of Florida
Known for pop art

James Rizzi (October 5, 1950 – December 26, 2011[1]) was an American pop artist who was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York.

Biography

James Rizzi studied Fine Arts at the University of Florida in Gainesville, Florida. He came up with the idea of 3D multiples now mostly associated with his name when, having taken classes in painting, printmaking and sculpturing, he had to hand in grade work for all three subjects, but only had time for doing one. So he created an etching, printed it twice, handcolored it, and mounted parts of the one print on top of the other, using wire as a means of adding depth. Having received good grades from all three teachers, he stuck with the idea and developed it further.[2]

He lived with Baybi Day an actress from 1971- 1979. Later, he married Gaby Hamill, a fashion designer, they shortly after divorced. James Rizzi never had any children of his own, but has two nieces Jennifer Fishman and Laura Rizzi and one nephew Brian Rizzi who is also his godson. Finally a goddaughter Georgia Rae Pai Foster, daughter of Emrie Brooke Foster.

Rizzi was most famous for his 3D artwork, "especially the large, elaborate prints and teeming anthropomorphic cityscapes. His merry maximalism and delight in delirious detail and elaborate minutiae created a true art brand, a trademark style as recognizable as any in the world."[3]

Late in life, he returned to painting. His "latest paintings combine his Picasso meets Hanna-Barbera drawing style with an increasingly chromatic palette and a complex graphic structure that simultaneously evokes cubism and the most sophisticated Amerindian friezes."[3]

Timeline

Year Projects
1973 Rizzi graduated from University of Florida and had his first exhibitions in outdoor art shows in Washington Square Park and Brooklyn Heights, New York.
1975 Design of a 150 ft. outdoor mural in New York City (the building was demolished in 1985).
1976 Participation in the exhibition "Thirty Years of American Printmarking, including the 20th National Print Exhibition" at the Brooklyn Museum.
1980/1982 Rizzi designed the album cover artwork for the first and second albums of Tom Tom Club.
1981/83 Rizzi created the animation for two music video clips of Tom Tom Club.
1987 Japanese television produces a film about Rizzi.
1988 The first book about Rizzi is being published: "James Rizzi - 3D Constructions".
1988-90 Various design projects in Japan.
1992 The second book about Rizzi is being published: Glenn O'Brien, "Rizzi".
1993 Rizzi designs the ring coat for German boxer Henry Maske.
1994 Design of china for Rosenthal and of a limited MetroCard for the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.
1996 Publication of "The New York Paintings" book. Rizzi is the official artist of the 1996 Olympic Summer Games in Atlanta, Georgia. He designs the exterior shell of a Boeing 757 for Lufthansa's charter airline Condor Airlines - the "Rizzi Bird".
1997 Official artist for the Montreux Jazz Festival in Switzerland. Retrospective in Brooklyn, New York at the Mill Basin Kosher Deli and Gallery http://www.millbasindeli.com and declaration of the opening day as "James Rizzi Day" by the Brooklyn Borough President.
1998 Artist of the year, United States Sports Academy. Official Artist, FIFA World Cup, France. Official participation in the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Distinguished Alumni Award, University of Florida.
1999 Design of three Volkswagen New Beetles for Volkswagen. Design of covers for 15 volume Brockhaus encyclopedia.
2000 Participation in CowParade, New York City. Work for UNICEF and the Japanese Railway.
2001 Opening of the "Happy Rizzi House", an office building designed by Rizzi in Braunschweig, Germany.
2002 Front page design for a newspaper in Hamburg, Germany. Design of a Teddy bear for Steiff. Design of three light railway cars for city of Heilbronn. Official participation in the World Economic Forum in New York City.
2003 Design of official poster for German public radio (SWR3).
2004 Design of a model New York fire engine for Schuco.
2005 Charity project together with Lions Club Germany and "action medeor" for the victims of the Pakistan earthquake.
2006 Receives "Steiger Award" in Dortmund, Germany, together with Mohamed ElBaradei, Claude Nobs, José Carreras, Jean-Claude Juncker, and others. Publication of his latest book titled "James Rizzi. Artwork 1993-2006", by Glenn O'Brien and Mark Weinberg. Design of official poster for the opening of the New York golf course on Governors Island.
2007 Children's charity project together with Peter Maffay. Joint project with fellow artist, Volker Kühn. Rizzi gets honored with the "Outstanding Alumni Award" by the College of Fine Arts at the University of Florida at Gainesville, FL, his former art school. Design of album cover for Bob Sinclar's 2007 album "Soundz of Freedom".
2008 Rizzi is the first living artist ever to be commissioned by the German government to create official postage stamps for Germany. On the occasion of the 30th anniversary of Artexpo New York, Rizzi is inducted into the inaugural "Artexpo Hall of Fame". Retrospective exhibition of Rizzi's work in the Rheingold Hall in Mainz, Germany - the largest Rizzi exhibition ever with over 1,000 pieces of artwork on display, and over 50,000 paying visitors.

Gallery

Books

References

  1. "Obituary", The Guardian, December 30, 2011
  2. James Rizzi, POP International Galleries
  3. 1 2 Glenn O'Brien (2006), James Rizzi' (foreword)

External links

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