Sal Sirugo
NEW YORK, NY
Recipient of: Jimmy Ernst Lifetime Achievement Award, Gottlieb Foundation Award, CAPS Fellowship, Longview Fdn. Award, Woodstock Fdn. Award, Emily Lowe Award
MessageSal Sirugo (1920-2013) was an Abstract Expressionist painter. Born in Pozzallo, Sicily, Sirugo came to the United States at the age of 17. He took work with the Civilian Conservation Corps, first as a firefighter in Idaho and later as a mason at Watkins Glen State Park in upstate New York. During WWII he was drafted into the U.S. Army in 1942. At the completion of basic training, he was assigned for a short period of time to the Military Intelligence Division. While on combat duty in Europe as part of the Rhineland Campaign, he was severely wounded and, subsequently, received a Purple Heart and a Bronze Star. He spent the next three and a half years in veterans hospitals undergoing over 30 operations. At the Valley Forge Hospital in Pennsylvania, volunteers, many of whom were artists, encouraged the patients to paint and supplied them with materials bought at their own expense. While still a patient, he visited the Barnes Foundation and attended a Matisse exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
A month after his discharge from the army in 1948, Sirugo began his formal art study at the Art Students League in Woodstock, NY, under the G.I. Bill. He continued his studies at the League’s school in New York City with Vaclav Vytlacil. Later he studied at the Brooklyn Museum Art School. With an art supply allowance of only $10 a month under the Bill, Sirugo resorted to buying black and white casein paint. This was advised by Vytlacil as an alternative to more costly oil paint. Also the turpentine used with it was too harsh a solvent and would exacerbate his war injuries. In the late 1940s, Sirugo lived and worked in Woodstock, New York, during the summer months. Initial dwellings included a converted pigpen, part of a church and an inoperative bus. Eventually, he was able to purchase a plot of land overlooking the Sawkill Creek and over several years built his own house. The thriving artistic community in Woodstock consisted mostly of realistic painters. Among his friends were Bradley Walker Tomlin, Raoul Hague, Rollin Crampton and Philip Guston.
In New York City, Sirugo was a member of The Club and showed his work in 10th Street galleries. He had solo shows at the Camino Gallery and the Tanager Gallery, where he was a member.
In the early 1950s, he resided on Norfolk Street in two cold-water apartments. He lived in one and used the other, across the hall, as his art studio. Living close by were Grace Hartigan and Alfred Leslie. He occasionally worked for his fellow artists, including Lee Krasner, Milton Resnick, and Alfonso Ossorio, when they needed carpentry work or assistance stretching canvases.
In 1953, after seeing a collection of Chinese paintings in Boston, Sirugo began working closely with ink and paper. He produced a series of abstractions based on suns and landscapes.
In the late 1960s, experimentation with Chinese ink resulted in new compositions. He began working on a series of abstract heads and imaginary portraits.
During his long career, Sirugo earned several awards including the Emily Lowe Award, Woodstock Foundation Award, CAPS Fellowship, Longview Foundation Award and was twice a recipient of the Adolph and Esther Gottlieb Foundation Award. In 2011, the American Academy of Arts and Letters honored him with the Jimmy Ernst Lifetime Achievement Award. His work is held in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, The Zimmerli Art Museum of Rutgers University, the Grey Art Gallery of New York University and Vassar College.
Statement
The beginning of my career coincided with the Abstract Expressionist movement. My large size work was done on canvas or Masonite, using Luminall paint, casein and acrylics. When limited funds made me forego the use of paint colors, I begin to explore the coloristic potential of black and white. After so many years of utilizing black and white, like the ancient Chinese painters, I have no limitations in its use. In the mid-1960s I begin working on paper, combining the remarkable qualities of all types of black inks on wet surfaces. The controlled and accidental fluidity of the medium dictates the direction of the paintings. The inks form “heads,” “eyes,” or imaginary landscapes. When I work I forget that I am painting and become completely absorbed in the pure visual sensations caused by the shapes gradually forming on the paper or canvas. My images portray what I am. The spontaneity of the ink flows that evolves into imaginary landscapes are visual pleasures. They are delicate and poetic compositions. The differences in black inks and gray tones achieve distinct depictions of nature in its vastness and complexity.
When my working area was reduced in size by necessity, the dimensions of my paintings grew smaller but the works retain the same sense of scale as my larger paintings. There is a 17th-century album of Chinese painting titled “Within Small See Large.” This is how I view my work.
Sal Sirugo
Excerpt from interview
Still Working, exhibition catalog, Parsons School of Design Publication, 1994
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Sal Sirugo’s archive was created by Carol Sirugo. For any further info., please contact her through the message or inquire button on this site.
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