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FRANK RAMPOLLA: THE DNA OF THE MARK

JANUARY 28, 2017 - APRIL 2, 2017

Murder VI by Frank Rampolla

Frank Rampolla (American, 1931–1971), Murder VI, from the portfolio Murder in the Cathedral, 1966. Etching and aquatint on paper, 15 1/2 x 11 7/8 inches. Museum of Contemporary Art Jacksonville, Gift of Judy and Ira Dushoff, M.D. Photo by: Paul Karabinis.

Dies Irae VII by Frank Rampolla

Frank Rampolla (American, 1931–1971), Dies Irae VII, from the portfolio Murder in the Cathedral, 1966. Etching and aquatint on paper, 15 5/8 x 12 inches. Museum of Contemporary Art Jacksonville, Gift of Judy and Ira Dushoff, M.D. Photo by: Paul Karabinis.

Interlude V by Frank Rampolla

Frank Rampolla (American, 1931–1971), Interlude V, from the portfolio Murder in the Cathedral, 1966. Etching and aquatint on paper, 15 1/2 x 11 7/8 inches. Museum of Contemporary Art Jacksonville, Gift of Judy and Ira Dushoff, M.D. Photo by: Paul Karabinis.

Te Deum VIII by Frank Rampolla

Frank Rampolla (American, 1931–1971), Te Deum VIII, from the portfolio Murder in the Cathedral, 1966. Etching and aquatint on paper, 15 5/8 x 11 7/8 inches. Museum of Contemporary Art Jacksonville, Gift of Judy and Ira Dushoff, M.D. Photo by: Paul Karabinis.

Enter Becket II by Frank Rampolla

Frank Rampolla (American, 1931–1971), Enter Becket II, from the portfolio Murder in the Cathedral, 1966. Etching and aquatint on paper, 15 1/2 x 11 5/8 inches. Museum of Contemporary Art Jacksonville, Gift of Judy and Ira Dushoff, M.D. Photo by: Paul Karabinis.

Title Page by Frank Rampolla

Frank Rampolla (American, 1931–1971), Title Page, from the portfolio Murder in the Cathedral, 1966. Etching and aquatint on paper, 15 5/8 x 11 7/8 inches. Museum of Contemporary Art Jacksonville, Gift of Judy and Ira Dushoff, M.D. Photo by: Paul Karabinis.

Birth and Death IV by Frank Rampolla

Frank Rampolla (American, 1931–1971), Birth and Death IV, from the portfolio Murder in the Cathedral, 1966. Etching and aquatint on paper, 15 1/2 x 11 3/4 inches. Museum of Contemporary Art Jacksonville, Gift of Judy and Ira Dushoff, M.D. Photo by: Paul Karabinis.

Thomas and the Four Tempters III by Frank Rampolla

Frank Rampolla (American, 1931–1971), Thomas and the Four Tempters III, from the portfolio Murder in the Cathedral, 1966. Etching and aquatint on paper, 15 5/8 x 11 7/8 inches. Museum of Contemporary Art Jacksonville, Gift of Judy and Ira Dushoff, M.D. Photo by: Paul Karabinis.

Frank Rampolla (1931-1971) was a Florida-based figurative expressionist artist and professor, who lived in Sarasota and Tampa during the 1960s. He taught at Ringling College of Art and Design and the University of South Florida. This exhibition examines not only his extensive mark-making skills but also the imprint he made on his students. Works from MOCA's Permanent Collection are featured along with several large-scale paintings from the collection of Rampolla's son. Jim Draper and Paul Ladnier join forces to show evidence of the master's influence in their work along with other students, such as Jere Allen.

ARTISTS

headshot of Jere H. Allen

JERE H. ALLEN

Jere Hardy Allen, born in Selma, Alabama, 1944, moved to Mississippi in 1972 to become a painting professor at the University of Mississippi. He has spent the last eleven years in his studio in Oxford. His family now extends to four generations in Lafayette County. Allen graduated from the Ringling School of Art and the University of Tennessee where he received his BFA and MFA degrees, respectively. He is listed in Who's Who in American Art, studied on a Group Studies Abroad Fulbright Grant in Costa Rica, received the 1993 Visual Art Award of the Mississippi Institute of Arts and Letters, and accepted an Individual Artist Fellowship from the Mississippi Arts Commission. Allen's art was included in the traveling exhibition Outward Bound: American Art on the Brink of the 21st Century. Solo exhibitions include shows at Stadtsche Galerie Paderborn, Der Kunstkreis Hameln, and Oldenburger Kunstverein in Germany, as well as the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, D.C., Carol Robinson Gallery in New Orleans, and Southside Gallery in Oxford, Mississippi.

Photo credit: Joe Ann Allen

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FRANK RAMPOLLA

Frank Rampolla (1931-1971) was a master figurative expressionist artist and art professor. Rampolla, schooled in the ways of the old masters, had an extraordinary classical knowledge of the arts and literature. He was a classically trained pianist and composer as well as a painter, sculptor, and printmaker. During his prime art-making days, as always, the arts were an integral facet of American society; they reflected the national issues of the time. In the 1960s, it was the Civil Rights movement, women's rights and the pill, Vietnam, Camelot, the Cold War, the space race, drugs, rock 'n' roll, free love, and hippies searching for the meaning of freedom and expression. The art welcomed rebellion, but Pop Art paintings of soup cans and gumball machines became the mainstream. A few artists chose the path led not by the whims of the market but the truth of their own conscience with a deep concern for the human condition. Rampolla ascended from this select group. The artist's works are in the permanent collections of museums across the country, including The Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota, Florida; The Philadelphia Museum of Art; and he Library of Congress and the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D.C.