Tito Canepa | |
---|---|
Born | 21 September 1916 |
Died | 11 February 2014 | (aged 97)
Known for | Painting |
Spouse | Florence Lessing |
Tito Enrique Canepa Jiménez (21 September 1916 – 11 February 2014)[1] was a leading Dominican painter of the generation that came of age in the 1930s and 1940s. Canepa's artistic identity was shaped in New York City, where he lived from the age of 21, never returning to stay in his native country. Despite this distance, or perhaps because of it, as León David has pointed out, his works always evince a certain dominicanidad without his setting out to achieve it as a goal — a dominicanidad that is never folkloric.[2] Of the three modernist Dominican painters of the 1930s and 40s singled out by Rafael Díaz Niese as most significant — Canepa, Colson and Suro[3] — Canepa is the one whose artistic activity developed in the most continuous absence from his native country, and the one longest resident in New York. Cánepa is accented in Spanish but not in the original Ligurian.