Latitude Art Gallery
Aldo Luongo - Biography
Born
to Italian parents, Aldo was raised in Argentina. While growing up
he was exposed to several of the arts including painting and
playing the piano. But his true love when young was playing soccer.
Painting and soccer are like walking to me. So natural.
In
fact, after graduating from the Academy of Fine Art in Buenos Aires,
Aldo Luongo played professional soccer for the New York Cosmos. A few
relocations, injuries, and a stint as a jewelry designer later, the
artist completed the circle by returning to painting.
A look
at Aldo Luongo’s work tempts one to say, Of course, he has to
paint. It’s fundamental to the man’s essence. And so it
is.
Flatteringly reviewed as a Post-Impressionist by the New
York Times, Luongo confesses that at first he was annoyed at being
categorized. However, since many of his favorite painters were
Impressionists he also understood the sincerity of the compliment.
Every artist adapts the best qualities of his favorite artists, but
I’m always conscious of capturing bits of life, of reality, of
situations, of people. It’s my space in time.
Black and
White Prints Leaving behind the gentle utopias of Impressionism, Aldo
Luongo captures his subjects in a more direct way. I attack a canvas
like I play soccer – with vigor. Soccer is my counterpoint to
painting. While painting, I’m confined, lonely, enmeshed in
emotions and self-doubt. Then comes the sweat and focus of a really
good game and I feel whole again. Life is a matter of balance.
Aldo
Luongo and his art evoke true emotion with every canvas. He describes
his work as possessing strength, vibrancy, and feeling. For him the
real journey is told by Aldo’s most recognizable image, Aguilucho
or The Hawk, a self portrait of the artist, himself, with the
character of the ultimate old man, my future self.
What makes
the Hawk so compelling? Look at the eyes – they mirror the soul of
a man who has lived a rich, full life and still sees joy in every
moment. They are the eyes that create the canvases of Aldo
Luongo.
Aldo Luongo has earned both critical praise and
celebrity collectors. Edward G. Robinson, Anthony Quinn, Kevin
Costner, Dionne Warwick, Bill Cosby, Yul Brynner, Charlton Heston,
and Rob Reiner, to name a few, have been touched by Aldo’s imagery.
In addition, Aldo was named official artist for The Olympic Committee
at the 1988 Summer Games, has a commissioned work which is displayed
in The Kennedy Museum in Boston, two years in a row was selected to
participate in The White House Easter Egg Hunt, where his painted
"eggs" are now on display at the world-renowned Smithsonian
Museum.