John Torreano USA, b. 1941

Overview
"The artists I knew at the time—Ron Gorchov, Bob Grosvenor, David Reed, Bill Jensen, Lynda Benglis, and Jennifer Bartlett—were working with different concepts of what art could be. That was what made it so exciting about being here. We were right at the beginning of the fracturing of concepts of a style, and a rejection of the idea that you had to belong to one of the primary religions: figurative, post–Abstract Expressionism, Pop, Minimalism, Color Field, and conceptualism. We were all part of an emerging eclecticism that continues to fracture to this day.”

John Torreano (b. 1941, Michigan) is an American artist, best known for utilizing faceted gems in a variety of mediums and methods to create a "movement-oriented perception" with his works. He developed his recognizable language with other post-minimalist artists such as Lynda Benglis, Ron Gorchov and Elisabeth Murray. With his nontraditional use of materials, such as acrylic gems and wood columns, he has challenged the dogmatic intransigency of Minimalism characterized by straight lines, cubes and monochromatic colors by emphasizing the oxymoronic relationship between material and visual perception. 

He grow up in a large Catholic family and he has referenced how his use of gems may have been influenced by early experiences as an altar boy. He found solace in the quiet intimacy of the church while serving early morning Mass. The ritual of lighting candles and monitoring banks of vigil lights may have set him up to respond to the reflective and refractive nature of gems later in his life as an artist. In a more expanded sense, Catholic concepts, the universal, contributed to his interest in outer-space and theoretical concepts like the Big Bang theory. This explains his use of shaped canvases and half-round columns as well as his paintings inspired by images of space objects such as stellar constellations and nebulae. Throughout his career, Torreano has investigated the question of value. How do materials such as acrylic gems, plywood, canvas paint, wood columns etc. transcend to an alternate meaning or value? Is this process of making art a contemporaneous version of transubstantiation? He believes artists are equivalent to scientists in their use of theoretical models to gain insight into the physical world and how it is perceived.  For Torreano art works are temporal results of the ongoing research, in the combining of physical material to achieve spiritual/aesthetic ends.

 
Torreano’s works have been exhibited in several museums and institutions, among all: Whitney Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington DC, the Indianapolis Museum of Art, Indianapolis and many others. His series of paintings titled "TV Bulge" were featured in the 1969 Whitney Biennial.
 
 
 
 
Works
  • John Torreano, Texture of White multicolored gems, 2021
    John Torreano
    Texture of White multicolored gems, 2021
    acrylic paint and acrylic gems on wood
    81 x 13 x 7.5 cm
  • John Torreano, Hot Stars, 1977
    John Torreano
    Hot Stars, 1977
    acrylic gems and acrylic paint on canvas
    183 x 183 cm
  • John Torreano, Spacescape with Dark Matter, 2018
    John Torreano
    Spacescape with Dark Matter, 2018
    acrylic and acrylic gems on panel
    107 x 452 cm
  • John Torreano, Sea Sky Gold, 2018
    John Torreano
    Sea Sky Gold, 2018
    acrylic and gold leaf on panels
    4 wooden panels total measures 114 x 456 cm
  • John Torreano, Spatial Grit (bluastro grigio), 2023
    John Torreano
    Spatial Grit (bluastro grigio), 2023
    acrylic gems and acrylic paint on canvas
    182 x 182 x 10 cm
  • John Torreano, Sparkle (white mint rose yelleow), 2023
    John Torreano
    Sparkle (white mint rose yelleow), 2023
    acrylic gems and acrylic paint on canvas
    51 x 51 x 10 cm
  • John Torreano, Pink Rose Red Gems Spots, 2024
    John Torreano
    Pink Rose Red Gems Spots, 2024
    acrylic paint and acrylic gems on wood
    195.5 x 25 x 12.5 cm
  • John Torreano, Colored Spots Gems, 2024
    John Torreano
    Colored Spots Gems, 2024
    acrylic gems and acrylic paint on wood
    150 x 20 x 10 cm
  • John Torreano, Spatial Grit and DM, 2023
    John Torreano
    Spatial Grit and DM, 2023
    acrylic gems and acrylic paint on canvas
    51 x 51 x 10 cm
  • John Torreano, Winter Winter, 2024
    John Torreano
    Winter Winter, 2024
    Acrylic paint and acrylic gems on wood column
    195.5 x 29 x 15 cm
  • John Torreano, Summer Glory, 2024
    John Torreano
    Summer Glory, 2024
    Acrylic paint and acrylic gems on wood column
    195.5 x 29 x 15 cm
  • John Torreano, Grit Too (bianco grigiastro), 2023
    John Torreano
    Grit Too (bianco grigiastro), 2023
    acrylic gems and acrylic paint on canvas
    182 x 182 x 10 cm
  • John Torreano, Bejeweled Sky, 2020
    John Torreano
    Bejeweled Sky, 2020
    acrylic paint and acrylic gems on wood
    107 x 18 x 9 cm
  • John Torreano, L'Inverno, 2023
    John Torreano
    L'Inverno, 2023
    acrylic paint and acrylic gems on wood
    195.5 x 25 x 12.5 cm
  • John Torreano, Pleiades Sky, 2023
    John Torreano
    Pleiades Sky, 2023
    acrylic gems and acrylic paint on canvas
    182 x 182 x 10 cm
  • John Torreano, Silver Gems White Spots, 2024
    John Torreano
    Silver Gems White Spots, 2024
    acrylic paint and acrylic gems on wood
    195.5 x 25 x 12.5 cm
  • John Torreano, Grunewald's Wounds Too, 2023
    John Torreano
    Grunewald's Wounds Too, 2023
    acrylic gems on wood
    195.5 x 29 x 15 cm
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