Joe
Radoccia
A
second generation Italian American, Joe Radoccia was born in the railroad
town of Hornell, New York, in 1960. His family settled in Buffalo, New
York. Growing up in a working class environment, in the heart of the
“rust belt,” helped shape Radoccia’s personal commitment to
communicating social issues with a broader audience,
and gave the humanist sensibilities to his figurative paintings. He
studied at Buffalo State College, earned a BS in design, and began working
in advertising in New York City. Disenchanted with this industry, he
returned to Buffalo to complete an MFA in painting (1985) at the University
of Buffalo.
Since
then, he has been devoting his time to painting. While in Buffalo, his
work was exhibited throughout Western New York, including shows at Hallwalls
and The Albright Knox. He taught Design and Fine Art at local colleges
and also worked with the exhibits department of the Museum of Science
in Buffalo. During that time period, Radoccia’s work addressed such
social issues as Apartheid and AIDS. Working with grass-roots and national
organizations, he exhibited nationally, as part of “Art Against Apartheid.”
He also took part in the travelling exhibition entitled “In the Face
of AIDS,” which included Susan Coe and Robert Flint. After a one year
painting sabbatical that took him to Florence, Rome and Venice, Radoccia
settled in Brooklyn, New York, and opened his studio. He works on private
commissions, mural painting, and exhibit and set design throughout the
United States. During this time, Radoccia took an interest in the humanist
and narrative sensibilities of the American Regionalist school.
Recently,
he spent time in his New Orleans studio to create a new body of work
entitled “Love Game.” With a continued concern for social issues, his
current painting tells the story of the complexity of human relationships
in gay culture. Radoccia playfully draws from the
narrative tradition of the American Regionalists,
while remaining open to the tradition of erotic miniatures from India.
In an effort to transcend the human boundaries of race, class and gender,
Radoccia’s current body of work reflects a commitment to “popular culture,”
a fascination for the vernacular, and a quest for cross-cultural exchanges.
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