Leo Amino

Leo Amino standing on the balcony of the Black Mountain College Studies Building with his sculpture. Photograph by Beaumont Newhall.

Leo Amino, Refractional #44, 1969. Photograph: Courtesy of the estate of Leo Amino. Photo: Alex Yudzon

FOCUS

Art/ Design/ Craft

ROLE

Guest Faculty

ATTENDANCE

1946 - 1950

BIRTH

1911-06-26

Taiwan

DEATH

1989-12-01

New York, NY

Leo Amino—born in Taiwan in 1911 where his father was an agricultural consultant for the Japanese government—was reared in Tokyo. In 1929, he immigrated to the United States and studied at San Mateo Junior College in California for two years and, later, at New York University. He remained in New York to work for a Japanese wood importing firm and took home ebony samples to carve. Although he had received no formal art training, his interest in sculpture grew rapidly and, in 1937, he studied briefly at the American Artists School with Chaim Gross, a leading proponent of direct carving.

Direct carving in wood or stone emphasizes properties of the material. The unique and distinctive patterns of veining, grain and color result in simplified sculptural forms and smooth geometrical outlines which harmonize with Amino's native sensibilities.

His work was exhibited at the 1939 World's Fair and he was given his first solo exhibition in 1940. Since then, he has shown almost continuously in commercial galleries and museums. In 1947 and 1950, he taught at the renowned Black Mountain College in North Carolina.

Amino taught at Cooper Union from 1952 until 1977 and, during that period, he continued to experiment.

Source: Biography written by the Smithsonian American Art Museum

Summer Arts Institute Faculty, Black Mountain College, 1946.
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