Ozz Franca - Impasto Bouquet
Artist: Ozz Franca (1928 - 1991)
Active: California / Brazil
Title: Impasto Bouquet
Category: Painting
Medium: Oil
Ground: Canvas
Signature: Signed Lower Left
Size: 24 x 20"
Style: Impasto Expressionism
Subject: Floral
Frame: Wood Carved, Metal Leaf, Clay Wash
Frame Size Overall: 33 x29"
Seller's Notes/Description: Certificate of Authenticity will be included.
Price: $7,500
Click on the image above for a full size view.
The following biography is from the archives of askART.
Born October 2, 1928, França (pronounced FRON-suh) grew up in Sao Paulo, Brazil, and from an early age showed talent as an artist, as well as exceptional prowess as a competitive swimmer. At 14 he won first prize at the annual Spring Salon Art Competition. At 15, he qualified for the Brazilian Olympic Swimming Team. With two amazing talents, França was unsure what he should do with his life. Fate stepped in, and the Olympic Games were canceled the year França was to compete due to the outbreak of World War II. At that point, he decided to devote his life to art.
He held his first one-man show at the age of 18. Following what he would later say was the best advice anyone ever gave him, França came to the U.S, to accept a scholarship in Utah. A year later, he moved to Hollywood and began doing movie illustration for Walt Disney. His projects included Lady and the Tramp and 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. He moonlighted as a swimmer when movie parts were available.
França painted many subjects, but he is best known for his esoteric images of Native American women. França's art enters the world of fantasy and dreams, where the spiritual meets the sensual. His works, with their floating imagery and airy, muted colors, evoke an aura of mystery. França said he always painted his subjects, which primarily were women, either in profile, looking toward the edge of the painting, or looking over her shoulder, "so that anyone could walk into it."
Joan Lee, print marketing professional, said that Ozz saw the spirituality and quiet dignity of Native American men and women. "there's a romance surrounding Native Americans that people appreciate seeing," said Lee.
. ." After creating a spectacular body of art, Ozz França died in 1991.
Submitted by Gae Hirsch, Professional art instructor and appraiser. She wrote: "I was recently in a position to do some research on this artist, and found all or part of the following bio on several different sites, both commercial and informational.
Sources Include:
Angela Howell, "Ozz França: A Mystical Visionary", Remembering the Legends by Angela Howell. Collector's Mart, June 1993