ON VIEW: MARCH 20 - MAY 2, 2026
OPENING RECEPTION & ANNUAL WINTER PARTY: FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 6 - 9 PM
Born in Buenos Aires to Italian parents, Domingo Guccione spent much of his life in music rather than in the visual arts, working as a classically trained guitarist and teacher. In the 1930s he began drawing privately, without formal training or a circle of peers, using colored pencils, graphite, thick paper, and a small wooden straightedge to devise intricate geometries that hover between architectural plan, cityscape, and inner vision. Long kept within his family, these works only began to surface publicly in the twenty‑first century.
Rhapsody in Red focuses on drawings in which red becomes the primary vehicle for rhythm and emotion, a chromatic analogue to Guccione’s musical background. Color blind, he approaches red not as description but as energy: it pools in plazas, climbs stairways, and bands corridors like a signal or pressure point. The eye follows these passages as it might follow a melodic line, moving through sequences of build‑up and release.
Guccione’s modest means and meticulous, directional hatching generate spaces that are both precise and unstable—stacked portals, tapering halls, zigzag currents that continually redirect the viewer’s route. The drawings resonate with modernist architecture and concrete abstraction yet remain grounded in a solitary, music‑inflected practice, functioning less as diagrams of buildings than as scores for a private, chromatic music whose key happens to be red.
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All Works:Untitled, 1930 - 55Colored pencil and graphite on paper25 1/2 x 19 5/8 in. (64.8 x 49.8 cm)
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Concurrently on view in Gallery One:
Martín Ramírez (1895 – 1963): Silent Dialogue
Visit the online viewing room here.
