Zenos Frudakis

ANA 1990; NA 1993

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Zenos Frudakis
Zenos Frudakis
Zenos Frudakis
American, b. 1951
As a child in Gary, Indiana, Zenos Frudakis began to sculpt under the family's kitchen table with a piece of dough given to him by his mother as she was preparing to bake bread. Frudakis’ father, born in Greece, came to the U.S. as a boy. The oldest of five children growing up in Greek culture, he admired, respected, and was drawn to Greek sculpture. Greek art influenced his aesthetic vision; additional inspiration came from sculptors Michaelangelo, Bernini, Carpeaux and Rodin. The poetry of Eliot, Frost, Roethke and Graves, is important to Frudakis, as is post-modern, deconstructionist philosophy.

Frudakis studied by scholarship at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, completing his formal education with a Bachelor in Fine Art and a Master in Fine Art at the University of Pennsylvania. He studied sculpture with his brother, sculptor EvAngelos Frudakis, and oil painting with James Hanes, both winners of the Prix de Rome.

Frudakis' emphasis has been the figure and the portrait, as demonstrated in his many monumental figure/portrait works, individual portrait busts and bas-reliefs. He excels at expressing the character and vitality of his subjects while capturing an accurate likeness. His portfolio includes figure sculpture, animals, bas-reliefs, portraits—both busts and paintings—of living and historical individuals, and poetic/philosophical sculpture with a postmodern sensibility. Over the past four decades, he has created monumental works in public and private collections throughout the US and abroad.

Although Frudakis creates personal, expressive works of art, he is a commissioned artist with wide-ranging versatility capable of sculpting subjects from the human form to animals.