(1930 - 2021)
Manuel Neri was a leading member of the Bay Area Figurative movement along with David Park, Richard Diebenkorn and Elmer Bischoff. The climate of the Post-War era encouraged bold artistic searches for new expression and Neri led the way in the Bay Area through a sculptural practice rooted in the desire to explore and manipulate material, beginning with cardboard and junk material and later oscillating between plaster, bronze and marble. Neri maintained close ties to the practice of painting, both in his painted plasters and bronzes, as well as in his large-scale abstractions, all the while remaining faithful to his primary motif—the female form.
Manuel Neri's work is internationally renowned and has been featured in numerous solo museum and gallery exhibitions in the U.S. and abroad, including the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, the Museum Moderner Kunst Stiftung Ludwig, Vienna, and the Museo Estudio Diego Rivera, Mexico. In 2006, Neri received the Lifetime Achievement in Sculpture Award from the International Sculpture Center, and in 2008, he received the Bay Area Treasure Award from the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.
Manuel Neri
Julia (Cast 2/4)
66 x 18.75 x 13.75 inches
bronze sculpture with oil-based enamel
1998
Manuel Neri
Coming in Last Thursday (Cast 2/4)
64 x 23.25 x 14.5 inches
Bronze sculpture with oil-based pigments
1981
Manuel Neri
Prietas Series V, (Cast 4/4)
68 x 17 x 13 inches
Bronze with oil-based pigments
1993/2000
Manuel Neri
She Said Series No. 16
41 x 26 inches
Mixed media on paper
1990, 1992
Manuel Neri
Amante Plaster Maquette IV
16 x 4.75 x 4.75 inches
Plaster, pigments, metal armature on wood base
2010
Manuel Neri
Maha - Plaster Maquette VII
22.75 x 16.5 x 4.5 inches
Plaster sculpture with mixed-media and oil-based pigments
1984
Manuel Neri
Window Series No. 12
35.5 x 45 inches
Oil on canvas
1958