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Manuel Neri was born in 1930 in Sanger, California. Neri attended San Francisco City College from 1949-50 with the idea of becoming an electrical engineer. A single class in ceramics turned him to art and a move to California College of Arts and Crafts and subsequent studies at California School of Fine Arts (now the San Francisco Art Institute). Studies with such artists as Elmer Bischoff and Richard Diebenkorn led him to abstract expressionism, but a radical turnabout occurred in the 1950s. “I would say that I did a U-turn in my art in 1955 when I saw my first child being born,” he says. “It was a fantastic moment. I realized then that the female body has the magic. The male may have the power, but the female has the magic.” Neri is known primarily for his life-size figurative sculptures in plaster, bronze, and marble, as well as for his association with the Bay Area Figurative movement during the 1950s and 1960s. Since 1972, Neri has worked with the same model, Mary Julia, creating drawings and plaster figures that merge contemporary sculptural concerns with classical forms. The anatomical skill of these works recalls the sculptures and drawings of Rodin, Giacometti and Degas. The fragile nature of his plaster sculptures led him to cast some of the plasters in bronze, which became a vehicle for color to emphasize surfaces and form. Neri lives in the San Francisco Bay Area, and also has a studio in Carrara, Italy, where he spends several months each year creating sculptures in marble.
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