Grace DeGennaro (born 1956) is an American artist. She is best known for watercolors and paintings that explore âÂÂritual, geometry, and growth through repeated forms, serial patterns, and iconic forms like circles and diamonds.âÂÂ
DeGennaro was born in Rockville Centre, New York in 1956. She received a BS in Fine Arts from Skidmore College in 1978 and an MFA from Columbia University in 1986. She lives and works in Yarmouth, Maine.
DeGennaroâÂÂs artistic practice has been described as nature and mathematics converging where âÂÂsubtle washes of watercolor yield symmetrical compositions of circles and triangles, which are then heightened with small beads of colored pigment. These patterns accumulate according to the Fibonacci sequence or the principle of gnomonic growth to create a visible record of time.âÂÂ
Among her early influences was the 1984 exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, Primitivism in 20th Century Art, which focused on the impact of ritual and religion in non-Western art.
Along with art from non-Western cultures the artistâÂÂs life-long study of symbols and her own dreams have been a source of inspiration. DeGennaro has recorded dreams in a journal for 37 years.
DeGennaro has been the recipient of a grant from the Ballinglen Arts Foundation in 2012.
DeGennaroâÂÂs work has been included in Sixfold Symmetry: Pattern in Art and Science at The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery in Saratoga Springs, Patterns: Selections from the Kentler Flatfiles at Kentler International Drawing Space in Brooklyn, NY, and To Infinity and Beyond: Mathematics in Contemporary Art at the Heckscher Museum of Art in Huntington, NY. Her work has also been exhibited in the American Embassies in Tanzania and Qatar.