Nocera “Lesson 313” 60 x 48 inches, pigment on linen

Nocera, “Lesson 321”, 48x48 inches, oil on linen

Lesson 19, Oil and tar on linen, 38” x 48” inches

Nocera “Lesson 314”, 48 x 60 inches, pigment on linen

Nocera “Lesson 317”, 48x48 inches, oil on linen

Lesson 20, Oil and tar on linen, 48” x 60” inches

The Other Heals, 24” x 20” inches, Oil and tar on linen

Journey Without Distance, Oil on linen, 24 x 20 inches

The Journey Back, Oil on linen, 24 x 20 inches

Separated From You, Oil on linen 24 x 20 inches,

Separated From You, Oil on linen 24 x 20 inches,

His Name is Yours, Oil on linen, 24 x 20 inches,

Richard Nocera was born in Waltham, Massachusetts, in 1973. His formal introduction to the arts occurred while attending the distinguished Cambridge School of Weston where serious emphasis was placed on drawing, painting and sculpture.   Following his graduation in 1992, he was accepted into The Parsons School of Design in New York City. During his time at Parsons, his techniques broadened and he was accepted to the prestigious Parson's Paris Program, in Paris, France, where he studied painting from 1994 to 1996. In 1996, financial constraints forced Nocera to leave Paris. He relocated to Canada’s Old Montreal Art District where he began to paint independently and establish himself as a working artist. In 1997, Nocera returned to New York and acquired a studio in the Meatpacking District where he was awarded an apprenticeship with the well-known Canadian artist, Attila Lukacs. Under Lukacs’s tutelage, Nocera began using large trowels, gesso and tar to create massive, heavily textured background surfaces onto which Attila applied his figures. Incorporating this technique into his own figurative work, Nocera’s subjects were no longer his primary focus; the painting’s surface became an additional form of expression. This laid the foundation for the materials and the tools Nocera would return to 20 years later.

In 1997, Nocera’s primary focus was large figurative work. During this time, he was introduced to Christopher Dawes, a British collector and major patron of the arts. Dawes believed in Nocera’s work so strongly that he awarded Nocera with a private artist residency on the Channel Islands, located off the coast of England, where he would paint, free from distractions. Dawes purchased Nocera’s entire collection and subsequently commissioned him to create a new series of paintings, “It's All about Marketing" for a solo exhibition in 1999 in London, England. Tragically, before the London show opened, Mr. Dawes died in a car crash and the show never came to fruition. The Dawes Estate in London purchased all of Nocera’s paintings. Today, the entire body of work hangs in a private collection in London.

Follow This Artist

Only One is True, Oil on linen, 24 x 20 inches

Ask of Yourself, Oil on canvas, 24 x 20 inches