Oscar de Mejo
Born in Trieste, Italy in 1911, de Mejo had degrees in both Law and Political Science. A believer in the occult and in particular the I Ching, he even chose his art dealer, Ken Nahan according to the I Ching’s advice.
De Mejo’s one constant obsession since boyhood had been painting. After World War II, he married the movie star Alida Valli and they came to the United States. After a stint as a jazz composer, Oscar finally returned to his first love – painting.
Oscar de Mejo’s paintings are a mesmerizing mixture of the naive and the sophisticated, the literal and the outlandish. His witty, whimsical depictions of American life are immediately engaging, but upon closer observation their complexity becomes fully apparent, and his unique brand of surrealism is revealed. The myriad irrational and incongruous details that fill his works prod both the concious and unconcious mind.
Features
Oscar de Mejo’s works have been featured in such publications as: American Heritage, Architectural Digest, Art Today, Sciences, Harpers, International Economy, Town and Country, MD Magazine, Vogue Magazine, Die Kunst (Germany), Oggi and Graza (Italy), Yale Literary Magazine, Penthouse, Travel & Leisure and the New York Times.
“The art of Oscar de Mejo is both ‘sophisticated’ and ‘primitive’. It is ‘primitive’ in the sense of being direct, playful, brightly colored and precisely delineated. It is ‘sophisticated’ in its choice of themes – and in the degree to which it is artfully influenced by the ‘primitive.’ De Mejo has learned things about vision and subtle distortion by studying the work of such naive painters as Bombots and Rousseau, just as Tamayo learned how to disembody his peasants by studying Picasso, or Picasso in turn had gone to school to the African sorcerers – and with as much right."
– Selden Rodman