Richard
Duardo has been both an artist and an advocate of the arts in Los
Angeles for over 25 years. Since graduating from UCLA in graphic design,
he has been prolific in producing a large body of serigraphs. He has
had museum shows in Tokyo and Gifu, Japan, New York and Los Angeles.
His work was selected for a National Endowment for the Arts travelling
exhibition where he was represented both as a printer and an artist.
In 1988, Duardo received The California Arts Commission for The Artist
of the Year Award. His work is represented in notable collections
including The Los Angeles County Museum of Art.
In 1980, Duardo established his fine art print studio, Hecho en Aztlan
and its later offshoots, Aztlan Multiples, Multiples Fine Art, Future
Perfect, Art & Commerce, and his current studio, Modern Multiples,
Inc. To date he has published over 300 artists' work. The archives
of these studios are collected by the University of California, Santa
Barbara's Department of Chicano Studies.
This past summer, Duardo spent 6 weeks in Japan as a part of an Artist-In-Residence
program at the Takumi Studios in Gifu as well as for his museum show
featuring 10 commissioned portraits of Akira Kurosawa. Since his return,
Duardo working on a new series of work based on "pictorial koans"
and promises to be a profound departure from his familiar terrain.
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