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Joe Andoe | |
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![]() Portrait of artist and author Joe Andoe, 2020 | |
Born | [1] | December 5, 1955
Education | Master's degree Art |
Alma mater | University of Oklahoma |
Occupation(s) | Painter, author |
Website | www |
Joe Andoe (born December 5, 1955) is an American artist, painter, and author. His works have been featured in exhibits internationally and in museums, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the Whitney Museum of American Art.[2]
Andoe was born in Tulsa, Oklahoma.[2] He has written extensively about his childhood, youth, and early career in his memoir, Jubilee City: A Memoir at Full Speed (P.S.), which was published in 2007.[3][4]
Andoe loved to draw as a child but he never created any artwork until he was in college. Andoe first realized that painting could be his career when he was enrolled in community college studying agricultural business. He was taking an elective class in art history when he learned about artists such as Robert Smithson and Dennis Oppenheim.[5] He soon changed his major and eventually earned a Master's Degree in Art from the University of Oklahoma in 1981.[6]
Joe Andoe's paintings primarily focus on horses and landscapes. They have been described as "lean" and "roughly poetic" by art writer Deborah Solomon, who wrote in 2019 that Andoe was "an important forerunner of the photo-based realism that has become the default style among younger artists today."[7]
The New York Times described Andoe's Me Copying Cy Twombly copying Picasso as incorporating "deadpan ... conceptual humor", which was displayed in the 2023 "Echo of Picasso" group show honoring the artist's legacy.[8] For his part, Andoe has stated, "Since the late ’70s I have fancied myself a landscape painter, and a painter of the things that hang around on the landscape."[4]
Andoe had his first collection of stories published in 2003 by Open City Magazine.[1] That same year he was published in Bomb[14] and Bald Ego. Andoe had earlier authored a comic-book-sized group of stories about his life that he distributed to friends and family. In 2005, Harper Collins asked him to create a longer, narrative version of that work.[5] These became the inspiration for Jubilee City: A Memoir at Full Speed (P.S.) which was published in 2007.[3][4]
Janet Maslin from the New York Times reviewed his memoir, writing, "[the subtitle] suggests that Andoe is eager to depict himself as a raw and reckless sort ... he is ardent but infantile, and his delivery is so deadpan that we’re never sure whether he’s self-critical or clueless."[3]
Andoe currently lives in New York City. He has two children, a son (Sam) and a daughter (Lilly).[6]