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TRANSMISSIONS of LIFE Lorenzo Quinn 1

Transmissions of Life, Lorenzo Quinn

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Lorenzo Quinn was born in Rome in 1966 and was the son of the famous actor ANthony Quinn. He studied at the American Academy of Fine Arts in New York and subsequently in workshops and foundries across the United States and Europe. Starting out as a painter in 1982, he soon discovered that a dimension was missing from his work. Turning to sculpture because of a deep-rooted need to create, he found this medium allowed him to directly convey his innermost feelings to the viewer. Quinn can be described as a prodigy in the art world. At the age of 21, he was already respected by the New York arts community. He was then selected to head the Absolut Vodka ad campaign, a campaign for which only the top world artists are chosen. Shortly after, he was asked by Vatican to create a sculpture of Saint Anthony in order to commemorate the eighth anniversary of his death.

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TRANSMISSIONS of LIFE

Lorenzo Quinn

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Cover:Finding Love Bronze,,100cm

Lorenzo Quinn

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Finding Love Aluminium,,50cm

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Finding Love Bronze,,50cm

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During Love Aluminium,,50cm

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During Love Bronze,,50cm

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During Love Bronze,,100cm

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We all try to maintain a precarious balance between our work and the rest of our lives, but per-haps might cast a wistful glance in the direction of the truly creative individual – someone who is free to think and dream and visualize and then to shake the cocktail of all that mental effort to produce something unique. The work of Lorenzo Quinn might suggest just such a labouring sybarite.

But Quinn, who is 41 and lives near Barcelona, in reality rarely feels able to revel in his position. “I am incredibly ambitious in a creative way, but I am not happy with where I am. My wife says: ‘I never really see you totally happy.’ She is right. An artist, to my mind, can never be totally satisfied. It is up to other people to recognize your masterpieces. She’s very honest – the most honest person I have ever met. Even if I try to camouflage things, I can’t fool her. Our minds usually coincide, but some-times they don’t, and I need – and want – a devil’s advocate.”

There has been one defining change of emphasis in Quinn’s life. It came about in 1986, when he real-ized that the path he had envisaged for himself as a painter, a surrealist, was never going to accommo-date his energy. Of course, the constant compari-son of the 20-year-old’s style to that of Salvador Dalí’s irked him, yet he began to suspect even then that he wouldn’t be able to paint in a way that would be meaningfully different from the work of other artists who had gone before him.

Nonetheless, he studied at New York’s American Academy of Fine Arts and subsequently gained invaluable experience in workshops and foundries in the United States and Europe. At the age of 21, he decided that his destiny lay in the field of sculpture. He recalls vividly the time in 1989 when he felt that he had finally created his first genuine piece of art. “I was in my studio on West 64th Street, near Central Park, and the event is still etched clearly on my mind,” he says.

“I had made a torso from Michelangelo’s drawing of Adam. I’d done a good job, you know, but it

was an artisan’s job. I had simply made a three-di-mensional copy of someone else’s work and I said; ‘No, I can’t do that!’ I had an idea and I started chiselling away, and Eve came out of Adam’s body. I had made Adam & Eve. It had started as a purely academic exercise, yet it had become an artwork.”Sculpture was to consume him from that point on; it was the niche he had been seeking, the conduit through which he could convey simple yet potent messages to the onlooker. For he claims that his art is primarily to do with communication. “It’s true. I dedicate my time to communication. The message is much more important than the art. I have a lot of things I want to say to the world and I do this through my work. To me, sculpture is never just figurative or decorative – the message behind the work is what matters. My work is easy to understand – I want that. Critics can sometimes be against it, but I don’t agree that if something’s accessible it must be bad. I don’t want people to have to sit down and think too much in front of it. I make art for myself and for people who wish to come along for a ride through my dreams. How we live our own lives is of the utmost importance, and most of my work has to do with values and emo-tions. We live in this society of consumers, and we forget to live for the moment.”

Lorenzo Quinn was born in Rome in 1966. His father was the late actor Anthony Quinn and his mother the costume designer Iolanda Addolori, Anthony Quinn’s second wife. At the time of Lorenzo’s birth, his father’s acting career was at its peak. He already had two Oscars to his name, one awarded in 1952 for his portrayal of the brother of Mexican revolutionary leader Emiliano Zapata in Viva Zapata! and the second in 1956 for his part in Lust for Life. Gina Lollobrigida, who played Es-meralda to Quinn’s Quasimodo in the 1956 movie Notre Dame de Paris, later said of him: “You could learn from him, from his humility. He loved life and he profited from it until the end.”

These details of Anthony Quinn’s incredible life and times are not merely tangential; the father had a profound impact on his son Lorenzo on

biography

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several levels. For one thing, Anthony worked as a painter before acting became his full-time profession. He was a student of Frank Lloyd-Wright for a time, and it was the famous architect who encouraged him to take a serious interest in acting. “He wasn’t as sure of himself as an artist as he was as an actor,” Lorenzo Quinn says today. “He always regarded painting as a hobby.” And there was a tremendous bond of love between them – Anthony Quinn adored all his offspring, but was particularly proud of Lorenzo’s prodigious talent. Indeed, the two of them have shared what is, by any standards, an extremely unusual artistic achievement: they have both played the roles of great painters on the big screen. In Vincente Min-nelli’s 1956 picture Lust For Life Anthony Quinn won a second Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his interpretation of the role of Paul Gauguin.

Lorenzo Quinn also enjoyed a brief film career, one of the highlights of which, aged 24, was to play the young Salvador Dalí in the 1990 biopic Dalí. It received critical acclaim, with one reviewer describing Quinn’s role as ‘a very likeable portrayal of Dalí as a young man... When meeting with strangers, reporters, or people whose chains he just wanted to yank, Dalí adopted an odd, distorted way of speaking that was barely intelligible, and Quinn reproduces this very well. If I hadn’t seen film of the real Dalí speaking this way, I would have suspected it was a fanciful invention of the film-makers. Quinn shows great charisma in this role.’ This was a notice that would please any young actor. Yet Quinn subsequently turned his back on the profession. “I didn’t like it,” he says. “I suppose I liked the fame but, of course, it was very superficial. I decided to get out of it. Again, my wife influenced me; she didn’t like me being an actor and that was part of what helped me decide to concentrate on my art.”

Having had a famous father (Anthony Quinn died in 2001 at the age of 86) has proved a double-edged sword. “I loved and adored my father and I am extremely proud of my name. For all the su-perficial things in life, having a famous father has been an asset. But for the more difficult aspects of life it’s been hard, because people expect so much more from you. They create preconceptions which are mostly incorrect. Last year, I found myself in a part of the world where the people I was working with had no idea who my father was, and that was fantastic because I knew that they really wanted me as an artist. I was much more insecure about it when I was younger; now, I figure you can’t live off a name for 20 years – there has to be something else behind it.”

Quinn has cited Michelangelo, Bernini, Car-paux and Rodin as among his inspirations. He is a frequent visitor to Italy where he soaks up as much of the influence of the great masters as he can. Collectors love his work, and this has led to many commissions from important and revered organizations, none more so than the Vatican, who asked him to sculpt the likeness of Saint Anthony in commemoration of the saint’s 800th birthday. “It was really quite amazing,” Lorenzo recalls. “Galileo had been judged in the same room in Padua where I was to present my proposal; both the implications of this and the pressure on me to meet high expectations were enormous and frightening. I brought the drawing and showed it to the cardinal, who said ‘Yes, yes, that’s fine, do it,’ but really he was almost trying to interest me in the ‘script’ of Saint Anthony’s story. It was an incredible experience.” Quinn’s sculpture was subsequently blessed by the Pope in Saint Peter’s Square before being placed in Padua’s Basilica del Santo in 1995.

Another venture, just as important to him but in an entirely different way, is his ongoing project The Globe Of Life. Quinn has been working on this for many years: 100 plaques, of which 20 have been cast, will unite in a 10-metre sphere to repre-sent his interpretation of the 100 most important moments in history.

As he attempts to realize this monumental sculp-ture he says, “I’m beginning to wonder whether it’s just a dream or else wishful thinking. It isn’t commercial and is not intended for profit – but I believe it could really help the world. “It symbol-izes my preoccupation with where the world is going – you know, towards this fragmentation, this independence of tiny parts of it. But the point is, despite colours of skin, we are all the same species. Whatever religion you have, then you have faith. If we knew a meteor was coming and we had to put all six billion of us on to spaceships to save ourselves, that really would put our lives into perspective. Yet we are still killing each other and having wars...” Lorenzo tails off; The Globe Of Life can be, for him, as acutely painful as it is upliftingly positive.

Indeed, the genesis of his work lurches in his own mind from flashes of excitement to the lengthy process – and sometimes tedium – of creating a piece. He seems, initially, reluctant to elaborate, but then opens up with gusto. “The inspiration comes within a millisecond,” he says. “If I am talk-ing to a client about what they envisage, I will say ‘come on, give me some adjectives’ – but I already

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see the finished project. Then I have to spend several months making it. I might have an idea for a sculpture, but then I start asking myself: ‘What does this figure say?’ They have to have a meaning. It’s very important that people understand, but I want their response to be immediate. With [my piece] In Perspective, it’s very clear... We are faced with decisions every single day and we have to put things into perspective and realize how small the world really is, and enjoy life.” Another recent piece, Perfect Story, is, he says disarmingly, without any hidden depths. “It’s about turning your whole life into an absolutely perfect story – as simple as that.”

Quinn’s sculptures are usually conceived in writ-ten form. This is the reason he displays poems alongside each sculpture. “They are a whole, one could not exist without the other. I am inspired to sculpt by observing life’s everyday energy. Enjoying the many different aspects of existence is absolutely vital to me.”

At the start of his artistic career, Lorenzo Quinn admits he was selfish. “I was hungry in all senses; it was difficult,” he says. “I was very self-centred but, being on my own, I was happy to be like that. Most great artists are selfish – think of Picasso! But, actually, I didn’t have a good life. It was work and worry all the time.”

Marriage to Giovanna in 1988, and the birth of his three sons, Christopher, now 13, Nicholas, 11, and Anthony, born in 2005, changed everything. And in an unexpected way. “I take a lot of advice from the kids. When I start on a piece of work, we have a family meeting and they’ll all come and discuss it. Sometimes, they’ll kill a piece and say: ‘Dad, this is bad!’ Most of the time they are right when it’s bad, but usually they love it. They give me ideas and I listen to them a lot. Children are so natural and their emotional response so instinctive. They are so up-front and incredibly honest.”

In Spain, where he now lives, Quinn feels he is best-known for his hand figures. He recognizes that the hands that have featured in several of his pieces have become an aspect that the viewing public identifies with him. “As an artist, in one way, I am honoured that people compare the hands I’ve made to the work of Rodin,” he responds. “However, it’s ridiculous, of course: I know I can reach many people with my work, but I will never have the technical skill and patience of Rodin.” In fact, if you ask him which pieces he is most pleased to see in situ, Quinn castigates himself for any perceived shortcomings. “I’m happy with my work

in Qatar, with my work outside Saint Martin’s Church, Birmingham, for instance. But there are others that I’m less happy with. It’s usually what I didn’t do, rather than what I did, that makes me unhappy.”

By his own admission, after all, he has only just completed his ‘foundation’. Quinn says that his reputation, in the context of the careers of other artists he admires, will solidify between the age of 40 and 50, and that he will create any genuine masterpieces only from the age of 50 onwards. “I fear death,” he says. “I can’t stop thinking about it. But I am thinking about it and getting on with my sculpture, and I am trying to convince myself to live what I am preaching.”

Giles ChapmanLondon-based writer, born 1965, award winning journalist, author and co-author of 12 books on specialist design, including one in collaboration with the Royal College of Art, London

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Love Aluminium,,200cm

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Love Aluminium,,100cm

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Love Bronze,,100cm

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Love Bronze,,50cm

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Eternal Love Bronze,,50cm

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Eternal Love Aluminium,,50cm

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Eternal Passion Bronze

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Emotions, small Aluminium,

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Chess Set Table Aluminium

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Chess Set Board Bronze

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Adam & Eve Stainless Steel

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Adam & Eve Stainless Steel

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Choices Aluminium

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In Perspective, large Bronze

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In Perspective, large Aluminium

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Flamenco Bronze

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The Force of Nature, Marina Barrage, Singapore Stainless Steel

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Forces of Nature Aluminium, 120cm

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The Force of Nature Stainless Steel

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Forces of Nature II Bronze

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Forth Dimension II Bronze

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Forth Dimension II Bronze

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Forth Dimension II Bronze

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Gravity Aluminiun Gravity, mini Bronze

opposite:

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Gravity Marble and Aluminiun

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Gravity Marble and Bronze

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Hand of God, large Aluminium

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Hand of God Bronze, 400cm

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Genesis, small Aluminium

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Give & Take II Bronze

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Give & Take III Bronze

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Trust, mini Aluminium

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Golf Aluminium

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Draw Your Own Time Aluminium

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Luck Mixed medium

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Reflection Bronze

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Reflection Aluminium

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Right Time Right Place Bronze

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Stairs of Life Bronze

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Volare, hanging Aluminium

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Volare, medium Aluminium

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Volare, mini Aluminium

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Volare, medium Bronze

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What Goes Around Comes Around Bronze, Corten Steel

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What Goes Around Comes Around, small Aluminium, Corten Steel

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What Goes Around Comes Around, small Aluminium, Stainless Steel

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What Goes Around Comes Around, small Bronze, Stainless Steel

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exhibitions

Halcyon Gallery, Bruton Street, London, UK

Artisan Gallery, London, UK

Il Mondo de la Escultura in Lleida, Vielha, Valle de Aran, Lleida, Spain

Art for Food, World Economic Forum, Davos, Switzerland

Inauguration of Legacy, Plaza de la Vila, St. Climent, Barcelona, Spain

Ibercaja Exhibition Hall, Valencia, Spain

Holland Art Fair – Vazquez Kunst, The Hague, Netherlands

Ibercaja Exhibition Hall, Logroño, Spain

Ibercaja Exhibition Hall, Huesca, Spain

Inauguration of Rise Through Education, ASPIRE, Academy for Sports Excellence, Doha, Qatar

Masters Art Galerie, Barcelona, Spain

World Gallery, Sitges, Barcelona, Spain

Halcyon Gallery, Bruton Street, London, UK

Sammer Art Gallery, Lanzarote, Spain

El Solell de Santa Agnes, Barcelona, Spain

Sammer Art Gallery, Marbella, Spain

Galerie Liehrmann, Liege, Belgium

Ajuntament de St. Climent, St. Climent, Barcelona, Spain

Halcyon Gallery, Bruton Street, London, UK

L’Heura Fundació “Inici de L’infinit”, Tarragona, Spain

Instituto Veracruzano de la Cultura, Veracruz, México

Galería Es Molí, Ibiza, Spain Galería El Claustre, Girona, Spain

Galerie D ́Art Joël Dupuis, Hardelot, France

Nering + Stern Gallerie, Berlin, Germany

ONCE – Museo Tiflológico, Madrid, Spain

Art Expo, Barcelona, Spain

Can Janer Galería d’Art, Inca, Palma de Mallorca, Spain

World Gallery, Sitges, Barcelona, Spain

Halcyon Gallery, ICC, Birmingham, UK

Galería El Claustre, Girona, Spain

Halcyon Gallery, Bruton Street, London, UK

Bullfighting Fair, Santarem, Portugal

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

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World Gallery, Sitges, Barcelona, Spain

Sala Audiforum, Madrid, Spain

Lorenzo Quinn & Anthony Quinn Art Exhibition Hall, Dubai, United Arab Emirates

Galería Es Molí, Ibiza, Spain

Halcyon Gallery, Selfridges, London, UK

Halcyon Gallery, ICC Birmingham, UK

World Gallery, Sitges, Barcelona, Spain

De Arte, Madrid, Spain

TEFAF 2001, Maastricht, Netherlands

ArTrade, Maastricht, Netherlands

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La Maison de l’Amerique Latine, Monaco

Galería Es Molí, Ibiza, Spain

Galerie Liehrmann, Liege, Belgium

Crédit Foncier, Montecarlo, Monaco

Crédit Foncier, Cannes, France

Halcyon Gallery, Bruton Street, London, UK

Sala de Exposiciones Crèdit Andorrà, Andorra

Museo de Arte Contemporáneo, Hong Kong, China

Espai Cultural Pere Pruna, Barcelona, Spain

Ayuntamiento de Castelldefels, Barcelona, Spain

Galería Echeberría, San Sebastián, Spain

World Gallery, Sitges, Barcelona, Spain

Galerie Jedlitschka-Fedjuschin, Zurich, Switzerland

Veranneman Foundation, Kruishoutem, Belgium

Art and Image, Cannes, France ARCO 2000, Madrid, Spain

Galería Fons d’Art, Olot, Girona, Spain

Galerie Jedlitschka-Fedjuschin, Zurich, Switzerland

Galería Castelló 120, Madrid, Spain Deutsche Bank, Madrid, Spain

La Maison de l’Amerique Latine, Monaco

Ayuntamiento de Sitges, Sitges, Barcelona, Spain

Castell de Benedormiens, Castell d’Aro, Girona, Spain

Art Expo ’99, Barcelona, Spain

Banco Bilbao Vizcaya, Barcelona, Spain

Palais des Rois de Majorque, Perpignan, France

2002

2001

2000

1999

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Seoul Art Centre, Seoul, South Korea

Caja de Ahorros de Gran Canaria, Islas Canarias, Spain

Ayuntamiento de Sevilla, Sevilla, Spain

Palacio del Almudí, Valencia, Spain Galerie Liehrmann, Liege, Belgium

Galería Juan Oliver Maneu, Palma de Mallorca, Spain

Palacio del Marqués de San Adrián, Tudela, Spain

Art Expo ’98, Barcelona, Spain Squisito Gallery, Kortrijk, Belgium Galería Castelló 120,

Madrid, Spain

Galería Echeberría, San Sebastián, Spain

Galería D’Art Susany, Vic, Spain Galería D’Art AB, Granollers, Spain

Galería Maria Salvat, Barcelona, Spain

Galería Nay, Palma de Mallorca, Spain

Galerie Michelle Boulet, Paris, France

Galerie Corso, Vienna, Austria

Museo del Pobo Galego, Santiago de Compostela, Spain

Museo de Grabado Español Contemporáneo, Marbella, Spain

United Nations, New York, USA

Scheidegger Art Center, Zurich, Switzerland

Galleria Edieuropa, Rome, Italy

Gallerie Steinrotter, Münster, Germany

Galerie Corso, Vienna, Austria Westport Art Center, Westport, USA

Ambassador Galleries, New York, USA

Benedetti Gallery, New York, USA Galleria Hausamann, Cortina, Italy

Rempire Fine Art and Gallery, New York, USA

Center Art Galleries, Honolulu, USA

Galleria Hausamann, Cortina, Italy

Center Art Galleries, Maui, USA

Center Art Galleries, Maui, USA

1998

1997

1996

1995

1994

1993

1992

1991

1990

1988

1987

1986

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TRANSMISSIONS of LIFELORENZO QUINN

first published 2010 byOde To Art Contemporary

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