
Catalogue
- Year
- 1958
- Medium
- Bronze
- Dimensions
- 94.5 × 126.3 × 129.3 cm (37 1/4 × 49 3/4 × 51 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Cosmo Campoli
Artist

Sculpture
Cosmo Campoli was a Chicago-based sculptor, known for his figurative work centered on the themes of birth and death, and for his use of bold, surreal bird and egg imagery. He was a member of a group of School of the Art Institute of Chicago artists collectively dubbed the "Monster Roster" by critic Franz Schulze in the late 1950s, based on their affinity for sometimes gruesome, expressive figuration, fantasy and mythology, and existential thought. That group included, among others, Leon Golub, George Cohen, June Leaf, H.C. Westermann, Seymour Rosofsky, and Theodore Halkin. Campoli rose to prominence in the 1950s locally and nationally when art historian and curator Peter Selz featured him, Golub and Cohen in a 1955 ARTnews article, "Is There a New Chicago School?", and included him, Golub and Westermann in the 1959 Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) exhibition, New Images of Man, as examples of vanguard expressive figurative work in Europe and the United States. Campoli's work was also shown at the Art Institute of Chicago, the Smart Museum of Art, Beloit College, the Hyde Park Art Center, and in a career retrospective at Chicago's Museum of Contemporary Art in 1971. Campoli was hampered in later years by bipolar disorder.
Full artist profile →More
More by Cosmo Campoli
Untitled (goat and man)
1953 · Graphite and brush and gray wash on cream wove paper, mounted on board
Untitled
1950 · Lithograph on ivory wove paper
Untitled
1950 · Lithograph on ivory wove paper
Untitled (woman combing her hair)
1943 · Graphite on cream wove paper, mounted to board
Untitled (2 encased sculptural forms)
1943 · Black chalk on cream laid paper, mounted on board
Untitled (birds in formation)
1943 · Black porous point pen and blue ballpoint pen on cream wove paper, mounted on board
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Artist
- Cosmo Campoli
- Year
- 1958
- Medium
- Bronze
- Dimensions
- 94.5 × 126.3 × 129.3 cm (37 1/4 × 49 3/4 × 51 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1958-132938
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





