
Composer Rafael Petit贸n Guzm谩n was known as "the ambassador of merengue."

Early photo of Tito Enrique C谩nepa Jim茅nez in New York.

Ojeda y Caonabo by Tito Enrique C谩nepa Jim茅nez
CUNY DSI鈥檚 鈥淓l M煤sico y el Pintor鈥 highlights careers of musician Rafael Petit贸n Guzm谩n and painter Tito Enrique C谩nepa
鈥淓l M煤sico y el Pintor/ The Musician and the Painter: An Exhibit Documenting the Lifetime, Work, and Artistic Trajectory of Two Early Twentieth Century Dominican Artists in New York,鈥 will be on view February 15 through March 27 at the CUNY Dominican Studies Institute Archives and Library. The Archives and Library are on the second floor of the North Academic Center at T九色视频.
The exhibit consists of 16 panels, documents, photographs, musical scores, and paintings from the Dominican Archives collections that highlight the careers of musician Rafael Petit贸n Guzm谩n and painter Tito Enrique C谩nepa. It is conceived as a traveling exhibit that will be made available to other institutions after its exhibition at City College concludes.
The archival collections of both artists provide a remarkable glimpse of early 20th century cultural history of Dominicans and Latinos in New York City. Maestro Petit贸n Guzm谩n and C谩nepa were enormously influential in their chosen professions. They contributed to the development of new hybrid artistic forms that combine traditional and modern elements and incorporate styles from different cultures.
C谩nepa, in particular, used his art to express political themes, chiefly his opposition to tyranny and imperialism. Petit贸n Guzm谩n used eclecticism and formal innovation as the vehicle of his revolt.
El M煤sico / The Musician: Maestro Rafael Petit贸n Guzm谩n, 1894-1983
Maestro Rafael Petit贸n Guzm谩n was born in Salcedo, Dominican Republic, in 1894 and received his earliest musical training from his father, Edilio Petit贸n, an excellent amateur musician. Later, he continued his music studies in Puerto Rico on a scholarship from the Dominican government.
He moved to New York City in 1935, where he studied at the prestigious Juilliard School of Music under the tutelage of famous conductor Leopold Stokowski. Maestro Petit贸n Guzm谩n went on to form the first known Dominican-led orchestra in New York City, Lira Dominicana, which performed in popular New York City ballrooms in the 1930s and 1940s. He performed at many premiere venues in New York City including Radio City Music Hall, the Stork Club, the Cuban Casino and the Copacabana.
Maestro Petit贸n Guzm谩n was one of the first musicians to introduce 鈥渕erengue鈥 to New York City audiences, and he became known as 鈥渢he ambassador of merengue.鈥 In addition to being a talented pianist, percussionist and music teacher, he was a prolific composer who used his well-rounded classical music foundation to compose in a myriad of Latin folk and popular musical genres including bolero, chachach谩, guaracha, mambo, merengue, pachanga, rumba and tango.
The Rafael Petit贸n Guzm谩n collection in the Dominican Archives consists of approximately eight cubic feet of original music scores, lyrics, sound recordings, musical arrangements, compositions, personal documents, photographs, and memorabilia of the composer and his family. Among the items are unpublished and unedited music. The music collection is available for research purposes to musicians, educators, students, historians, and researchers interested in early and mid-20th century Latin American music and the history and culture of the Dominican population in the United States.
El Pintor / The Painter: Tito Enrique C谩nepa Jim茅nez, 1916 -
Painter Tito Enrique C谩nepa Jim茅nez was born in 1916 in San Pedro de Macor铆s, Dominican Republic. In the early 1930s, he began to protest the increasingly totalitarian regime of Rafael Leonidas Trujillo Molina. As a result of his political activities, his parents sent him to Puerto Rico and then to New York City.
Upon his arrival in New York City in the mid-1930s, C谩nepa worked in the Experimental Workshop led by Mexican muralist David Alfaro Siqueiros and Bolivian painter Roberto Berdecio. These two artists and Dominican art historian Am茅rico Lugo strongly influenced C谩nepa鈥檚 style of painting.
C谩nepa鈥檚 paintings display a strong commitment to portraying Dominican political, cultural, and religious life, and often contain explicit political content. Important Dominican political figures portrayed in his paintings include Juan Pablo Duarte and Gregorio Luper贸n, heroes of Dominican independence and thought, and the Mirabal sisters, who were opponents of the Trujillo regime.
Among his most notable paintings are: 鈥淧easant Family鈥 (1939), 鈥淭ryptych: Enriquillo, Duarte, Luper贸n鈥 (1971), 鈥淎nacaona鈥 (1988) and 鈥淪elf Portrait鈥 (1946). C谩nepa鈥檚 work received early recognition when his paintings were exhibited in New York City in the early 1940s. In 1943, Dominican critic Rafael D铆az Niese named Tito C谩nepa, Jaime Colson, and Dar铆o Suro 鈥渢he three most accomplished Dominican painters.鈥
The Tito Enrique C谩nepa Jim茅nez Collection consists of approximately seven cubic feet of: drawings and sketches; correspondence with his cousin, Dominican social scientist and educator Juan Isidro Jim茅nez Grull贸n (1945-1982); subject files; motion pictures and newsreel; photographs and contact prints depicting C谩nepa, his family, and his paintings, and other documents produced or collected by C谩nepa. The collection also contains three paintings: 鈥淥jeda y Caonabo鈥 (1984), 鈥淭he Mirabal Sisters鈥 (1985), and 鈥淭he Gulf of Arrows鈥 (1987).
Established in 1992, CUNY DSI is the premier research institution for the study of Dominicans in the United States. This exhibit is one of many current projects that, together, carry forward the Institute鈥檚 mission:
鈥 To gather, produce and disseminate knowledge concerning the human experience of people who trace their ancestry to the Dominican Republic;
鈥 To address the current lack of useful and reliable information concerning Dominicans in the United States, and
鈥 To advance research and teaching at the City University of New York focusing on the Dominican people.
Institutions interested in displaying the exhibit should contact the CUNY Dominican Studies Institute Archives at 212.650.8865, dsiarchives @ccny.cuny.edu, and ask to speak with the chief archivist, Don Idilio Gracia Pe帽a.
On the Internet
MEDIA CONTACT
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