Tito Enrique C谩nepa

The Tito Enrique C谩nepa Jim茅nez Collection, 1916-2012

Tito Enrique C谩nepaBiographical Note: Tito Enrique C谩nepa Jim茅nez was born in 1916 in San Pedro de Macor铆s, Dominican Republic. Young Tito began to protest the increasingly totalitarian regime of Rafael Leonidas Trujillo y Molina and as a result of these 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 pro-Communist Experimental Workshop led by Mexican muralist David Alfaro Siqueiros and Bolivian painter Roberto Berdecio. These artists as well as the art education provided by Dominican art historian Am茅rico Lugo strongly influenced C谩nepa鈥檚 painting style. His works demonstrate strong influences from cubism, the Mexican muralists, and other modernist movements. His paintings display strong commitments to portraying Dominican political, cultural, and religious life. Important Dominican political figures portrayed in his paintings include the Mirabal sisters and heroes of Dominican independence Gregorio Luper贸n and Juan Pablo Duarte. Among his most notable paintings are Peasant Family (1939), Tryptyc: Enriquillo, Duarte, Luper贸n (1971), Anacaona (1988), and Self Portrait (1946). C谩nepa was married to dancer Florence Lessing. The couple had two children: Eric and Cathy.  Mr. C谩nepa鈥檚 work received early recognition when his works were exhibited in New York City in the early 1940s, but even in his own dictatorship-dominated Dominican Republic.  In 1943 Dominican critic Rafael D铆az Niese 鈥渘amed Tito C谩nepa, Jaime Colson, and Dar铆o Suro the three most accomplished Dominican painters鈥 (Pelligrini 1996).  Art historian and critic Edward J. Sullivan locates Mr. C谩nepa within 鈥渢he second generation of Latin American modernists鈥 who came to the artistic fore in the 1930s and 1940s. 鈥淲hile they incorporated the achievements of the radical modernists of the previous decades, they also imbued their own art with a renewed interest in classicism and, at times, a personal and political concern for the social realities of the day鈥 (Sullivan 1992). According to Sullivan, what distinguishes Mr. C谩nepa鈥檚 art is 鈥榯he manifestation of the benevolence of divinity expressed in uniquely human terms. Tito Enrique C谩nepa died in Charlotte, North Carolina on February 11, 2014. 

Scope and Contents Note: The Tito Enrique C谩nepa Collection consists of forty-one paintings, 53 drawings and sketches; a mural and a piano designed and built by Tito Enrique C谩nepa (only in digital photographs). There are three original paintings: 鈥淥jeda y Caonabo鈥, 1984; 鈥淢irabal Sisters鈥 (鈥淟as Hermanas Mirabal鈥), 1985; and 鈥淭he Gulf of Arrows鈥 (鈥淓l Golfo de las Flechas鈥), 1987 that were donated to the CUNY  Dominican Studies Institute. The gesso on panel 鈥淥jeda y Caonabo鈥, 48鈥漻36鈥, portrays a faceless Spaniard in armor, Alonso Ojeda, moments after presenting the powerful Taino Caonabo with the gift of handcuffs. The oil on canvas 鈥淢irabal Sisters鈥, 48鈥漻23鈥, depicts the heads of the three Dominican martyrs in the struggle against Trujillo. The sisters鈥 faces are figurative while the rest of the painting is abstract, the colors display influences of fauvism. The oil on canvas 鈥淕ulf of Arrows鈥, 60鈥漻44鈥, is a cubist-influenced work that appears to address the Dominican landscape, culture, and politics. In addition to the art collection, there are consists of correspondence with his cousin Dominican social scientist Juan Isidro Jim茅nez Grull贸n (253 items, 1945-1982); subject files; numerous photographs and contact prints depicting C谩nepa,his family, and his paintings; photographs; 27 motion pictures (restricted) and other documents generated or produced or collected by Tito Enrique C谩nepa from c.1939 to 1992; a computer diskette containing a manuscript relating to the colonial history of the Dominican Republic (228 pages). There is also an interview of Tito Enrique C谩nepa conducted, conducted by the archives at his apartment prior to his donation. In the hour-long interview Mr. C谩nepa talks about his early life in the Dominican Republic during the early 1930s and his campaign against Dominican Dictator Rafael Trujillo Molina. 

Conditions Governing Access: The Dominican Archives obtained photographs of the entire Tito Enrique C谩nepa painting, owned by his son Eric C谩nepa, has been declared a restricted collection, and can only be used for educational purposes with the approval of the Chief Archivist. Except for the three painting that were donated to the CUNY Dominican Studies Institute Archives (Ojeda y Caonabo, El Golfo de las Flechas, and the Mirabal Sisters; the Mural and the Piano photographs and the drawings, the art collection is restricted and can only be used for educational purposes with the written approval of the Chief Archivist. Permission to use or publish photographs of the painting not donated to the Archives or any other use can only be obtained from the Owner of the Original Paintings Eric C谩nepa. 

Last Updated: 04/21/2025 13:46