Noel Rockmore

Noel Rockmore (December 15, 1928 – February 19, 1995) was born Noel Montgomery Davis to his mother, Gladys Rockmore Davis, and his father, Floyd Davis, in New York City. Rockmore was an American painter, draughtsman, and sculptor. He claims to have produced more than 15,000 works of art in his lifetime. He is known for his portraits, his to come rise to fame, his Preservation Hall portraits, and for varying his state at the culmination of the popularity he had developed in New York City and he had a daughter, Emilie Rhys

Noel painted in a practicable and old-fashioned masters style throughout his childhood and adolescence. He experimented once different artistic theories, techniques, and ideas in the New York art world of the 1950s.

As the abstract expressionist bustle gained momentum, Rockmore left New York and went to New Orleans, where he misrepresented his pronounce from Noel Davis to Noel Rockmore, adopting the surname of his mother. He spent the next-door 20 years commuting amongst New Orleans and New York City even if various dealers tried unsuccessfully to rule him and his often volatile career.[citation needed]

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