Jorge Noceda Sánchez | |
Office: | Cultural attaché, Dominican Republic Embassy in Tokyo |
Term Start: | 1964 |
Constituency: | Dominican Republic |
Birth Date: | 6 September 1925 |
Birth Place: | Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic |
Death Place: | Miami, Florida, United States |
Alma Mater: | Autonomous University of Santo Domingo New York University National Academy of Design |
Occupation: | Diplomat, painter, gastroeonerolgist, dog breeder |
Jorge Noceda Sánchez (6 September 1925 – 11 March 1987) was Dominican-born American diplomat, and painter. His surrealist artwork has been collected by international museums.[1] He also worked as a gastroeonerolgist, and a dog breeder.
Jorge Noceda Sánchez was born on 6 September 1925 in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. Sánchez received a medical degree from the University of Santo Domingo in 1952. After graduation, he moved to New York City to specialize in gastroenterology at New York University while working as a resident in the Bronx.[2]
However, he quickly became absorbed with painting, his new-found hobby. Initially self-taught, his talent developed rapidly. In 1956, Sánchez enrolled at the National Academy of Design in New York City, where he received instruction from French and American artists, including Robert Philipp and René Bouché. His technique, magnificent color sense and whimsical style received immediate critical acclaim at exhibitions in New York, Havana and Santo Domingo, and later in Paris, Washington, D.C. and Mexico City.[2]
By 1959, Sánchez decided to leave medicine and focus on his artwork.[2] That year, he embarked on a world tour which brought him international recognition. During the tour, he exhibited in Tokyo, Hong Kong, New Delhi, Tel Aviv, Athens, Rome and at the Royal Academy in London. In 1960, he won a Gold Medal Award at the Biennial in São Paulo, Brazil.
In 1964, the Dominican Republic appointed Sánchez cultural attaché at the Dominican Republic Embassy in Tokyo.
In 1966, he was the first Dominican painter to exhibit at the Association Fraternal Latinoamericano. He later exhibited at Galleria 88 in Rome, the Federal Reserve in Washington, D.C. and galleries in New York City, including the Caravan Gallery, Hammer Gallery and, in 1975, at the Bodley Gallery,[3] which featured the leading surrealist artists including Max Ernst, Yves Tanguy and René Magritte.
In 1966, Sánchez moved to Miami, where he also became a breeder of champion Shih Tzu and Japanese Chin dogs with his long-time partner, Gilbert Stanley Kahn,[2] the son of the philanthropist Janet Annenberg Hooker and nephew of the publisher and diplomat Walter Annenberg.[4]
Sánchez died on 11 March 1987 in Miami, Florida, of colon and lung cancer at the age of 61. He was survived by his partner Kahn and a sister.[2]