Frank Edward Romero (born July 11, 1941) is an American artist considered to be a pioneer in the Chicano art movement.[3][4][5] Romero's paintings and mural works explore Chicano and Los Angeles iconography, often featuring palm trees and bright colors.
Biography
Frank Romero was born July 11, 1941, in the Boyle Heights neighborhood of Los Angeles, California.[6][3][7] He was the oldest of three children in a middle class family, his parents were Delia Jurado and Edwardo (or Edward) Romero.[4] Romero is of Spanish and Mexican heritage.[8] Growing up they spoke English at home and Romero learned to speak Spanish later in life.[8]
His best known painting is Death of Ruben Salazar (1986), which was one of his police brutality series.[9] He is also known for Nino y Caballo (A vision expressing freedom and joy) (1984), one of the three building-sized murals on the Victor Clothing Company Building.[10]
Personal life
Romero's first marriage was in 1969 to Diane Marie Humphrey in New York City.[4][11]