Robert Donley was born in Cleveland, Ohio, and came to Chicago to receive a BFA in 1960 and an MFA in 1966 from the School of the Art Institute. For almost 40 years, beginning in 1967, Donley taught in the art department at DePaul University until moving to Portland, Oregon in 2008. His work is included in the collections of the National Museum of American Art, First National Bank in Chicago, DePaul University, and Mobil Oil Corporation in New York.
Donley returned to Chicago in 1964 to re-enter the School of the Art Institute, destined to build on a very different set of images, though his preoccupation with searing colors and the landscape format have persisted. By the 1970s Donley began to investigate more historical themes, painting his first landscapes populated by crowds of tiny figures. In 1980, at his first solo exhibition at Monique Knowlton Gallery in New York, he exhibited a series of these paintings depicting major wars of the twentieth century - scenes that are simultaneously apocalyptic and hilarious. Donley's contemporary work continues his fascination with the city, with their God's-eye views of all of the buildings, trees, animals, rivers, cars, and people, both anonymous and recognizable, that populate urban life.
Shows including Robert Donley:
• Robert Donley (publication)