About Robert Longo
Robert Longo (born 1953, Brooklyn, New York) is a leading figure in contemporary American art, internationally recognized for his large-scale, photographically based artworks examining power, authority, and collective memory. Associated with the Pictures Generation, he emerged in the late 1970s alongside artists who recontextualized mass media imagery to question cultural influence and political control.
Longo’s practice transforms drawing into a monumental medium. Working primarily in charcoal, he creates hyper-real artworks marked by stark chiaroscuro and cinematic intensity. Motifs such as weapons, jet fighters, waves, and national symbols recur across his drawings, sculptures, and limited edition prints, reinforcing his sustained investigation into spectacle, violence, and systems of power. His printmaking plays a central role in his oeuvre, translating the visual force of his drawings into highly sought-after fine art prints.
His breakthrough series Men in the Cities (1979–1983) established his international reputation. These iconic artworks, issued as drawings, photographs, and prints, depict sharply dressed figures in contorted poses and are widely interpreted as reflections on ambition, vulnerability, and psychological tension in late-capitalist society.
Robert Longo’s artworks have been exhibited internationally, including at the Museum of Modern Art and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. His work continues to confront viewers with imagery that blurs the boundaries between beauty and menace, spectacle and critique.























