Celebrating Pinoโs Legacy Through His Sonโs Memory
If youโve ever strolled down a bookstore aisle lined with love stories, odds are you have encountered the enchanting artwork of Pino.
Legendary artist Pino is best known for his stunning depictions of women, images still found sprawling across the covers of Harlequin romance novels. The Italian painter is celebrated for his notable illustrations featuring Fabio as well as his textured paintings that capture movement and emotion.
Pino passed away on May 25, 2010, but his memory lives on through both his artwork and his children. Join us as we celebrate Pinoโs amazing artistic legacy through the intimate memories of his sonโMax Dangelico.
Pino: Raised with Art
When he stepped through the front door of his familyโs New Jersey home, Max Dangelico recalls hearing Italian songs from the 1950s and โ60s flowing throughout the house. Music was how he knew his father was painting.
โIt was always nice to enter the house, coming back from school or coming back from college, and the first thing you would hear is the music in the background,โ Dangelico says.

Pino working on one of his paintings.
Growing up, Dangelicoโs tight-knit Italian family was closely involved with his fatherโs artistic life. Whether they were sitting around the dinner table or gathering in his studio, Pinoโs family had a front-row seat to the creative process behind his famous works of art.
โIt was really cool having him at the house, watching him paint,โ Dangelico said. โA lot of these paintings he created I watched him paint.โ
Pino would often pull artwork out of his studio to show his family his latest projects. Dangelico said Pino often complained about parts of the painting he wanted to change or aspects of the artwork he thought werenโt working. As an artist, Pino was never satisfied with his work, an attribute Dangelico remembers fondly.

โVivianโ (2009), Pino
โTo me, he was just my dad,โ Dangelico says. โHe was never an artist, he was never special, he was never unique; he was never different.โ
Pinoโs family was more than just a spectator to his creative process. While he was working as an illustrator, Pinoโs wife played a critical role in fleshing out the story behind her husbandโs illustrations.
Dangelico says his mother would read the novels, and then give Pino a synopsis to create his the cover art. Although he used models to begin the illustrations, Dangelico said his father relied on his own imagination to fill out the characters.

Oil painting, designed for cover of the novel โCamberleighโ (Berkley, 1986), Pino
Dangelico describes his father as โcharismaticโ and social. Throughout his life, Pino took his family to visit art galleries and museums, cultivating a love of art in Dangelico.
โI grew up with a passion and loving art,โ he says. โDonโt ask me to draw anything because I canโt draw stick figures, but I do believe I have a keen sense, a keen eye for what good art is, and thatโs just because I was around my father.โ
Although he didnโt inherit his fatherโs artistic skill, Dangelico joined the art world when he began expanding his fatherโs business. He helped his Pino bring his artwork to more collectors by making limited editions of the captivating paintings. Pinoโs artwork quickly grew from appearances in only three galleries to more than 250 art galleries in the United States alone.

โRestfulโ (2005), Pino
โIt was beautiful because I was able to work with my father, not only with him but with his artwork,โ Dangelico said.
The overwhelming success Dangelico and his father experienced was wonderful, but Dangelico says the real honor was spending time with his father.
โItโs just amazing. When youโre so close to it you donโt realize the gift that people have around you,โ Dangelico says. โNow that heโs no longer with us I appreciate it even more.โ
Painting from Memory
Born in Southern Italy on November 8, 1939, Pino grew up in a โbig Southern Italian familyโ during the post-WWII era. Because many men had died at war, Pino was raised in a home surrounded by the women of his family. Both women and family are strong themes seen throughout Pinoโs paintings, with imagery ranges from women and children walking alongside the ocean to sitting around the dinner table.
โThe family scenes are what everyone held dear, and thatโs what he held dear until the last day of his life. Thatโs what was important to him,โ Dangelico says.

โCountry Side Retreatโ (2007)
At a young age, Pino became fascinated with drawing. Because his family spent most of their time inside their home, most of his subjects included whatever was around the house. When he was 18, Pino moved to Milan to perfect his talent at Milanโs Academy of Brera. One by one, he brought his family to live with him in the city.
After moving to Milan, Pino took on his first artistic position as an illustrator for Italyโs two largest publishers, Mondadori and Rizzoli. Following his first step into the artistic field, Pino never held a job as anything but an artist.
โTo me, it was just amazing that my dad was always [able] to paint for a living,โ Dangelico said. โNot a lot of artists get to do that.โ
In 1978, Pino immigrated to the United States where he gained popularity among numerous book publishers such as Penguin USA, Zebra and Harlequin. Since his death in 2010, Pinoโs artwork lives on through his vast number of popular illustrations and life-like paintings.

โSweet Visionโ (released 2015), Pino
โHe left us with a vast and long-lasting legacy,โ Dangelico said. โYou can really feel the passion and emotion behind my dadโs work. I think thatโs why people are drawn to it because these paintings are alive.โ
Keeping Memory Alive with Park West
As an artist with Park West Gallery, Pino was honored to meet some of the collectors who were passionate about his artwork.
โHe loved to meet people. Not just because they were collectors, but because he loved to socialize and learn,โ Dangelico said. โHe felt he grew as a person, the more people he met the better a person he would become.โ

โGypsy Dancerโ (2010)
After his father passed away, Dangelico made the decision to keep his fatherโs artwork under one roof. Park West Gallery is proud to be the exclusive dealer for Pinoโs estate.
โThe only person that could do that is Albert and Park West. It really has been an amazing partnership, โ Dangelico said.
If youโre interested in the works of Pino, contact our gallery consultants at (800) 521-9654 ext. 4 or sales@parkwestgallery.com for information.