Well-established gallery celebrating our 31st year in Palm Beach county.
06/19/2021
"Passing Flamingos", Vincent J. Cacace, 36" x 36", oil on canvas
This original is available. South of Arles is a wetland park full of Greater Flamingos. Sometimes as many as 20,000 nesting pairs call this home. You can get up close and delight in all their antics.
06/18/2021
"Beach in Bloom", Vincent J. Cacace, 60" x 60", oil on canvas
There's a mystery to a path that turns a corner. It draws you in, and leaves you to decide just what is around the bend.
06/17/2021
"Beach Fun", Vincent J. Cacace, 30" x 40", giclèe on canvas
A bright sun warms the sand. A fresh breeze shapes the gentle waves. In the shade of the umbrella, you fill your lungs with sea air and relax deeper in your chair
06/16/2021
"Quiet Cove", Vincent J. Cacace, 36" x 48", oil on canvas
I grew up at the end of a cul de sac surrounded with woods. Across the street was a babbling brook that led to a pond in the woods. I spent most of my free time here.
06/15/2021
"Celebration", Vincent J. Cacace, 30" x 40", oil on canvas
Seagrapes dance and twist. Their round leaves turn red and orange like festive balloons.
06/14/2021
"Hurricane House", Vincent J. Cacace, 18" x 24", oil on panel
06/13/2021
"Dune Path", Vincent J. Cacace, 60" x 48", oil on canvas
You sink in the soft sand. You lean in, toward the sea, pushing the sand down and back into a new wake of craters.
06/12/2021
"Yellow and Green Coconuts", Vincent J. Cacace, 40" x 60", oil on canvas
I painted these from life in my studio.
06/10/2021
"Summer School", Vincent J. Cacace, 36" x 48", oil on canvas
Small sailboats fill the harbor with kids learning to sail. This summer tradition can be viewed from the Lighthouse Point in Marblehead.
06/09/2021
"Irises and lilies", Vincent J. Cacace, 30" x 40", oil on canvas
Yellow Spatterdock lilies nestle in the blue flag irises at Green Cay Wetlands. This original has been sold.
I can hand finish a giclèe on canvas for you in one of several sizes. DM me for more info.
06/06/2021
"The Old Inlet Bridge", Vincent J. Cacace
This was the first bridge built across the Boca raton Inlet. Built in 1923, it was one lane wide.
06/05/2021
"Garden Path", Vincent J. Cacace, 20" x 24", oil on panel
The Mendocino Botanical Garden is a jewel on the Pacific coast. It's a mix of formal manicured gardens, coastal bluffs and a dense pine forest. I loved this meandering path and all the red in the garden.
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Vincent J. Cacace was born in 1953 in the city of Waltham, Massachusetts, about twenty minutes west of Boston. Raised in neighboring Weston, Vincent spent much of his youth exploring a favorite pond in the woods and developing his great love of nature.
This love for nature took shape early in the form of academics. Vincent studied General Agricultural at Alfred State College. He later transferred to Cornell University where, in his senior year, he enrolled in a painting class that would change his life forever. That art instructor figuratively taught his student “how to see”. For the graduate it meant the culmination, the source of expression for his true loves: nature and art.
In 1977, Vincent moved to Harvard Square in Cambridge and accepted conventional work in the wine industry. Though quite successful, Vincent knew that it could only be temporary. He began collecting paintings, the best he could afford, and became a voracious painting student. For twelve years he traveled throughout New England to paint its magnificent landscape.
In January 1989, Vincent moved to Boca Raton, Florida. He participated in numerous art festivals and critically acclaimed exhibitions, his work appearing on four art festival posters. From 1989 to 1999 Vincent completed over 60 commissioned paintings for The Boca Raton Resort and Club, The Breakers, The Biltmore Hotel, Loew’s Miami Beach Hotel, the St. Moritz in South Beach, PGA National, Turnberry Isle Resort and Club, and the Doral Golf Resort and Spa.
In March of 1999 Cacace had a one-man show at the Wally Findlay Gallery on Worth Avenue in Palm Beach. He exhibited 30 black & white paintings of historic Palm Beach and Coconut Grove. These black and white paintings offer a unique visual perspective and evoke a sense of suspended time. Vincent often returns to that simple palette, and has since captured historic Boca Raton & Delray Beach, romantic moonlight, and his passion for Jazz.
In May of 2000, Vincent and American Impressionist painter Sam Barber spent a month in Paris. They painted along the Seine, in the parks, and his favorite, Monet’s Garden. Vincent started 22 small plein air paintings in Paris, and completed 30 large studio paintings upon his return.
In December, 2001, Cacace Studio and Fine Art Gallery opened at 135 E. Atlantic Ave., Delray Beach. The second story loft gallery in the 1912 historic Cathcart building was a beautiful space to show paintings with antique furniture, hardwood floors, and 14-foot ceilings. Those who climbed the 26 steps were always delighted at the ambiance of rooms filled with original oil paintings, and were often welcomed into Vincent’s studio in the front room. During the ten years ‘on the Avenue’ Vincent collected over 3500 names for his mailing list, dozens of collectors, hundreds of patrons, and innumerable friends.
Many of Vincent's summers are spent traveling and painting. Trips to Italy, France, Mexico as well Cape Cod, Acadia National Park and Monhegan Island have inspired large bodies of work.
In January 2012, Vincent moved his gallery to a large industrial space in the Pineapple Grove Arts District in downtown Delray Beach. Vincent named this warehouse area “Artists Alley” and artists flocked in. Within 3 years there were 21 spaces with 30 artists working in this one block area.