Ippolito's family immigrated to the United States when he was 9 years old. After serving in the Philippines during World War II, he studied with
Amédée Ozenfant and
John Ferren in New York and
Afro in Rome. In 1952 he and painter
Fred Mitchell invited artists
Lois Dodd,
William King, and Charles Cajori to join in founding the first
artist-run downtown gallery in New York. The Tanager Gallery inaugurated the
Tenth Street-
avant-garde scene of the 1950s, and its members soon grew to include artists such as Sally Hazelet,
Alex Katz and
Philip Pearlstein. Its primary audience was other artists who were "simultaneously participants and spectators." The Tanager's founders actively sought out underrecognized artists, giving a first show to artists who would later become famous, including
Elise Asher,
Alfred Jensen, and
Jasper Johns. Ippolito later accepted positions as artist-in-residence at the
University of California at Berkeley (1961–62) and as a professor of art at
Michigan State University (1963–71) and
Binghamton University (1971-2001). After his death on October 29, 2001 he was interred at
Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York. == Work ==