|
The First Art Newspaper on the Net |
|
Established in 1996 |
|
Saturday, November 16, 2024 |
|
Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza opens an exhibition of works by figurative painter Rosario de Velasco |
|
|
Rosario de Velasco, Things, 1933. Oil on canvas. 45,5 x 65,5 cm. Colección particular. © Rosario de Velasco, VEGAP, Madrid, 2024.
|
MADRID.- The Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza is jointly presenting with the Museo de Bellas Artes de Valencia an exhibition on the Spanish figurative painter Rosario de Velasco (Madrid, 1904 - Barcelona, 1991). Curated by Miguel Lusarreta and Toya Viudes de Velasco, the artists great-niece, the exhibition brings together around 30 paintings from the 1920s to the 1940s - the earliest and the most important from Velascos career - and also has a section on her work as an illustrator.
The exhibition, which is benefiting from the support of the Region of Madrid and the City Council of Madrid, aims to present and draw attention to the work of one of the great Spanish women artists of the first half of the 20th century. In addition to well-known paintings from museum collections, such as the famous oil Adam and Eve (1932) from the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, The Massacre of the Innocents (ca. 1936) from the Museo de Bellas Artes de Valencia, Maragatos(1934) from the Museo del Traje, Madrid, and Carnival (before 1936) from the Centre Pompidou, Paris, the exhibition features works still with the artists family and in private collections and others that have only been rediscovered and located in the past few months. Following its showing in Madrid, the exhibition will be presented at the Museo de Bellas Artes de Valencia from 7 November 2024 to 16 February 2025.
Rosario de Velascos work represents an outstanding example of the so-called return to order in Spain, a movement parallel to German New Objectivity and Italian Novecento with a style that combined tradition and modernity. Velasco admired painters such as Giotto, Masaccio, Piero della Francesca, Mantegna, Velázquez and Goya, but also avant-garde figures such as De Chirico, Braque, Picassoartistas de vanguardia, como De Chirico, Braque o Picasso and the exponents of the return to order in Germany and Italy, whom she encountered via magazines and exhibitions held in Madrid in the 1920s.
The exhibition also focuses on Velascos activities as an illustrator, revealing a graphic artist of great versatility. This is evident, for example, in her illustrations for the 1928 edition of Stories for dreaming by María Teresa León and Stories for my grandchildren (1932) by Carmen Karr.
Born into a very traditional and religious family in Madrid, Rosario de Velasco began to study art aged fifteen at the academy of the genre painter Fernando Álvarez de Sotomayor, a member of the Royal San Fernando Academy of Fine Arts and two-time director of the Museo del Prado. Dating from that period is her Self-portrait (1924), which she signed with a monogram consisting of the initials R, D and V. Inspired by Dürers monogram, it has been fundamental to locating some of the artists paintings.
Velasco was, however, aware that she needed to go beyond tradition and assimilate the new trends and avant-gardes in her desire to compete as an equal in a largely male world. Her openness and cultural curiosity led her to associate with numerous creators of her generations, particularly women painters and writers such as Maruja Mallo, Rosa Chacel and María Teresa León. Other women friends included Mercedes Noboa, Matilde Marquina, Concha Espina and Lilí Álvarez, the tennis champion whom Velasco painted in the 1930s and with whom she enjoyed playing the sport. Velasco was also a tireless traveller and enjoyed mountaineering, skiing and rock climbing.
In 1924, the year she completed her studies, the artist participated in the National Fine Arts Exhibition in Madrid and also produced her first illustrations. By the 1930s Rosario de Velasco had established a considerable reputation, taking part in numerous group shows and competitions, such as the National Fine Arts Exhibition of 1932 in which she presented the canvas Adam and Eve, which earned her a second prize medal in the Painting category. The work was exhibited together with all the other entries in the Palacio de Exposiciones in the Retiro park and in various exhibitions organised by the Society of Iberian Artists held in Copenhagen and Berlin, where it was warmly praised by critics for its power and originality and Velasco was singled out as the major discovery of the season.The work is startling in its play of perspective, employing a birds-eye view, a device also used in various still lifes and in (Untitled) The Childrens Room (1932-33), another work in the collection of the Museo Reina Sofía, in which the artist disrupts the space through an original arrangement of objects that recalls Cubism.
The majority of Velascos most important works date from that decade: Maragatos, which was awarded second prize in the National Painting competition of 1932; The Massacre of the Innocents (ca. 1936), which for many years was attributed to Ricardo Verde due to the signature RV, until it was correctly attributed to Velasco in 1995; and Laundresses (1934), a wedding gift to her brother, Dr Luis de Velasco, who appears in another work in the present exhibition.
In 1935 Gypsies was selected to participate in the Carnegie International, an exhibition of artists from different countries organised by the Carnegie Museum of Art in Pittsburgh. Velascos work shared space with that of Carlo Carrá, Otto Dix, Edward Hopper and Georgia OKeeffe, as well as Picasso and Dalí. Lost for years, the painting has only recently been located and is one of the major discoveries made during the preparation of this exhibition.
On the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War the artists membership of the Falange and her family context led her to leave Madrid. She went first to Valencia and later to Barcelona, to Sant Andreu de Llavaneres where she met a doctor, Javier Farrerons, who later became her husband and who succeeded in liberating her from the Modelo prison in Barcelona where she was being held. After the war Velasco settled in Barcelona with her husband and their daughter María del Mar.
In 1939 Velasco participated in the National Exhibition of Painting and Sculpture in Valencia and in 1940 presented her first solo exhibition, in Barcelona. Over the following years she continued to exhibit in Madrid although less often, for example at the National Fine Arts Exhibitions of 1941 and 1954, and at various galleries. In 1944 Velasco was selected for the 2nd Salón de los Once, organised by the Academia Breve de Crítica de Arte, founded by Eugenio dOrs to promote art of the immediate post-war period. DOrs was one of the well known figures in the artist and her husbands circle of friends, together with Dionisio Ridruejo, Pere Pruna and Carmen Conde, among others.
The recent search for works by Velasco which was undertaken via the social media and the media in general has resulted in the identification in private collections of both celebrated works of which all trace had been lost, such as Gypsies (1934) and Mother and Child (1933), as well as various illustrations for books and a preparatory drawing for the oil painting Carnival (before 1936). It has also brought to light some previously completely unknown works such as Pensive Woman (1934), Still Life with Fish (ca. 1930), Things (1933) and Girls with a Doll (1930-40).
|
|
Today's News
June 18, 2024
'Tsiaras, Poseidon and The Hyperbolic Horse' opens at The Blender Gallery in Athens
Gagosian presents Anselm Kiefer's first solo exhibition in Athens
British Museum launches international architectural competition
The Museo del Prado is co-publishing the series "Art and Gender in the Museum. The Prado Collection"
Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza opens an exhibition of works by figurative painter Rosario de Velasco
Handbags Online: The New York Edit totals $3.5 million
A tale of 2 nearly extinct giant salamanders
At Tony Awards, 'The Outsiders' wins best musical, and 'Stereophonic' best play
1908-S Saint-Gaudens Double Eagle leads Heritage's $10.9 million Long Beach US Coins auction
"Tavares Strachan: There Is Light Somewhere" opens at The Hayward Gallery
Cormac McCarthy did not talk craft, with one surprising exception
Heritage offers some of baseball's rarest cards in summer sports card catalog auction
Daniel Radcliffe, Pete Townshend and Sarah Paulson party for the Tonys
Save Venice celebrates the Church of San Sebastiano
Best and worst moments from the 2024 Tony Awards
Opening tomorrow in Hydra, "Tschabalala Self: The Bigger Picture"
Tony Awards' viewership inches lower
Powell and Pressburger US retrospective tour - launches at MoMA, New York on 21 June
The Art House unveils brand new portraits created by artist Charan Singh in his first-ever solo exhibition
How an artist became the queen of Baltimore
John Everett Benson, who chiseled John F. Kennedy's grave, dies at 85
Exhibition by Stephen Shore features works from his Topographies series
Hiroshi Sugimoto presents a new series of large-scale photographic prints at Lisson Gallery
Eco-Friendly Garden Suites: The Role of Metal Roofing
Step-by-Step Guide to Replacing Windows and Doors During Home Renovation
How Basement Underpinning Can Boost Toronto Property Values
What Are Premium CBD Gummies In Canada: Side Effects, Benefits, And How To Take
What You Need to Know Before Building a House
Fan (Allen) Zhang: The Visual Narrator of Fashion
How to Print Custom Checks from Home
How to Acquire Dakimakura Body Pillows
Companion Care in Norristown Can Make You Happier!
Poolside Paradise: Unveiling the Best Villa with Swimming Pool in Lonavala
|
|
|
|
|
Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography, Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs, Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, . |
|
|
|
Royalville Communications, Inc produces:
|
|
|
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful
|
|