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In 1931, he returned to Venezuela and dedicated himself to zealously capturing nature scenes in his country. In 1951, he won the National Prize for Painting and in 1955, the Herrera Toro Award, in the sixteenth Official Hall, besides other important awards. He was director of Museo de Bellas Artes of Caracas between 1942 and 1946. Manuel Cabré ...
Tirado Yepes continued working on decoration while he began to participate in art exhibitions, being recognized as the “El Avila” artist. In 2003, he was invited to participate in the collective art exhibition honoring El Avila at the Venezuelan Consulate in Miami, Florida. [2]
19th Century Venezuelan artists. Pedro Castillo(1790-1858), painter; Juan Lovera (1776–1841) Carmelo Fernández (1809–1897), artist and painter;
Juan Calzadilla (born 1931), poet, painter and art critic; Julio Maragall (born 1936), sculptor; Harry Abend (1937–2021) Balthazar Armas (1941–2015), contemporary and abstract movement painter; Paul del Rio (1943–2015), sculptor and painter; Jorge Blanco (born 1945), artist, sculptor, graphic designer, illustrator and humorist; Patricia ...
Julio Aguilera by Venezuelan painter Vicente Saavedra Julio Aguilera during his still hairy Kung Fu days. War and Peace. Bronze, 2004. Julio César Aguilera Peña is a Venezuelan-American painter and sculptor born in Caracas, on July 28, 1961. Previously to his career as an artist, Aguilera was awarded the sixth Dan in Kung Fu when he was just ...
Elisa Elvira Zuloaga (25 November 1900 – 14 April 1980) was a noted Venezuelan painter and engraver. Winning numerous prizes for her works, she has four landscapes in the permanent collections of the National Art Gallery in Caracas and is remembered as an important South American graphic artist.
Alfredo Boulton (1908–1995) was a Venezuelan artist, critic, and art historian. [1] As an art historian and critic, he is known for publishing a comprehensive history of Venezuelan art. Boulton was also an active photographer; his work is held in the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City.
Alejandro Otero studied art at the Escuela de Artes Plásticas y Artes Aplicadas de Caracas from 1939 to 1945. In 1940 he won a prize in the First Venezuelan Official Art Salon. [2] After his studies, Otero traveled to New York and Paris where he focused his work on a revision of Cubism in 1945, living in Paris until 1952.