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His fruitful career spanned over eight decades, although he was most prolific between 1915 and 1930 and 1950 and 1980. Antonio Alcantara painted all over Venezuela, Latin America, the Caribbean, Europe and Asia. Between 1925 and 1950 he dedicated the bulk of his time to private business in order to provide support to his extensive family.
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 ...
Carmelo Fernández (1809–1897), artist and painter; Martín Tovar y Tovar (1827–1902) Eloy Palacios (1847–1919), artist, sculptor and painter; Emilio Jacinto Mauri (1855–1908) Emilio Boggio (1857–1920) Antonio Herrera Toro (1857–1914) Cristóbal Rojas (1857–1890) Arturo Michelena (1863–1898)
It has presented exhibitions of national and international visual artists of painting, sculpture, drawing, film, video, and photography. It contains 17 rooms located in Central Park, near the Teresa Carreño Theatre, as well as a cabinet paper, a comprehensive art library, a creative workshop, a media room, a gallery, and a sculpture garden.
Jorge Pizzani is a Venezuelan visual artist, born in Acarigua, Venezuela on October 14, 1949. [1] He currently works in Caracas and Turgua, Venezuela . He studied at Instituto de Diseño Fundación Neumann, Caracas. He spent working seasons in Paris and Barcelona. He is considered as one of the most important artists of contemporary Venezuelan art.
Artwork by Mike Alejandro Rowan De La Rosa, a Venezuelan American artist based in New Orleans, will be on display University of Mount Union's Beeghly Art Gallery through Dec. 12.
Halyna Mazepa (1910–1995), Ukrainian-Venezuelan modern artist, illustrator, and ceramist; Cristina Merchán (1927–1987), painter, ceramist; Faride Mereb (born 1989), editor and graphic designer
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.