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José Sabogal
Peruvian painter

José Sabogal

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Peruvian painter
A.K.A.
José Sabogal Diéguez
From
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Praga
Place of death
Lima
Age
68 years
Family
Children:
José Sabogal Wiesse
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

José Sabogal (Cajabamba, March 19, 1888 – Lima, December 15, 1956) was a Peruvian painter and muralist who was "the most renowned early supporter" and thus a leader in the artistic indigenist movement of his country. As Daniel Balderston, Mike Gonzalez, and Ana M. López assert, Sabogal "became Peru's militant indigenist and aesthetic nationalist, and led this movement for the next thirty years.

Biography

He was born in Cajabamba, Cajamarca, Peru and traveled extensively in Europe (particularly Italy) and North Africa from 1908 to 1913 before enrolling in the National School of Fine Arts in Buenos Aires, Argentina where he studied for five years.

In 1922 he married a poet and writer María Wiesse. The couple had two children: José Sabogal Wiesse (1923-1983) and Rosa Teresa Sabogal Wiesse (1925-1985).

Sabogal taught at the Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes, Lima (National School of Fine Arts, Lima) from 1920 onward. He served as its director from 1932 to 1943. Afterward Sabogal and Luis E. Valcárel cofounded the Instituto Libre de Arte Peruano (Free Institute of Peruvian Arts) at the Museo Nacional de la Cultura Peruana (National Museum of Peruvian Culture).

Indigenism

Although Sabogal's own descent was Spanish rather than indigenous, he promoted pre-Columbian culture and esthetics. A six month stay in Cuzco prompted his indigenism; he took an interest in depicting the city and its inhabitants. In 1919 his Cuzco paintings attracted attention at an exhibition in Lima. As Jane Turner explains, "in 1919 was the first exhibition of the work of JOSÉ SABOGAL at the Casa Brandes in Lima, an event that would be immensely influential on the future..."

Sabogal decided to promote Peruvian art to international audiences after a 1922 visit to Mexico where he met Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco, and David Alfaro Siqueiros. These efforts were so successful that in "the field of the visual arts, the most striking phenomenon of the 1920s was the rise of José Sabogal (1888-1956), founder and long-time leader of the so-called 'Peruvian School' of painting."

Written work

  • Mates burilados: Arte vernacular peruano (1945);
  • Pancho Fierro, estampas del pintor peruano (1945);
  • El toro en las artes populares del Perú (The bull in the peruvian popular arts) (1949);
  • El "kero", vaso de libaciones cusqueño de madera pintada (1952);
  • El desván de la imaginería peruana (1956, 1988);
  • Del arte en el Perú y otros ensayos (About peruvian art and other essays) (1975);

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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