Fernando Botero, the famous Colombian painter and sculptor, has died at 91

“My colors are those of Latin American still life. My characters are those of the Latin American middle class, whores, soldiers…”, Fernando Botero confided to Le Monde in 1985. The Colombian painter and sculptor, who became famous precisely for his characters with voluptuous shapes, is dead, announced Friday September 15 Colombian President Gustavo Petro.

“Fernando Botero, the painter of our traditions and our faults, the painter of our virtues, is dead,” he declared on the X network (formerly Twitter), without specifying the place or date of death. “The painter of our violence and our peace. Of the dove rejected a thousand times and placed a thousand times on its throne,” added President Petro, in reference to one of the artist’s emblematic animals.

Influence of pre-Columbian art

Fernando Botero was born in Medellin in 1932. Francophile, elevated to the rank of officer of the Legion of Honor in 2002 at the French Embassy in Bogota, he is considered one of the greatest Latin American artists of the 20th century. century.

The son of a sales representative, he was introduced to art very early. At the age of 15, he was already selling his bullfighting drawings at the gates of the Bogota bullring. “When I started, it was an exotic profession in Colombia, which was not well regarded and offered no future. When I told my family that I was going to dedicate myself to painting, they replied: ‘Okay, but we can’t help you,'” said the most highly rated Colombian artist in the world. .

After a first individual exhibition in Bogota in the 1950s, he left for Europe, staying in Spain, France and Italy where he discovered classical art. His work is also influenced by pre-Columbian art and the frescoes of Mexico, where he later settled.

His career took off in the 1970s when he met the director of the German Museum in New York, Dietrich Malov, with whom he organized several successful exhibitions. “Totally unknown, without even a contract with a gallery in New York, I then began to be contacted by the greatest art dealers in the world,” he said.

Extraordinary dimensions and “defender of volume”

The extraordinary dimensions of his art, which would become his trademark, were revealed in 1957 in the painting “Still Life with Mandolin”. He then painted the central sound hole (opening) of the mandolin too small, in comparison with the size of the instrument. Thus, he explained, “between the small detail and the generosity of the exterior layout, a new dimension appears, more volumetric, more monumental, more extravagant.”

For the artist, the term “fat” did not suit his characters. A lover of the Italian Renaissance, he called himself a “defender of volume” in modern art. His sculpture, also marked by gigantism, occupied a very important place in his career, developed mainly in Pietrasanta, in Italy. For years he shared his life between this corner of Tuscany, New York, Medellin and Monaco where he continued to create.

The artist, who said he never knew what he was going to paint the next day, was inspired by the beauty, but also the torments of his country, marked by modern art. His sculpture, also marked by gigantism, occupied a very important place in his career, developed mainly in Pietrasanta, in Italy.

In 1995, a bomb placed at the foot of his sculpture “The Bird” killed 27 people in Medellin. Five years later, he donated a replica called “The Bird of Peace”. His work depicts guerrillas, earthquakes, brothels. He also painted a series on the prisoners of the American penitentiary at Abu Ghraib, in Iraq.

The artist was also a major patron, with donations estimated at more than $200 million. He gave many of his works to the museums of Medellin and Bogota, and dozens of paintings from his private collection, including Picasso, Monet, Renoir, Miro…

For his 90th birthday, his hometown dedicated an exhibition to him to say “thank you”. His works can also be seen outdoors in many cities around the world, with the artist believing that exhibitions in public spaces are a “revolutionary rapprochement” of art with the public.

Married three times, the last to the Greek sculptor Sophia Vari, the “maestro” suffered the death of one of his children, at the age of four, in a car accident.

His work, of more than 3,000 paintings and 300 sculptures, demonstrates his insatiable appetite to create. The very idea of ??abandoning the brushes “terrorists me more than death,” he said.

Exit mobile version