Herrera Maclean, Carlos A.
Pedro Figari
Pedro Figari
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Buenos Aires: Editorial Poseidón, 1943. 1st Edition. Octavo with green boards and black spine in red and black pictorial jacket; 169 pages: illustrations (some color), plates, frontispiece; 23 cm Very good; some edgewear to boards; a bit of must; pages are clean and binding solid; jacket is very good (-) with some chipping near head of spine and at corners; shelfwear; now in archival mylar. Hardcover.
In Spanish. Part of a series of artist monographs. 121 black and white images and 8 color images by the Uruguayan artist who moved to Buenos Aires in 1921. "Pedro Figari (June 29, 1861 – July 24, 1938) was a Uruguayan painter, lawyer, writer, and politician. Although he did not begin painting until his later years, he is best known as an early modernist painter who emphasized capturing the everyday aspects of life in his work. In most of his pieces, he sought to capture the essence of his home by painting local customs that he had observed in his childhood. Figari painted primarily from memory, a technique that gives his work a far more personal feeling. With his unique style, which involved painting without the intention of creating an illusion, he, along with other prominent Latin-American artists such as Diego Rivera and Tarsila do Amaral, sparked a revolution of identity in the art world of Latin America." -- Wikipedia
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