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Ignacio Zuloaga

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to Spanishize Spain, and get rid of all outside influences, so that we can keep our great nature. That’s my dream in art. I hate fads (which are destructive to racial characteristics) One must (for good or bad) be oneself, and not ape the style of anyone else. I will dedicate the years that are left to me to that end. What shame there will be in the future, for those countries who inflicted crime, savage vandalism, which reigned within the soviet clan in Spain!
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in Five Essays, page 98...."aquellos rostros de viejos y viejecitas, severos, rudamente mĂ­sticos, preocupados por un pensamiento doloroso, ensombrecidos por el recuerdo de glorias que fueron, tienen el alma triste, gimen bajo el peso de un ideal de siglos, no son representaciones individuales, son la
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Thanks to God, and to Franco, at last the war is won and over! And over, despite the goodwill of those so-called democratic countries – what a farce, what shame, when those countries learn the truth of this drama! We all will work with all our strength to rebuild a new Spain (free, great and unified)
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It is this racy and picturesque life which Zuloaga seeks above all else to place on record, and it is these popular types unspoiled by ruthless modernism which he pursues into the farthest corners of his native land. In this zealous quest of congenial models he hesitates at nothing. He will haunt for
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He personifies in extreme form the spirit of autocracy in art, the principle of absolutism so typical of his race and country. You will meet in these bold, affirmative canvases no hint of cowardice or compromise. The work is defiant, almost despotic. It does not strive to enlist sympathy nor does it
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workshop of his father, Plácido. His father's craftmanship, a familial trade, was highly respected throughout Europe, but he intended his son for either commerce, engineering, or architecture, but during a short trip to Rome with his father, he decided to become a painter. His first painting was
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One of the American collections to feature Zuloaga's work is the Johns Hopkins University's Evergreen Museum & Library, Baltimore, Maryland. Officially owned by the Evergreen House Foundation, an independent entity started by Zuloaga's great friend, philanthropist Alice Warder Garrett
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severe, roughly mystical, beset by painful thoughts, shadowed by the remembrance of the glory they once were, they have sad souls, moaning under the weight of an ideal of centuries, they are not individual representations, but the synthesis of the sadness of the Spanish
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hours a fiesta on the outskirts of some provincial town, or hasten away to the mountains, passing months at a time with smugglers and muleteers, with the superstitious fanatics of Anso in the extreme north of Aragon or with the monkish cutthroats of
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during an exhibition of Spanish art in London. The nationalist content of his depiction of the Alcazar was allied to Zuloaga's celebration of folk traditions. Stylistically, the directness of the
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in 1936, when the building's Nationalist defenders refused to surrender despite the building being in flames. This siege, and other events such as the death of
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son, served as a rallying cry for the Nationalist forces. In January 1939, this painting was hung in adjacent room displaying Picasso's modernist painting of
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fear to be frankly antipathetic...the tones not infrequently acidulous, and the surfaces sometimes hard and metallic. Reactionary if you will...
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of 1890. Continuing his studies in Paris, where he lived for five years, he was in contact with post-impressionists such as
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He attempted to gain success during a sojourn in London; but lackluster patronage led him to return to Spain, settling in
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Brinton, Christian (1916). Foreword by John S. Sargent, Introduction notes and Bibliography by Christian Brinton. (ed.).
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Catalogue of paintings by Ignacio Zuloaga exhibited by the Hispanic society March 21 to April 11, 1909
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dancers; or portraits of family members and friends in such attire. He also painted village dwarves (
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in 1901 and 1903, and displayed 34 canvases at the Barcelona International exposition of 1907.
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in their earthy colouring and genre themes. He painted portraits of attired bullfighters and
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was rejected for inclusion into the Spanish representation at the Universal Exposition in
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in Madrid. He also painted a similarly painting of individuals undergoing a traditional
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After only six months' work he completed his first picture, which was exhibited at the
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Exhibition of Paintings by Ignacio Zuloaga under the auspices of Mrs Philip M Lydig.
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Esposizione Internazionale D'arte Della CittĂ  Di Venezia 1903, Catalogo Illustrato
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Brinton in his 1909 essay was prescient of Zuloaga's future enamourment with
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Brinton in his review of an exposition in America in 1909, he states that:
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Zuloaga married Valentine Dethomas on May 18, 1899. Valentine's brother,
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was not endeared to complex symbolism such as found in works such as
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painting also avoids modernity's challenge to realistic depictions:
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This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
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In an April 1939 letter to his patron, Mrs Garret, Zuloaga stated:
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Thesis on Zuloaga by Dena Crosson (2009), University of Maryland.
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Zuloaga and his patrons felt slighted in 1900, when his painting
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and grandson of the organizer and director of the royal armoury (
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in its 1954 series, with a depiction of Toledo on the back.
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Gil says that the faces of the old folk he paints are
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Co. 554:Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina SofĂ­a 536:Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina SofĂ­a 192:Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina SofĂ­a 706: 365:(1900). These paintings were praised by 202:In his youth, he drew and worked in the 1030:Members of the Royal Academy of Belgium 629: 521: 361:and a bleeding crucified Christ called 7: 906:Hispanic Society of America (1909). 375:religious and tragic, a black Spain 637:Buffalo Fine Arts Academy (1909). 613:Portrait of Anita RamĂ­rez in Black 161:He was the son of metalworker and 25: 1015:20th-century Spanish male artists 1000:19th-century Spanish male artists 955:Works by or about Ignacio Zuloaga 857: 827: 605: 590: 575: 560: 542: 532:Don Plácido Zuloaga en su taller 524: 351:Hermandad del Cristo Crucificado 688:Utrillo in Five Essays, page 8. 237:My Uncle Daniel and his Family 214:Zuloaga and his wife (c. 1900) 1: 1010:20th-century Spanish painters 995:19th-century Spanish painters 434:Zuloaga was committed to the 864:Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1922). 207:exhibited in Paris in 1890. 34:, the first or paternal 931:Artcult.com Zuloaga article 893:Brinton, Christian (1909). 338:. He was accepted into the 306:El enano Gregorio el Botero 241:Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 227:Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 172:) in Madrid. His uncle was 27:Spanish painter (1870–1945) 1056: 359:mortification of the flesh 147:Ignacio Zuloaga y Zabaleta 75:Ignacio Zuloaga y Zabaleta 29: 18:Ignacio Zuloaga y Zabaleta 1040:Spanish portrait painters 739:Brinton 1916, pages 19–20 349:(Christ of the Blood) or 58: 772:En el Estudio de Zuloaga 568:Las brujas de San Millán 871:Encyclopædia Britannica 850:Encyclopædia Britannica 65:Ignacio Zuloaga in 1909 964:Ignacio Zuloaga Museum 813:Brinton 1909, page 30. 697:Brinton 1916, page 13 670:Brinton 1916, page 11. 515: 491: 404: 395: 243: 229: 215: 194: 188:El Cristo de la Sangre 1005:Spanish male painters 784:Crosson, D. page 148. 718:Brinton 1916, page 16 679:Brinton 1916, page 12 661:Brinton 1916, page 10 510: 486: 411:; and a landscape of 399: 382: 324:Before the Bull-fight 235: 221: 213: 186: 1035:People of Montmartre 550:Torerillos de pueblo 458:Siege of the Alcázar 436:Nationalist faction 347:Cristo de la Sangre 223:Castilian Landscape 936:Britannica on-line 866:"Zuloaga, Ignacio" 793:Crosson, page 151. 463:General Moscardo's 244: 230: 216: 195: 990:People from Eibar 948:Fundacion Zuloaga 885:Second Impression 583:Juan de Azurmendi 440:Spanish Civil War 371:De Arte Pictorico 355:Museo Reina Sofia 332:Luxembourg Palace 144: 143: 16:(Redirected from 1047: 959:Internet Archive 920: 902: 889: 875: 861: 860: 854: 845:Zuloaga, Ignacio 833: 831: 830: 814: 811: 805: 800: 794: 791: 785: 782: 776: 768: 762: 759: 753: 746: 740: 737: 731: 725: 719: 716: 710: 704: 698: 695: 689: 686: 680: 677: 671: 668: 662: 659: 653: 652: 650: 648: 634: 609: 594: 579: 564: 552:(1906), Madrid, 546: 534:(1895), Madrid, 528: 279:Toulouse-Lautrec 260:Santiago Rusiñol 190:(1911), Madrid, 103: 100:October 31, 1945 84: 82: 63: 49: 21: 1055: 1054: 1050: 1049: 1048: 1046: 1045: 1044: 1020:Basque painters 970: 969: 944: 905: 892: 878: 863: 858: 843:, ed. (1911). " 839: 828: 826: 823: 821:Further reading 818: 817: 812: 808: 801: 797: 792: 788: 783: 779: 769: 765: 760: 756: 747: 743: 738: 734: 726: 722: 717: 713: 705: 701: 696: 692: 687: 683: 678: 674: 669: 665: 660: 656: 646: 644: 636: 635: 631: 626: 619: 617:Brooklyn Museum 610: 601: 595: 586: 580: 571: 565: 556: 547: 538: 529: 520: 499:Francoist Spain 432: 424:Airbus A340-642 369:in his book on 363:The Flagellants 340:Venice Biennale 317:Maxime Dethomas 200: 166:Plácido Zuloaga 159: 136:(grandfather), 134:Eusebio Zuloaga 130:Plácido Zuloaga 111: 105: 101: 92: 86: 80: 78: 77: 76: 66: 54: 53:Ignacio Zuloaga 47: 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 1053: 1051: 1043: 1042: 1037: 1032: 1027: 1022: 1017: 1012: 1007: 1002: 997: 992: 987: 982: 972: 971: 968: 967: 961: 951: 950: 943: 942:External links 940: 939: 938: 933: 928: 923: 903: 890: 876: 855: 841:Chisholm, Hugh 822: 819: 816: 815: 806: 795: 786: 777: 770:Padre M. 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Index

Ignacio Zuloaga y Zabaleta
Spanish name
surname

Eibar
Madrid
Painting
Plácido Zuloaga
Eusebio Zuloaga
Daniel Zuloaga
Eibar
damascener
Plácido Zuloaga
Don Eusebio
Daniel Zuloaga
Goya

Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina SofĂ­a
armourer's


Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Montmartre
Paco Durrio
Pablo Uranga
Santiago Rusiñol
Paris Salon
Ramon Casas

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