Leonardo Tejada

Last updated

Leonardo Tejada (Latacunga, 1908 - Quito, 2005) was an Ecuadorian painter whose work was known for its Social Realism and Expressionism.

Tejada was born into a family of wood carvers, ad himself used wood in his art. He was a folklore scholar and an initiator of the folk art revival of Ecuador. In 1923 he enrolled in the School of Fine Arts in Quito, from which he graduated in 1930.

He was one of the founders of the House of Ecuadorian Culture. [1]

From a young age he created art that expressed the social reality of his people. He employed watercolor, oil, and wood carving in his art. He is credited largely in the revival of folk art in Ecuador. He held his first exhibition of folk art in the House of Ecuadorian Culture in 1952. He also contributed to the revival of Ecuador's indigenous sculptural art. Since the 1970s he incorporated recyclable materials in his works, including rags, cords, and other materials, seeking more expression from the materials themselves. He also worked as a teacher in various countries, such as Costa Rica and Venezuela. [2]

Even in school Tejada, like most artists, showed a tendency to think outside the box. Not interested in academics, he spent his time painting. His uniqueness lay in his rooting his paintings in the prevalent social situation. It was this closeness and desire to depict social life that gave Tejada's work a sociopolitical dignity. His approach also made him immensely popular in his country. His oil paintings are specially candid and painfully honest, depicting misery and poverty of the people. His contribution to wood engraving in Ecuador is equally important. He is credited with starting a renaissance of sorts in wood engraving. His exhibition of Folk Art, set in 1952 at the House of Ecuadorian Culture is also seen as an important step in reviving folk art in Ecuador.

He died in Quito on January 30, 2005 at 97 years of age. [3]

In 2003 he was awarded Ecuador's national prize Premio Eugenio Espejo in the field of art. [4]

Related Research Articles

Benjamín Carrión Ecuadorian writer and diplomat (1897-1979)

Manuel Benjamín Carrión Mora was an Ecuadorian writer, diplomat and cultural promoter.

Theo Constanté Parra was a master Latin American painter part of the Abstract Informalist Movement in Ecuador. In 2005, Constanté won the country's most prestigious award for art, literature and culture, the Premio Eugenio Espejo National Award, presented by the President of Ecuador. Constanté's works are abstract in nature and consist of many colors which meld together amongst loosely drawn geometric lines. Constanté stated that his favorite colors were red, orange and blue and they are the colors that are typically more dominant in his work.

Enrique Tábara Ecuadorian painter

Luis Enrique Tábara was a master Ecuadorian painter and teacher representing a whole Hispanic pictorial and artistic culture.

Carlos Catasse, born Carlos Tapia Sepúlveda in Santiago, Chile, formed his new last name by combining the first two letters of his first, middle and last names. Catasse is a Chilean painter of international recognition. Since 1969, he has lived and painted in Quito, Ecuador, the country that in 1986 granted him with Ecuador's National Prize for Painting, the Premio Eugenio Espejo. Catasse has had a great number of individual exhibitions throughout Latin America, as well as, Switzerland, Italy, Germany, Spain, and the United States. After Catasse died in Quito, Ecuador at the age of 65, his remains were cremated in a cemetery in the Ecuadorian capital, and there are plans to open a gallery exhibition of his works.

Aníbal Villacís was a master painter from Ecuador who used raw earthen materials such as clay and natural pigments to paint on walls and doors throughout his city when he could not afford expensive artist materials. As a teenager, Villacís taught himself drawing and composition by studying and recreating the illustrated ad posters for bullfights in Quito. In 1952, Jose Maria Velasco Ibarra, former President of Ecuador, discovered Villacís and offered him a scholarship to study in Paris.

Estuardo Maldonado

Estuardo Maldonado is a Equadorian sculptor and painter inspired by the Constructivist movement. Maldonado is a member of VAN, the group of Informalist painters founded by Enrique Tábara. Other members of VAN included, Aníbal Villacís, Luis Molinari, Hugo Cifuentes, León Ricaurte and Gilberto Almeida. Maldonado's international presence is largely due to his participation in over a hundred exhibits outside of Ecuador.

Gilberto Almeida

Gilberto Almeida Egas was an Ecuadorian painter born in San Antonio de Ibarra, in Imbabura Province. He studied at the School of Fine Arts in Quito from 1953-1957. His early work was in many media, especially paintings of buildings and views in old Quito; his later work concentrated on large black-and-white drawings, in a baroque, expressionistic, and dramatic style.

Rodolfo Pérez Pimentel

Rodolfo Pérez Pimentel is an Ecuadorian lawyer, historian, and biographer. He was declared the lifetime chronicler of the city of Guayaquil, and is a member of the National Academy of Ecuadorian History. He was the 2005 recipient of the Premio Eugenio Espejo in Literature, awarded to him by President Alfredo Palacio.

Leslie Wright Durán Ballén is a notable Ecuadorian pianist. He is Ecuador's cultural attache in Paris and has received many international awards.

Galo Galecio Taranto was a renowned Ecuadorian painter, sculptor, caricaturist, and printmaker.

Jorge Pérez Concha

Jorge Pérez Concha was an Ecuadorian historian, biographer, writer, and diplomat.

Julio Pazos Barrera Ecuadorian poet, writer, teacher, and cook

Julio Pazos Barrera is a poet, writer, teacher, and cook.

Luigi Stornaiolo Pimentel Ecuadorian painter

Luigi Stornaiolo Pimentel is an Ecuadorian painter.

Jorge Swett

Jorge Swett Palomeque was an Ecuadorian muralist, painter, lawyer and writer.

Alfredo Palacio Moreno was an Ecuadorian sculptor and painter.

Jorge Núñez Sánchez Ecuadorian historian

Jorge Núñez Sánchez was an Ecuadorian writer, historian, and professor.

Rodrigo Pallares was an Ecuadorian architect and promoter of Ecuadorian culture. He was Director of the Cultural Heritage Institute attached to Ecuador's Ministry of Education.

Oswaldo Muñoz Mariño was an Ecuadorian architect and painter.

Hernan Crespo Toral was an Ecuadorian architect, archeologist and museologist who played an important role in the conservation of cultural heritage in Ecuador.

Diego Luzuriaga is an Ecuadorian composer of classical music.

References