Águeda Dicancro Explained

Águeda Dicancro
Birth Name:Águeda Dicancro
Birth Date:1938
Birth Place:Montevideo, Uruguay
Death Date:14 August 2019
Death Place:Montevideo, Uruguay
Occupation:sculptor
Alma Mater:University of the Republic
Awards:Prmio Alas
Premio Figari

Águeda Dicancro (1938 – August 14, 2019) was a Uruguayan sculptor from Montevideo, noted for her plastic art.[1] Her art is featured at the Museo Nacional de Artes Visuales in Montevideo.[2]

Life

Dicancro studied at the University of the Republic National School of Fine Arts (Spanish; Castilian: Instituto Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes de la Universidad de la República)[3] between 1960 and 1964, and later at Uruguay's Universidad del Trabajo.[4] She also studied engraving and cement sculpture under Spanish sculptor Eduardo Yepes, before graduating as a professional ceramist in 1964.

She was awarded a scholarship from the Organization of American States and traveled to Mexico in 1964[5] to study ceramics at the Universidad Nacional Autonoma's School of Applied Arts, and was awarded a second scholarship to study gold and silver metalworking[6] at Mexico's School of Design. However, she is primarily known for her sculptures made of glass, her chief material alongside wood. She began using glass in 1968 in her jewelry, and by 1970 started working with it on a much larger scale, incorporating it into living spaces by collaborating with architects, decorators, and lighting experts. The combination of glass and wood could be seen in her opalescent exhibition Arborescencias at the Museo Nacional de Artes Visuales.[7]

An Águeda Dicancro sculpture of steel and glass can be found in the Telecommunications Tower (Montevideo), the current location of ANTEL.[8]

Awards

She was selected to represent Uruguay at the Venice Bienniale in 1993 and the San Pablo Biennial in 1994.

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Los sueños del bosque alado . 23 August 2019. . es.
  2. Web site: Instalación de Agueda Dicancro . La República . 23 March 2009. 8 May 2011. es.
  3. Web site: Águeda Dicancro. Museo Nacional de Artes Visuales. 16 September 2008. Spanish. 29 February 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20080229125126/http://www.mnav.gub.uy/dicancro.htm. dead.
  4. Book: A woman's gaze : Latin American women artists . 1998 . White Pine Press . Marjorie Agosín . 1-877727-85-7 . Fredonia, N.Y. . 38132659.
  5. Web site: Águeda Dicancro. Artesana, orfebre, escultora. Cotidiano Mujer . Cotidiano Mujer. 2001. 16 September 2008 . Spanish.
  6. Web site: Águeda Dicancro: "Arborescencias". Ministerio de Educación y Cultura de Uruguay. 30 November 2007. 16 September 2008 . Spanish.
  7. Web site: Exposiciones Temporarias. Museo Nacional de Artes Visuales. 16 September 2008 . Spanish.
  8. Web site: Complejo Torre de Comunicaciones . ANTEL. 16 September 2008. Spanish.