Agustín Fernández (artist) explained

Agustín Fernández
Birth Date:April 16, 1928
Birth Place:Havana, Cuba
Death Date:June 2, 2006
Death Place:New York, United States of America
Spouse:Maria Elena Molinet de la Caridad, Lia Fernández (born Epelboim)
Movement:Surrealism

Agustín Fernández (16 April 1928  - 2 June 2006) was a Cuban painter, sculptor, and multimedia artist. Although he was born in Cuba, he spent the majority of his career outside of Cuba, and produced art in Havana, Paris, San Juan, and New York.

Biography

At the age of 11, in 1939, he took his first drawing lessons, soon entering the Jesuit-school Belén de Embarque, where he received painting classes. In 1944 he began studying at the art school La Anexa, and two years later he entered the San Alejandro National Academy of Fine Arts. He also pursued doctoral studies in philosophy and literature at the University of Havana, which he did not complete. After graduating from San Alejandro, he traveled to New York, where he studied with George Grosz and Yasuo Kuniyoshi at the Art Students League.

Back in Havana, he exhibited at the Ciudad Cultural Nuestro Tiempo, revealing himself as key emerging artists of the Cuban avant-garde. In 1953, he travels to France and Spain on the British ocean liner "Queen of the Pacific". For approximately two years he lives in Spain, attending courses at the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando in Madrid. In 1953, and until 1955, he was part of the group Los Once. In this first period he exhibited his works in Madrid (Bucholz Gallery, 1953), Washington D.C. (Pan-American Union, 1954), New York (Acquisitions of painting and sculpture, MoMA, 1958), and Caracas (Museum of Fine Arts, 1959). He also participated in the IV and V Biennial of the Museum of Modern Art of Sao Paulo, receiving a mention in 1957.

International career

Although Fernández began his career in his country, most of his works were made and exhibited abroad. In 1959, with the triumph of the Cuban Revolution, he received a scholarship to study in Paris. Due to political differences, Fernandez decided to go into exile in Paris. There he maintained contact with Simone Collinet - André Breton's first wife, who directed the Fürstenberg Gallery-as well as Roberto Matta, Joan Miró, Max Ernst, Alain Bosquet and Richard Wright. In 1967 he participated in MoMA's retrospective on Latin American art 1931-1966.

By 1969 he moved to San Juan, Puerto Rico, after obtaining a contract with La Casa del Arte gallery. He also exhibited 20 collages on silkscreen at the Colibri Gallery.

In 1972, he moved permanently to New York City. There he became friends with the photographer Robert Mapplethorpe. He exhibited in the following galleries, among others: Anita Shapolsky, Gimpel and Weitzenhoffer Gallery, ACA Gallery, Mitchell Algus and Nina Menocal Gallery, Mexico City. In New York he produced his famous group of paintings: Armors. Agustin Fernandez participated during his career in a variety of art fairs, among them: the May Salon, Paris Internationale, FIAC (Paris), Independent, Frieze (New York) and in Maastricht (Netherlands). In the period 1978-1979 he received a scholarship as a visual artist from the Cintas Foundation. In the 1990s he focused on developing a series of sculptural objects in which he returned to his surrealist essence.[1] In 1992 Florida International University presented a major retrospective of his work.

Two paintings by Fernández have been featured in cinema: "Développement d'un délire" appeared in Brian De Palma's film Dressed to Kill (1980), and in The Father of the Bride (2022), starring Cuban American actor Andy Garcia.

Private life

Agustín Fernández first married María Elena Molinet in 1952. A second marriage followed in 1961 to Lia Epelboim, who had escaped from Romania during the World War II. They had three children: Clodio, Clea and Sebastian. Fernández died on Thursday, June 2, 2006, in New York, at the age of 78, due to complications from pneumonia. Lia had passed away a few weeks earlier. By the time of his death, Fernández had had some thirty solo exhibitions and participated in over one hundred group exhibitions.He left unpublished memoirs in which he recounts his childhood and youth in Cuba, as well as the influences of masters such as Diego Velázquez in the development of his career as an artist.

Solo exhibitions

Collections

Notes and References

  1. Kuspit. Donald. 2012. The Fetishized Breast and the Phallic Woman: Agustín Fernández's Surreal Imagery. Agustín Fernández: The Metamorphosis of Experience. 5 Continents. 12.
  2. Web site: Form’s Transgressions: The Drawings of Agustín Fernández. The Snite Museum of Art.
  3. Web site: Agustín Fernández: Ultimate Surrealist American University Museum, Katzen Arts Center, Washington DC. American University. en. 2019-12-29.
  4. Web site: The Erotically Charged Technophilia of Cyberpunk Paintings. 2018-06-12. Hyperallergic. en-US. 2019-12-29.
  5. Web site: Agustin Fernández: Armaduras. Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami. en-US. 2019-12-29.
  6. Web site: Agustin Fernandez. Art Museum of the Americas.
  7. Web site: Agustin Fernandez. Brooklyn Museum.
  8. Web site: Agustin Fernandez. Cintas Foundation.
  9. Web site: Permanent Art Collection. Miami Dade Public Library System.
  10. Web site: Agustín Fernández. Museum of Modern Art.
  11. Book: Agustin Fernandez: a retrospective, October 30 - December 11, 1992. Frost Art Museum, The Art Museum at Florida International University. 1992. Catalogs. 51.
  12. Web site: Agustin Fernandez. Tucson Museum of Art.
  13. Web site: Agustin Fernandez. Yale University Art Gallery.