José Navarro | |
Birth Name: | José Navarro y Llorens' |
Birth Date: | 1867 |
Nationality: | Spanish |
Birth Place: | Valencia, Spain |
Death Date: | 1923 aged 56-57 |
Death Place: | Valencia |
Known For: | Painting |
Training: | San Carlos Art Academy, Valencia |
Movement: | Orientalist |
José Navarro y Llorens (1867–1923) was a Spanish painter, active in Valencia noted for his Orientalist paintings, still lifes and local landscapes.
José Navarro y Llorens was born in Godella, near Valencia, Spain in 1867. He received his art education at the San Carlos Academy in Valencia, a city to which he remained very attached throughout his life.[1]
He lived in Madrid from around 1920. He travelled extensively through Europe and North Africa, to expand his knowledge of the arts. He visited Morocco while relatively young. In Morocco, he developed an affinity for oriental subject matter. Navarro was a great admirer of Mariano Fortuny, which was possibly the inspiration that impelled him to travel to Morocco.[2]
He was a friend of the artist, Pinazo Camarlench and like him, landscapes are heavily represented in Navarro's work. However, Navarro's themes also included seascapes, Orientalist themes and people, especially gypsies and Moroccans. His work was influenced by the Spanish greats such as Maria Fortuny and Joaquín Sorolla.[3]
On account of his talent, Navarro was considered as one of the most worthy painters to represent the Valencian School.[4] In 1908 he made a trip to Rio de Janeiro, where he exhibited his works and obtained great recognition.[5]
Navarro died on 6 February 1923 in Valencia.
His Orientalist scenes often used short brush strokes in an impressionistic style. His work often includes seascapes, especially those depicting dramatic events associated with life at sea; such events were relatively commonplace in 1890s Spain. For example, he produced a work detailing the shipwreck of 1894 that is now located in the Carmen Thyssen Museum, Malaga and is possibly the painting presented to the National Exhibition of 1895, in which it received the Honorable Mention. Also exhibited at that museum is the Arrival of Fishing (1904-1910), a work inspired by Joaquín Sorolla's La Vuelta de la Pesca (1894), currently at the Musée d'Orsay in Paris.[6] He used both oils and water-colours with equal success.[7]
Select list of works