Luis Fraile | |
Birth Name: | Luis Martínez Fraile |
Birth Date: | 7 February 1947 |
Birth Place: | Albacete |
Death Place: | Madrid |
Nationality: | Spanish |
Known For: | Painting |
Style: | surrealist, expressionist, syncretist, figurative |
Luis Fraile (Albacete, February 7, 1947 - Madrid, January 5, 2016), was a Spanish artist with an extensive career path, who developed his activity mainly in Madrid. He embraced various trends and styles throughout his prolific artistic life, developing a style of his own around surrealism, reflecting a subconscious and dreamlike world.[1]
He was born in Albacete (February 7, 1947), in a humble family, the first of the two children of Valentín Martínez Flores, master builder and former political prisoner after the Spanish Civil War, and Julia Fraile Montalbán, factory worker and self-sacrificing housewife. During his childhood he combines studies with several jobs, amongst others as an employee in the mythical Casino Primitivo of the city, laboural and vital experiences that helped him to forge a very critical and mature view of the environment from a very early age. At the age of 20 he became Draftsman and Urban Planning Designer at the City Council of his hometown. He worked for the Cadastre and with the renowned architect Julio Carrilero Prat, designing amongst others, the Nautical Club of Torrevieja. Being Painting his true vocation, he decides to undertake several travels abroad in order to improve his technique and to learn new methods.
He studied Altarpiece and Polychromy in the Massana School of Barcelona, Ceramic (Barcelona Arts and Crafts School), as well as Engraving and Lithography, not only in the Catalan metropolis, but also in Paris (Atelier Hayter) and Toronto (North Toronto Collegiate), where he also made his living creating stained glass artworks. During his Parisian stay, it is also possible to review his studies of Plastic Arts (Université de Vincennes) and History of the Art (École du Louvre).
In the same way, his intellectual concerns and his extensive self-taught formation extended to multitude of subjects, will lead him to create a work in endless transformation. He was featured in important Spanish publications of the time (Diario ABC, Casa & Jardín, El Punto de las Artes, Revista de Artes Plásticas Cyan, La Brocha, Tribuna, Formas Plásticas, etc.), and was already awarded in its beginnings by the Güell Painting Foundation (Barcelona, 1974) and finalist in the 7th Cleveland International Drawing Biennial in the United Kingdom. In the mid-1970s he even achieved representation with the veteran gallery owner Juana Mordó, but for various reasons he returned to Paris. For several decades, he exhibited locally and internationally. At the end of the 1980s, he settled permanently in Madrid with his family, where he created most of his paintings, being represented by the now extinct Novart Gallery.
After a long illness that kept him away from painting, Luis Fraile passed away on January 5, 2016. His artistic legacy consists of more than 3,000 works of great originality and vitality.
" The figurative world of Luis Fraile is complex, full of intentions that evolve over time, discovering new ideas. It is a reflective painting that offers a panorama of oppositions, the playful faced with the limitations turning in a measured whirlwind."[2]
" He offers a dynamic of drawing, shapes and colors in a tension of encounters, dialogues and looks. In the rigid, hieratic and almost sacred figures of this painter there is frequently a man-woman dialogue; an energy and quarrel of the sexes; a magma open to the eye and the mind."[3]
1974: Real Círculo Artístico. Barcelona
1974: Galería Toison. Madrid
1975: Galerie Poisson d'Or. Paris
1978: Galerie Marigny. Paris
1979: Galerie Marigny. Paris
1982: De Cortez Gallery. Toronto
1983: De Cortez Gallery. Toronto
1987: Galería Novart. Madrid
1987: Galería Enebro. Segovia
1988: Galería Berruguete. Valladolid
1988: Museo de Calahorra. La Rioja
1988: Galería Arlanzón. Burgos
1988: Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Vilafamés. Castellón
1988: InterArte 88. Valencia
1988: Museo de Arte Contemporáneo. Albacete
1989: Museo de La Rioja. Logroño
1989: Galería Novart. Madrid
1989: Obra Social y Cultural - Fundación de la Caja de Ahorros de Asturias. Gijón
1991: Heller Gallery. New York
1991: Galería Novart. Madrid
1991: Museo de Ciudad Real. Castilla-La Mancha
1993: Montserrat Contemporary Art Gallery. New York
Fundación Güell - Barcelona
Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando - Madrid
Museo Internacional de Arte Contemporáneo - Guinea Ecuatorial
Museo de Calahorra - La Rioja
Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Vilafamés - Castellón
Fundación Caja Asturias - Gijón
Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Albacete - Castilla La Mancha
Museo Riojano de Arte Contemporáneo - Logroño