Birth Date: | 1922 9, df=yes |
Nationality: | Peruvian |
Education: | National Superior Autonomous School of Fine Arts |
Known For: | Painting, President of the Association of Plastic Artists of Peru |
Spouse: | Yolanda Santisteban Vásquez |
Signature: | Firma de Óscar Allain.jpg |
Óscar Guillermo Allain Cottera (born 19 September 1922 in Lima) is a Peruvian painter of French descent.[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7]
Allain was born in 1922 in the capital of Lima, Peru. He is the son of the marriage of the military man Guillermo Allain Soto and the novice Juanita Cottera Palomino. His father, Guillermo Allain, proposed that he study the militarization of the Chorrillos Military School and his mother, Juanita Cottera, died at the age of twenty-two.[5]
The independent painter studied at the National Superior Autonomous School of Fine Arts (ENSABAP). He was a disciple of Alejandro González Trujillo, "Apu-Rimak", at the centennial National School of Fine Arts as a member of the so-called "golden generation". He worked as a professor at the Víctor Morey Peña Higher School of Fine Arts in Iquitos and at the Hermilio Valdizan National University in Huánuco.[4] [6]
Allain is a paradigmatic, testimonial and expressive painter of the coast, mountains and jungle of Peru. His plastic art captures the colors, faces and characters such as the painting of the artists Pancho Fierro, Francisco Laso, José Sabogal and Teodoro Núñez Ureta that expresses the man of Peru with his peculiarities.[4] [6]
The independentist master has participated in the most prestigious museums in Paris, Amsterdam, Madrid and London, observing the essential paintings. Throughout his career, Allain exhibited in the most important galleries in Peru and the world such as the Cultural Center of San Marcos with the exhibition of the private collection of Bill and Cristina Kallop.[4] [8]
The independent master Allain relocated to Paris, France, for several decades. He has lived in the Place de la Concorde and attended the flea market where he buys a military painting about Allain's ancestors who were Sephardic Jews who moved from Spain to Bordeaux, France because of a terrorist threat. In France, Allain painted on the banks of the Seine river like the Impressionist painters, with the good fortune that the public bought his paintings as they were nearing completion. Among the various pictorial motifs we find women dressed in white represented in a watercolor entitled "Las chismosas". Allain has pointed out that he likes to paint customs.[7]
The independent painters are integrated by Ricardo Grau, Óscar Allain, Francisco González Gamarra, Sérvulo Gutiérrez, Juan Barreto, Carlos More, Domingo Pantigoso, Víctor Humareda, Carlos Quizpez Asín, Federico Reinoso, Bernardo Rivero, Ricardo Sánchez, Adolfo Winternitz and Sabino Springett, among others.[9]
The independent painter Allain formed the group 8 pintores which was made up of the painters: Ángel Chávez López, Aquiles Ralli, Enrique Galdos Rivas, Fernando Sovero, Gamaniel Palomino, Julio Camino Sánchez, Manuel Zapata Orihuela.[10]
He is a member of the Association of Plastic Artists of Peru (ASPAP),[11] [12] and the Society of Authors and Composers of Peru (SAYCOPE).[13]
Allain's pictorial work seeks to reinterpret the art and culture of Peru. The independent master is a creator, an integrator who assumes the diverse identities of Peru, a country of diverse nationalities since the ancestors populated this wonderful nation.[3]
This scenario encouraged Allain's creative spirit, highlighting the mastery with which he captures the world of the common man with his land, diversity of customs and traditions in a realistic, telluric symbology, creating his canvases with the colors of the homeland, flora and the fauna of the coast, mountains and jungle of Peru. In this historical framework we find the diversity of human beings as protagonists of their ancestral genius that they obtain from the outside world.[3]
In his long journey around the world, Allain developed his pictorial experimentation, capturing the spirit, strength and resistance of man in his daily life with the intensity of the brush that processes his expressionist proposal to discover the feelings, the soul and the bones of the common man through the unity of color, shape and movement.[3]
Allain with the pictorial technique of "telluric expressionism" is sensitive and eloquent to observers and experts of plastic art. This pictorial technique is characterized by light, dark and chiaroscuro strokes and the subtlety of the observation of his canvases.[4]
The writer José Antonio Bravo recognizes the value of his pictorial paintings and his transcendence in the article "Allain and everyday Peru". Characters such as the northern cholas, the fishermen, the banana vendors are part of his pictorial creation.[4]
The painter Allain is accurate in his judgment about painting and its social role. The independent master expresses that painting is pure emotion because art does not mean portraying reality. Pictorial criticism makes his paintings recognized by the national and international public.[4]
His long-standing pictorial work can be found in various places in Peru and the world. Master Allain has exhibited in countries such as France, Holland, Spain, England and the United States.[2] [4]
The painter Óscar Allain has been artistically influenced by Teófilo Allain by the music of the "cholo" Carlos Pantoja who was also a neighbor of the Barrios Altos and the Cercado de Lima, a place where criollismo is intensely lived and the famous Amancaes fair.[3]
Allain also worked as an announcer on Radio Delcar and on Radio Central. This locution work has created links with criollismo. Allain had as friends the criollo composers and singers Lucy Smith, Pablo Casas Padilla, Manuel Acosta Ojeda, Lorenzo Sotomayor Lishner, Luis Takahashi Nuñez, Carlos Hayre Ramírez, Alicia Maguiña Málaga, María de Jesús Vásquez Vásquez.[3]
As a boxer he obtained a trophy in the bantamweight category, however, the promoter Max Aguirre recommended that he not continue in the art of fists so that he could write a journalistic column in the newspaper La Crónica. The path of writing related him to writers such as Martín Adán and Juan Gonzalo Rose. The independent master is a walker who travels all over Peru.[2]
His painting is also influenced by the world of bohemia and music. The Rímac, the Barrios Altos and La Victoria are the triangle of criollismo in Peru. Óscar Allain was influenced by this source and painted much of that history of singers, dancers and marinera dancers. Allain is the artist who bears witness to his time with his own style.[4]
Among the awards and distinctions he has received we can find the following:[2] [3] [4]