Myrna Báez

Myrna Báez
Born (1931-08-18) August 18, 1931
Santurce, Puerto Rico
Nationality Puerto Rican
Education University of Puerto Rico
San Fernando Art Academy
Institute of Puerto Rican Culture
Pratt Institute
Known for Painting
Printmaking

Myrna Báez (born August 18, 1931) is a Puerto Rican painter and printmaker. She is considered one of the most important painters and engravers in Puerto Rico.[1][2][3] She has been instrumental in promoting art and art education in her country.[4] Her work has been shown and collected by the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Smithsonian American Art Museum and the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Her work has been characterized as confident and complex.[5] She lives and works in San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Life and education

Báez was born in Santurce, Puerto Rico, to an upper-middle-class family and was one of five children. Her father, Enrique Báez was a civil engineer and her mother, America Gonzalez was a teacher and an independent and confident woman.[6] Báez was strongly influenced by her mother. Her mother insisted that all of her children take classes in the arts and she exposed them to theater and reading.[3] Báez started painting classes at age nine.[3] Báez was described as an intelligent and gifted child.[6] She graduated from the Colegio Puertorriqueno de Ninas in 1947.

Báez received a bachelor's degree in the sciences from the University of Puerto Rico in 1951.[4] She was exposed to many cultural and artistic movements while at the University. There had been a migration of many Spanish intellectuals and artists to Puerto Rico at the time and many of them were active around the University.[3] She began to develop ideas about issues surrounding Puerto Rican independence. She believed that Puerto Rico should be an independent country.[6] Báez attended political rallies and cultural events.[3] Báez supported the woman's rights movement and identifies as a feminist.[3]

Báez left for Spain, initially to study medicine at the Royal Academy of San Fernando in Madrid.[4][7] Before she arrived in Spain, she spent time in New York and Paris, immersing herself in the culture of both cities. In 1952, her passion for the arts led her to leave medical studies and pursue painting. She applied at the San Fernando Art Academy and was rejected, but she worked hard to build up her portfolio and was accepted in 1953.[3] She received her master's degree in art from San Fernando Art Academy in 1957. Afterwards, she returned to Puerto Rico to study with graphic artist Lorenzo Homar at the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture in San Juan.[8] Later, she studied at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn from 1969 to 1970.[7]

Career and art

Báez's career started in 1957. She was a teacher of painting and drawing at schools in Puerto Rico between 1962 and 1987. From 1981 to 1987 she taught at the Art Students League in San Juan.[8] Báez paints in both oil and acrylic. Báez's paintings are "softly painted" and "luminous."[2] Her prints, especially her collotypes, are "rich" in texture and color.[9]

Much of Báez's early art works, created during the 1960s, are described as "traditional images of Puerto Rico." During her earlier period of work, she often portrayed images of "everyday life" for "Puerto Rico's working-class people."[8] She began to use more printmaking techniques, such as engraving and woodcuts. She later studied lithography and intaglio techniques with Dimitri Papagiourgi in Spain.[6] She became influenced by impressionism, surrealism and abstract art, incorporating many of these aspects into her work.[6]

Báez became interested in working with collotypes in the 1970s.[6] During this time, the political climate of Puerto Rico had shifted. Her work began to focus on the new middle class.[6] Art critic Margarita Fernández Zavala identifies class struggles in Báez's work which often explores urban themes and an emerging Puerto Rican bourgeoisie.[6] There is a sense of uneasiness where individuals depicted in her portraits of this period seem unsure of their new economic and social status.[8] Báez creates a sense of dichotomy with these pictures where the individuals portrayed don't seem to completely fit-in with their surroundings. They seem both at-odds with their world and, yet her vivid sense of color lifts them out of the ordinariness of everyday life.[8]

The sense of space and how individuals fit into that created space is a trend that continues in her work. Báez creates multiple dimensions in her prints and paintings, using frames, reflections, pictures on walls and open windows to build layers of "unreal" space.[8]

Báez has been influenced by the works of European masters, but locates her classically derived figures in Caribbean settings.[10] She references great masters and re-imagines famous female nudes with intent to both disguise the figures and reveal them.[11] Báez's portraits continue to question the idea of the male gaze.[11] She paints women from a female perspective or a personal sense of understanding and which still imply a strong sense of her own identity as a woman.[3] Her figures have been considered part of the field of socially concerned figurative painting.[9]

Báez was one of the founding members of the Puerto Rican arts group, Hermandad de Artistas Gráficos in 1981. This group was initially established to protest government intervention in cultural matters.[6]

Báez founded the fine arts program at the Sacred Heart University in Puerto Rico. Since 1988,[6] she has been an artist-in-residence and is currently working there in an additional capacity as a professor.

Awards and honors

In December 2014, the annual Campechada cultural and artistic festival in Old San Juan was dedicated to Báez's career and work.[12] This was the first time a living artist and a woman was celebrated by the festival.[1]

Quotes

"I do not want to do landscapes for tourists nor make pictures of the sentimental, nostalgic or folkloric things that people in this country suffer from due to a lack of identity. I am using landscape because I am interested in the form, because I'm interested in color, because I'm interested in the place... I'm interested in expressing: light—that which surrounds us, the shapes that have formed me, that have made me and that move me."[3]

References

  1. 1 2 "Thousands to attend Campechada cultural festival in San Juan". Fox News Latino. 13 December 2014. Retrieved 4 March 2015.
  2. 1 2 Benson, Elizabeth P. (2004). Retratos: 2,000 Years of Latin American Portraits. Yale University Press in association with San Antonio Museum of Art; National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; and El Museo del Barrio. p. 296. ISBN 0300106270.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 González, María de Jesus (1 June 2007). "Myrna Báez: Her Art and Her Identity". Anthurium: A Caribbean Studies Journal. 5 (1). Retrieved 5 March 2015.
  4. 1 2 3 "Artist Painter, Myrna Báez". Puerto Rican Painter. Retrieved 4 March 2015.
  5. Traba, Marta (June 1980). "Myrna Báez : notas sobre una pintura difícil / Marta Traba". Imagen (in Spanish). International Center for the Arts of the Americas. 4. Retrieved 4 March 2015.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Mendez, Serafin Mendez; Cueto, Gail, eds. (30 July 2003). Notable Caribbeans and Caribbean Americans: A Biographical Dictionary (1st ed.). Greenwood. pp. 30–32. ISBN 978-0313314438.
  7. 1 2 Heller, Nancy (1995). North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century. New York: Garland. p. 46. ISBN 9780824060497.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Congdon, Kristin G.; Hallmark, Kara Kelley, eds. (2002). Artists from Latin American Cultures: A Biographical Dictionary (1st ed.). Greenwood. pp. 24–27. ISBN 978-0313315442.
  9. 1 2 Cockcroft, Eva Sperling (1993). "From Barrio to Mainstream: The Panorama of Latino Art". In Lomeli, Francisco; Kanellos, Nicolas; Esteva-Fabregat, Claudio. Handbook of Hispanic Culture-Literature and Art. Houston, Texas: Arte Publico Press. pp. 202–203. ISBN 9781611921632.
  10. McMillan, Janet (20 February 1987). "Myrna Baez's Canvas Is Puerto Rico The Artist, Whose Work Is On View Here, Paints Her Passion For Her Homeland". The Inquirer, Philadelphia. Retrieved 4 March 2015.
  11. 1 2 Bleys, Rudi (27 October 2000). Images of Ambiente: Homotexuality and Latin American Art, 1810-today. Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 110–111. ISBN 9780826447234.
  12. "Dedicated to Myrna Báez the Campechada 2014". El Nuevo Dia (in Spanish). 16 October 2014. Retrieved 4 March 2015.
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