René Portocarrero Paintings
René Portocarrero created abstracted, polychrome paintings of the religious and cultural practices and architecture of Cuba as well as portraits of Cuban women. A key figure in the second generation of Vanguardia artists in Cuba, his work was exhibited alongside Cundo Bermúdez, Mario Carreño, and Amelia Peláez in the landmark Museum of Modern Art exhibition “Modern Cuban Painters” in 1944. He was awarded the International Samba Prize at the 1963 São Paulo Bienal and was featured in the 1966 Venice Biennale. Portocarrero displayed his artistic talent at a young age; although he spent a brief period studying at the San Alejandro Academy of Fine Arts he was mostly self-taught. Known for his use of horror vacui, Portocarrero delineated space via deliberate linework. Later in his career, the artist’s interest in geometric forms led him increasingly towards abstraction. Beginning in the mid–the 1950s, he produced a series of imagined cityscapes based on Havana’s eclectic architecture.
1960s Cubist René Portocarrero Paintings
Oil
1950s Cubist René Portocarrero Paintings
Canvas, Oil
1950s Cubist René Portocarrero Paintings
Canvas, Oil
2010s Cubist René Portocarrero Paintings
Oil
2010s Analytic Cubist René Portocarrero Paintings
Paper, Oil, Acrylic
2010s Analytic Cubist René Portocarrero Paintings
Paper, Oil, Acrylic
Mid-20th Century Cubist René Portocarrero Paintings
Oil
1950s Cubist René Portocarrero Paintings
Canvas, Oil
2010s Analytic Cubist René Portocarrero Paintings
Paper, Oil, Acrylic
1940s Cubist René Portocarrero Paintings
Canvas, Oil
1970s Cubist René Portocarrero Paintings
Canvas, Oil
1940s Cubist René Portocarrero Paintings
Canvas, Oil
2010s Analytic Cubist René Portocarrero Paintings
Paper, Oil, Acrylic
1970s Modern René Portocarrero Paintings
Tempera
1970s Modern René Portocarrero Paintings
Tempera
1940s René Portocarrero Paintings
Paper, Gouache