Birth Anniversary of Juvenal Sanso
The #NationalMuseumPH celebrates the 93rd birthday of modernist painter Juvenal Sansó.
Born in 1929, Sansó is a Spanish artist who has lived all his life in Manila. He is a multi-faceted artist who has worked with various media such as oil, acrylic, ink and dry brush, textile, printmaking, and photography. Aside from being a visual artist, he has also ventured into production design by creating set and costume designs for operas in France and the Philippines. Immediately after World War II, his art was affected mainly by his traumatic experience resulting in his Black Period. It is characterized by works representing surreal bouquets of faces and heads in black and white. This period was later replaced by his colorful and genuine bloom series which gained popularity and admiration.
One of these bloom series is an acrylic on canvas created in 1965 entitled “Blue Floral.” It shows an arrangement of bright red flowers nestled in leaves of various sizes and shades of green and blue against a soft blue background. The painting, which is on loan from the Government Service Insurance System collection, can be viewed at the National Museum of Fine Arts, Gallery XIV, as part of the “Pillars of Modernism I ” exhibition. This exhibition features works created between the 1920s to 1970s by modernist painters such as National Artist Victorio Edades (1895-1985), Manuel Rodriguez, Sr. (1912-2017), Galo Ocampo (1913-1985), Diosdado Lorenzo (1906-1984) and Juvenal Sansó (b. 1929).
Sansó was born on November 23, 1929, in Reus, Catalonia, Spain. His family moved to Manila when he was five years old, where they started their wrought-iron business. However, this business fell through during World War II when his father refused to work for the Japanese war effort. After the war, he enrolled as a special student at the University of the Philippines School of Fine Arts from 1948 to 1951 where he was taught by National Artist Fernando Amorsolo (1892-1972) as well as by Dominador Castañeda (1904-1967) and Ireneo Miranda (1896-1964). Aside from this, he also took special classes at the University of Santo Tomas.
In 1950, he was awarded first prize in the watercolor category of the Art Association of the Philippines Annual Art Competition for his work entitled “Incubus.” He won the first prize again in 1951 but this time in the oil category for his work “Sorcerer.” The same year, Sansó went to Rome to study at the Academia di Belle Arti. It was followed by further studies in Paris at L’Ecole Nationale Superieure des Beaux Arts from 1953 to 1961. He held his first solo exhibition in Paris in 1956 and then his first solo exhibition in Manila in 1957 at the Philippine Art Gallery. These exhibitions were followed by more solo exhibitions in Italy, the United States, England, and Mexico. In 1964, his work entitled “Leuers” was awarded the Print of the Year award by the Cleveland Museum of Art, sharing the distinction with previous winners like Henri Matisse and Salvador Dali.
Sansó was awarded the Presidential Medal of Merit on May 20, 2006, for his significant contributions to Philippine art. As a way of giving back to the Philippine art community, he has found ways to encourage young Filipino artists by serving as an artist in residence for the Art Interaction program of the Shell National Students Art Competition from 2008 to 2009 and through his museum, Fundacion Sansó, which was launched in 2015.
The National Museum of Fine Arts is now open for walk-in visitors! For visitor guidelines, please visit www.nationalmuseum.gov.ph. You may also view the 360 degrees virtual tour of selected NMFA galleries on the link https://www.nationalmuseum.gov.ph/nmfa360/HTML5/NMFA360.html. See you at your National Museum!
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