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Matiz, Leo

LEO MATIZ Abstracto, 2014

Regular price $35
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Original exhibition poster for Abstracto by Leo Matiz, produced for the “América Fría” exhibition held at the Fundación Juan March in Madrid in 2014. This is an official poster issued for the exhibition (not a later reprint), featuring Matiz’s striking geometric and architectural abstraction in soft monochrome tones. A beautiful and collectible piece of Latin American modernist photography history.

Details

Sku: CB3663

Artist: Leo Matiz

Title: Abstracto

Year: 2014

Signed: No

Medium: Offset Lithograph

Edition Size: Unknown

Framed: No

Frame Suggestion: Inquire with our experts for framing suggestions.

Condition: A: Mint

Dimensions

Paper Size: 19.75 x 28 inches ( 50 x 71 cm )

Image Size: 18.75 x 28 inches ( 48 x 71 cm )

LEO MATIZ Abstracto, 2014

$35

About the Artist

Leo Matiz

Leo Matiz (1917 – 1998) was a Colombian photographer, caricaturist, newspaper publisher, painter and gallery owner. Matiz was born in the small village of Aracataca in the Magdalena Department of Colombia to father Tulio Matiz and mother Eva Matiz. His hometown is also the birthplace of Gabriel Garcia Marquez. He travelled widely and sold caricatures and illustrations to earn a living. In 1951, Matiz's gallery hosted the first exhibition of Colombian artist Fernando Botero with a showing of his paintings at the Bogota gallery. Matiz was known for his sense of style including a thick slightly long hair, colored jackets, and gangster style mustache. He had a robust laugh and carried his caricatures and drawings in a folder. He was at the center of the bohemian intellectualism of Bogota, Caracas, Mexico City and other Latin American capital centers. He photographed Frida Kahlo, Diego Rivera, Esther Williams, Janice Logan, David Alfaro Siqueiros, the first castings of Maria Felix, Luis Bunuel, Marc Chagall, Louis Armstrong, Alvaro Mutis, Pablo Neruda, Walt Disney, Enrique Santos Montejo, “Caliban”, Lucho Bermudez, Agustin Lara, Gabriel Figueroa, Esther Fernandez, Jose Clemente Orozco, Mario Moreno Cantinflas, and Dolores del Rio. He was influenced by Mexican cinema, geography, architecture, history, muralism, and history as well as the artists Gustave Dore, George Grozt, Nadar and Guadalupe Posada. He was a photographer for Asi, Life, Reader's Digest, Harper Magazine, Look and Norte. He had a high profile and intense dispute with David Alfaro Siqueiros.
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