The Baroque World of Fernando Botero


Fernando Botero is one of Colombia’s and the world’s most popular artists. His enormous bronze sculptures are seen on Park Avenue in New York City, the National Mall in Washington D.C and the Champs-Elysees in Paris. The baroque world of Fernando Botero is the retrospective of artist’s work  along with his private collections held in many exhibitions across the world. These are key works he saved or brought back, providing the artist’s personal look at the amazing sweep of his career. Fernando Botero’s paintings can be explored online and if you like them enough go ahead and buy Fernando Botero’s paintings online.

Fernando Botero was born in 1932 in the Colombian small town Medellin. As a child, he was influenced by the baroque architecture of the colonial churches. As a teenager, he was drawn to the work of Picasso and was expelled from his Catholic high school for writing an admiring essay on the modernist master. In the 1950s he travelled to Spain, Italy and France and was exposed to the works of Velazquez; his portraits of Spanish royalty, Goya, Durer, Rubens, Italian Fresco painters and French artists Courbet, Ingres and Delacroix. Adam and Eve of Durer mostly inspired him. The Mexican muralists Rivera, Orozco, Siqueiros and the great Frida Kahlo, with her haunting self-portraits have also influenced his work. Check out these works by Fernando Botero and if you like his art buy Fernando Botero’s paintings online.

He sketched his breakthrough mandolin in 1956 in Mexico City. By making the central opening of the instrument very small, he enlarged the volume of the entire mandolin. This creation made the pathway of his entire style. He would enlarge everything he would draw or paint to a baroque shape, an expression of sumptuousness and sensuality, not only in human figure, but also in still-life, in fruits, in a mandolin. The still-life is a critical part of Botero’s work almost from the very beginning. The artist explained, “When you see a still-life of mine, you will notice that the knives and forks, the grit, the table, the napkins, everything is rendered in the same fashion, therefore the whole work reflects a sense of unity, harmony, and coherence. That is what communicates its essential truth.”  The very same feeling can be endured exploring the brilliant artist with a keenr eye. Check out Fernando Botero’s paintings online and if you like them, buy Fernando Botero’s paintings online.
While his work includes still-life and landscape, Botero has also experimented with situational portraiture. All his paintings and sculptures are showed the same proportional exaggeration, also called ‘Boterismo’. Botero explains his use of these "large people", as they are often called by critics, in the following way:

"An artist is attracted to certain kinds of form without knowing why. You adopt a position intuitively; only later do you attempt to rationalize or even justify it." 

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