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Virginia Patrone

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Virginia Patrone (born 1950 in Montevideo, Uruguay)[1] is an Uruguayan visual artist who worked in Uruguay before moving to Spain in 2003.[2]

Education

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In 1971 Patrone began her studies as an architect in the Faculty of Architecture, in the Universidad Mayor de la República, Uruguay's National University. In 1978 she turned to painting, studying until 1981 in the Studio of Pepe Montes.[3] Montes himself had trained in the studio of the renowned Montevideo artist Joaquín Torres García.

Patrone is a founding member of the Buenaventura Studio,[3] established in 1989 with the artists Carlos Musso, Carlos Seveso, and Álvaro Pemper. She has also taught courses at and was invited to the School of Fine Arts at Montevideo's Universidad Mayor de la República, New York's Museum of Modern Art, the State University of New York (SUNY) and educational programs in museums in Barcelona and Madrid.

Press

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In a 1992 review of Patrone's work at Los Angeles' Linda Moore Gallery, the Los Angeles Times art critic noted that in "her phantasmagoric scenes, now on view at the Linda Moore Gallery, she bestows women and buildings alike with a full-bodied sensuality."[4]

Awards

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Recent Award: Premio Figari 2019, highest fine arts award in Uruguayhttps://www.museofigari.gub.uy/innovaportal/v/123378/20/mecweb/virginia-patrone.In 1988 Patrone obtained a Fulbright Grant.[citation needed] She won First Prize at the 1986 City Hall Fine Arts Showroom in Montevideo,[citation needed] and at the 1996 Uruguayan Republic Bank's Century Painting Showroom. She was also awarded prizes for excellence in painting at the 1987 National Association of Communications Painting Showroom ,[citation needed] and for Drawing at the Uruguayan Republic Bank Art Hall in 1987 and 1988.,[citation needed] She has had solo exhibitions at the Metropolitan Museum of Tokyo in 1990,[citation needed] and the State University of New York (SUNY).[citation needed] Her work is featured in the collections of the Inter-American Development Bank (Washington, DC), National Museum of Visual Arts (Montevideo, Uruguay), the Juan Manuel Blanes Fine Arts Museum (Montevideo, Uruguay), the Uruguayan Republic Bank Art Hall (Montevideo, Uruguay), the City Hall Museum of San Fernando (Punta del Este, Department of Maldonado, Uruguay) and the American Art Museum (Maldonado, Uruguay).,[citation needed]

In 1997 Patrone won the Florencio Award,,[citation needed] Uruguay's most prestigious theatre award, for the murals she produced in collaboration with the artist Álvaro Pemper, for the play Juego de Damas Crueles.

She was invited to represent Uruguay several times:

  • Biennial of Painting in Cuenca (Ecuador, 1991 and 1994)
  • Latin Art Gallery organized by the Latin-American Development Bank in Nagoya (Japan, 1991)
  • Biennial in Valparaíso (Chile, 1994)
  • Biennial Vento Sul (Brazil, 1996)

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Virginia Patrone". Galeria Zielinsky. Archived from the original on 12 February 2020. Retrieved 2020-04-06.
  2. ^ "Virginia Patrone". Saatchi Art. Retrieved 2020-04-06.
  3. ^ a b "Actitud - Virginia Patrone". Google Arts & Culture. Retrieved 2020-04-06.
  4. ^ Ollman, Leah (1992-06-10). "A Pulsating Rhythm for Women, Buildings". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2020-04-06.