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Artists |
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Raul Martinez
(1927-1995)
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Raul Martinez is known as the most famous
pop artists to ever come out of Cuba. His work ranged
from highly political, to purely commercial, but loudly
echoes the changing of the times in Cuba in the late
1950s.
Like many others, Martinez attended the San Alejandro
School, and after graduation went on to study in Chicago
on a scholarship. In general, Martinez was successful in
the plastic arts, and even took on photography and ghost
writing for awhile. His themes were usually political in
nature, or else his work was commissioned for poster
work, such as the famous Cuban film “Lucia”. |
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Lucia
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During the 1960s,
Martinez worked heavily in graphic design. He would
often incorporate images of famous Cuban figures, such
as Cuba’s national hero Jose Marti, and also Che Guevara
and Fidel Castro. Fellow pop artist Andy Warhol created
posters of Che Guevara as well, and one could say that
their styles are similar (he even created square
portrait repetitions of Jose Marti in the same way that
Warhold did of Marilyn Monroe). It has been said that no
other painter or artist has ever created as many
paintings of Jose Marti as Martinez has.
One such example of Martinez using Cuban visages is in
his poster “Cartel Cubano”. |
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Cartel Cubano
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After the 1960s,
Martinez began experimenting with print making. He would
make his prints in small numbers, such as this one
entitled “Farmer and Che” (1986) which only ran 80
copies. |
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Farmer and Che
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Martinez's early work
was very abstract in nature, and he would use a tropical
color palate, and sometimes only black and white. He is
not generally known for this early abstract work, and
therefore some of them may have been overlooked by
authenticators.
Martinez was a part of a group called “The Eleven”, who
pioneered abstract art in Cuba. “The Eleven” or “Los
Once” also used their art as expression against Batista
and the dictatorship, and met regularly at Martinez's
studio for group meetings.
During his lifetime, Martinez faced a lot of hardship as
an artist and as an individual while living in Cuba. He
was openly gay, and during the 1970s in Cuba, many
people were forced to repress their lifestyles. He did
not, and was one of many professors to be fired, at
which time he was working for the school of
Architecture.
However, this unfortunate event for him made a great
impact on art. He survived by doing freelance graphic
design, which inspired generations of artists and
forever changed the face of Cuban art. In a sense, he
was responsible for the boom in print making and graphic
design that Cuba saw in the 1970s. Towards the end of
the 70s, he began to incorporate heavy texture into his
artwork, such as lines to give depth to his paintings or
prints.
Martinez has exhibited all over the US, Latin America
and Europe, and his work is housed in museums worldwide.
He received National awards in Cuba, as well as in
Chicago and Tampa in tribute to his lifetime of work,
and will forever be remembered as a forerunner in
abstract and the father of Cuban pop art. |
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