Fernando García del Molino

Fernando García del Molino (23 March 1813, Santiago - 1899, Buenos Aires) was a Chilean-born Argentine portrait painter, miniaturist and lithographer. Many of his portraits were done from photographs or daguerrotypes.

Portrait of Encarnación Ezcurra; possibly done with Carlos Morel. (c.1835)
Portrait of
Juan Manuel de Rosas. (c. 1850)

Biography

He was born to a family of Spanish merchants. In 1822, when he was only nine, they moved to Buenos Aires. Shortly after, he began to show some artistic talent and was enrolled in classes at the "Academy of Drawing" of the University of Buenos Aires, where he studied with the Italian painter, Pablo Caccianiga (1798-1862).[1] While there, he befriended his fellow student Carlos Morel and they often painted together.[2] After graduating, he turned to teaching. One of his earliest students was Franklin Rawson, only six years his junior.[1] He was already a well-known artist by the age of twenty-five.

During the Juan Manuel de Rosas administration, he created most of his best-known portraits, including those of Manuela Rosas, Encarnación Ezcurra, Rosas himself and many more of those in his immediate circle. He visited Rosas' home in the Palermo District so often, that he virtually became the Governor's official painter.[2]

He also created portraits of notable figures from Argentine history, including Facundo Quiroga and José Félix Aldao.[1] After Rosas went into exile, his commissions decreased dramatically. Later, he took a trip to London; invited by Manuela Rosas and her husband, Máximo Terrero (1817-1898), the son of rancher and businessman Juan Nepomuceno Terrero. While there, he painted another portrait of the elderly Rosas, probably in Southampton.[1]

References

  1. Brief biography @ Revisionistas.
  2. Brief biography @ Fundación Konex.

Further reading

  • José León Pagano, Fernando García del Molino: El pintor de la Federación, Secretaría de Educación, Subsecretaría de Cultura, 1948
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.