Marta Colvin Andrade (1907–1995) was a sculptor from Chillán, Chile.

Marta Colvin Andrade
Born1907 (1907)[1][2]
Chillán, Chile
Died27 October 1995(1995-10-27) (aged 87–88)[1][2]
Santiago, Chile
NationalityChilean
Known forSculpture

Biography edit

Marta Colvin Andrade was the daughter of James Colvin of Irish descent and Elvira Andrade of Portuguese descent. After the 1939 Chillán earthquake, she lived in Santiago, Chile, and studied at the School of Arts. In 1943 she was appointed assistant professor from the sculpture workshop of Julio A. Vasquez and master Lorenzo Domínguez and was officially appointed Professor in 1950. In 1948 she attended the Grande Chaumiere Academie in Paris with masters Ossian Zadkine and Henry Laurens. She went on to live in France for more than thirty years. In 1965 she took part in the first Sao Paulo Biennale.[3] She was known worldwide and awarded the National Art Prize in 1970 in recognition of her works.

She died in Santiago on 27 October 1995.[4]

Sculpture in museum collections edit

 
Homenaje a la Neurocirugía, sculpture by Marta Colvin. Instituto de Neurocirugía, Providencia, Santiago, Chile
 
Himno al Trabajo
 
Colvin, Marta - Madre Tierra
  • Silvia, 1946, bronze, 80 x 43 x 50 cm, Santiago Museum of Contemporary Art
  • Danza para tu sombra, 1952, granit, 3,5 x 3 x 2,8 m, tomb of the dancer Isabel Glatzel, General Santiago Cemetery[5]
  • Buste de Benjamín Vicuña Mackenna, 1952, Square de l'Amérique-Latine, Paris[6]
  • Homenaje a la Neurocirugía, 1953, bronze, 3 m tall, Instituto de Neurocirugía, Santiago[7]
  • Eslabón, 1956, sycamore wood, 64cm de hauteur, Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, Santiago[5]
  • Quinchamalí, 1956, wood, 1.27 x 0.55 x 0.5 m; Parque de las Esculturas Marta Colvin de Chillán
  • Manutara, 1957, bronze, 1,6 m, Battersea Park, London[5]
  • Terra Mater, 1957, bois, 2 m; Pinacoteca de la Universidad de Concepción
  • Andes, 1959, bronze, 0,50 m, Palais du Quirinal, Rome
  • Yo sostengo tu cruz, 1960, bois, 2,3 m; Benedictine Monastery of the Santísima Trinidad de Las Condes, Santiago
  • Signo solar / Grand Signe, 1963, Andes stone, 2,4 x 2 x 2,2 m, Musée de la sculpture en plein air, Paris
  • Monumento a Laurita Lagos, 1964, Chillán stone, 3 m, Cimetiere de Chillán
  • Las torres del silencio, 1960-1963, stone, 3,5 x 1,25 x 0,5 m, Musée de sculpture en plein air de Middelheim
  • Vigías, 1968, polished wood, 2 m tall; Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, Santiago[5]
  • Le Grand Signe, 1970, bronze, 2,4 x 2 x 2,2 m, Musée de la sculpture en plein air, Paris
  • Mural de Osaka, 1970, stone and copper, Museum of Osaka
  • Puerta del Sol, 1970, red Andes stone, Museum of Pontoise
  • Señal del bosque / Signal en forêt, 1971, wood, 4,5 x 4 x 2 m, Forest of Sénart
  • El árbol de la vida, 1971, stone, Centro Cultural Gabriela Mistral, Santiago
  • Carrefour de l'esprit, 1972, wood, 4,5 x 4 x 2 m, College of Villepinte
  • Caleuche (Nef), 1975, Andes stone, 3.5 x 2 x 2 m, port of Saint-Nazaire
  • Victoire, 1978, stone, 4 x 3 x 2 m, Régiment Bouliac, Bordeaux
  • Léviathan, 1977, wood, 4.5 x 3 x 3 m, Lycée Professionnel "Professeur Clerc" in Outreau (Pas-de-Calais)
  • Mélusine, 1978, stone, 2,5 m, Collège de la Crèche, Niort
  • Rosa de los vientos, 1979, stone, 3,60 x 3 x 3 m, Faculté d'Ontologie de l'Université de Paris
  • Homenaje a los templarios, 1981, stone, 4 x 3,5 x 3 m, Ville Nouvelle de Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines
  • Espíritu del agua, 1982, bronze, 3 x 2 x 1,5 m, Plaza del General de Gaulle, Marly-le-Roi
  • Vigía del mar, 1983, granite, 6,5 x 3 x 2 m, Fort Crozon, Brest, France
  • Horizonte andino, 1986, stone, 0,21 x 0,46 x 0,16 m, Museo de Artes Visuales, Santiago
  • Madre Tierra / Pachamama, 1986, red Andes stone, 4.18 x 1.26 x 1.04 m, Museo Parque de las Esculturas de Santiago
  • Himno al trabajo, 1989, polychromed wood, Cámara Chilena de la Construcción, Santiago[5]
  • Señal de oriente y occidente / Signal, 1991, polychromed wood, 3.5 m, Sculpture park of Séoul
  • Alas al viento, stone, sculpture park, University of Talca
  • Monumento a Sucre, Plaza Sucre, Ñuñoa, Santiago

References edit

  1. ^ a b Artes (Chile), Museo Nacional de Bellas; Zárate, Patricio Muñoz; Ivelić, Milan (2009). Centenario: colección Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, 1910-2010 (in Spanish). Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes. ISBN 978-956-8890-00-1.
  2. ^ a b Historia (in Spanish). Instituto de Historia, Universidad Católica de Chile. 2001.
  3. ^ Viñuales, Rodrigo Gutiérrez (9 January 2016). Arte latinoamericano del siglo XX. Otras historias de la Historia (in Spanish). Prensas de la Universidad de Zaragoza. ISBN 978-84-15770-83-1.
  4. ^ "Marta Colvin is Dead". New York Daily News. Santiago de Chile. 31 October 1995. p. 9. Retrieved 9 March 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  5. ^ a b c d e "Marta Colvin - Artistas Visuales Chilenos, AVCh, MNBA". www.artistasvisualeschilenos.cl.
  6. ^ "Busto de Benjamín Vicuña Mackenna realizado por Marta Colvin". Museo Nacional Benjamín Vicuña Mackenna (in Spanish).
  7. ^ "Revista Chilena de Neurocirugía" (PDF), neurocirugiachile.org, La Sociedad de Neurocirugía de Chile, 2016, ISSN 0716-4491