JOAQUÍN CLAUSELL, Untitled, Unsigned, Oil on masonite, 5.3 x 6.7 in
JOAQUÍN CLAUSELL (San Francisco de Campeche, 1866 - Lagunas de Zempoala, Morelos, 1935)
Untitled
Unsigned Oil on masonite Presents details of conservation. Gerardo Murillo, Dr. Atl, described Joaquín Clausell as a straight and clear man, who apart from being an artist of great talent served as a defender of social causes, so the harmony imprinted in his works was the result of the daily balance under which he lived. His work abounds in delicately illuminated tones, worked with pasticities that give personality to the scenes he portrays, in this way the adjective of impressionist that Joaquín Clausell earned over time is affirmed. “Joaquín Clausell, a man with a generous heart and a broad intelligence, captured from his youth the clear light of this land, the grace of the seascapes, the majesty of the forests and mountains; he was, in essence, a lover of our nature, which he knew how to interpret with unparalleled mastery and with a determined pictorial instinct
”. Roberto Montenegro. Source consulted: MURILLO, Gerardo and MONTENEGRO, Roberto. Joaquín Clausell. The general exhibition of his work.
Mexico. Museum of the Palace of Fine Arts, 1945. 13.5 x 17.25 cm