"Mano Grande" (Big Hands), 1981 ARTIST - Eduardo Kingman Riofrío (1913 - 1997) Born in Loja, Eduardo is known as "the painter of hands" and was regarded as one of the masters of twentieth century expressionism. He studied at the School of Fine Arts in Quito, with stops in Venezuela, Peru, Bolivia, and in the United States at the San Francisco Art Institute. Eventually he received a chair at the same institute, was the director of Quito's Colonial Art Museum, and a owned private gallery also in Quito. While living in Quito, he became the protege of other famous Lojanos like writers Bejamin Carrion and Pablo Palacio. His lithographs, woodcuts, and paintings concentrated on the social realities of Ecuador's indigenous people. The artisit's deeply humanistic style captured the range of emotions from anguish, anger, and impotence in the face of injustice, to the quieter feelings of tenderness and devotion. As well as painting, Eduardo ...
ARTIST - Gabriela (Gaby) Jaramillo Soto (1997 - ) Studies plastic arts at Universidad Nacional de Loja (UNL). Recent exhibitions include "Mizizi" roots Samay Ayapash-soul and spirit (“MIZIZI” RAÍCES SAMAY AYAPASH- ALMA Y ESPÍRITU) and "Ancient Ancestral Art" (Arte Anígena Ancestral) in 2019. Artist quotes: "My art is indigenous-Ancestral and social cut. The proposal I'm finally developing is an ancestral tribute. All that hidden memory, which for some reason is lost, I rescue it. Every proposal becomes autobiographical. I've looked inside of me to find myself. That land is where I grew up and has its story." "I just know that I give the best of me that I give everything I can and I have, I fight, I effort, someday everything will be worth it." Ñawikuna (Faces) facebook.com/gaby.soto instagram.com/gabie
"Dance of the Duendes" from the 2017 exhibition "My Free Thought" ARTIST - Alívar Villamagua (1947 - ) 71-year-old Lojano Alívar Villamagua Montesinos is an internationally known talent who has been painting for 50 years. In an interview with the newspaper El Diaro Cronica, Villamagua said of his early interest in drawing and painting as an expression of his feelings, "My first sketches I did in school where I noticed simple things like watching a butterfly fly or observing the moon." After graduating in 1970 as a painter and sculptor from the Escuela de Fine Arts of the State University of Cuenca, Villamagua returned to Loja. He married, had a family, and founded the first school of fine arts in the province. He eventually became a professor and then director of the School of Fine Arts of at the National University of Loja. Known for producing highly expressive and dream-like images of his beloved local landscape and its inhabitants in p...
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