Carlos Enríquez Gómez
Carlos Enríquez Gómez | |
|---|---|
Portrait of Enríquez, painted in 1926 by American expressionist artist Alice Neel, whom he married in 1925. | |
| Born | August 3, 1900 Zulueta, Cuba |
| Died | May 2, 1957 (aged 56) |
| Other names | Carlos Enríquez |
| Occupation(s) | Painter, illustrator, writer |
| Spouse | Alice Neel (m. 1925–1930; separated) |
Carlos Enríquez Gómez (August 3, 1900 – May 2, 1957), was a Cuban painter, illustrator and writer of the Vanguardia movement (the Cuban Avant-garde). Along with Víctor Manuel, Amelia Peláez, Fidelio Ponce, Antonio Gattorno, and other masters of this period, he was involved in one of the most fertile moments in Cuban culture. He is considered by critics to be one of the best, and most original, Cuban artists of the 20th century.
Enríquez strove to develop a genuinely Cuban style that, while fueled by surrealism and modernism, took inspiration from Cuba's landscapes, culture, social problems and way of living. He was also considered a rebel, and was often criticized for the allegedly explicit nature of his nudes, and for his bohemian lifestyle.