Emilio Sanchez (artist)
Emilio Sanchez  | |
|---|---|
| Born | Emilio Sánchez Fonts 1921 Camagüey, Cuba  | 
| Died | 1999 (aged 77–78) | 
| Nationality | Cuban, American | 
| Known for | Painting, Printmaking, Drawing | 
| Movement | American Modernist | 
| Awards | First Prize, 1974 San Juan Biennial (Puerto Rico) | 
| Website | Emilio Sanchez Foundation | 
Emilio Sanchez (1921–1999) was an American artist known for his architectural paintings and graphic lithographs. His work is held in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York NY), Museum of Modern Art (New York NY), National Gallery of Art (Washington DC), Smithsonian American Art Museum (Washington DC), Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes de La Habana (Havana, Cuba), Museo de Arte de Ponce (Ponce, Puerto Rico), Bogotá Museum of Modern Art (Bogotá, Colombia), La Tertulia Museum (Cali, Colombia), and the National Gallery of Australia (Canberra, Australia).
A representational artist with a modernist and, at times, abstract approach, Sanchez emphasized "pattern, color and strong lighting contrasts". By 1970, architectural themes, from detailed stained glass windows to abstracted storefronts or city skylines, dominated his oeuvre. Carol Damian of the Frost Art Museum (Miami, FL) described his work as studies in "horizontals and verticals, bold stripes of color, and the ever-present shadows, especially diagonal shadows that he so favored, with darks and lights in repetition." For her, Sanchez's work was "not a picture of something, but the application of pigment onto a flat surface to become a singular object to its own definition."