About: Eolo Pons

An Entity of Type: person, from Named Graph: http://dbpedia.org, within Data Space: dbpedia.org

Eolo Pons (1914–2009) was an Argentine painter. Eolo Pons was born in Buenos Aires. He studied from 1935-38 in the studio of the influential Argentine painter and teacher Lino Enea Spilimbergo; among Pons' fellow students were his close friends figurative painters Leopoldo Presas (b. 1915) and (1911–1995). Subsequently, Eolo Pons worked in the printmaking studio of Surrealist graphic artists (1900–1960), Juan Batlle Planas (1911–1966) and (1900–1977). He died in Buenos Aires on October 28, 2009.

Property Value
dbo:abstract
  • Eolo Pons (1914–2009) was an Argentine painter. Eolo Pons was born in Buenos Aires. He studied from 1935-38 in the studio of the influential Argentine painter and teacher Lino Enea Spilimbergo; among Pons' fellow students were his close friends figurative painters Leopoldo Presas (b. 1915) and (1911–1995). Subsequently, Eolo Pons worked in the printmaking studio of Surrealist graphic artists (1900–1960), Juan Batlle Planas (1911–1966) and (1900–1977). Eolo Pons' work is sometimes associated with that of his philosophical mentor (1887–1965), a native of Uruguay who was known for his writings on art and aesthetics and for his small paintings of Misiones Province landscapes. From 1958-1964, together with indigenous painter (1906–1976), (1914–1965), and , Eolo Pons established and taught at the Provincial Fine Arts School of Jujuy, in the Andean northwest of Argentina. Tightly structured with carefully orchestrated color, Eolo Pons' landscapes, cityscapes and figurative works evoke, rather than describe, the nature and culture of his native Argentina. Eolo Pons' paintings and drawings retain the influence of Surrealism."Long ago in the year 1939, Eolo Pons introduced himself into the surrealist garden with the same discipline and respect he had given his academic training. The surrealism of Pons made incursions into the world of dreams, into the Freudian subconscious, being there he delved deeply into all the nooks and crannies of its purest orthodoxy. But afterwards these sub-real images remained in the background ignored because the artist chose not to borrow his fantasies from others. Still, the exercise that had driven Pons to excavate the mysterious served him in seeking out the soul of things, smoothing the way for him, by virtue of his technical resources and his never-abused and never-forgotten manual education. This man, who had spent time in the stillness and in the depths, knew that not all mystery is a dream. And thus, he set himself to look for that which hides in the landscape, that which floats in the unbounded atmosphere of a happy day, that which slips between words in order not to state aloud an intention or a sentiment. In the landscapes of Eolo Pons, and in his figures, come and go the evocation of a mystery—a mystery that, perhaps, opens to us the doors of the landscape and brings us into the souls of the people. The sure thing is that we see it and feel it, as we see and feel the night in its most profound silence, as we see and feel the advance of a shadow as it crosses the path of a dream." – Rodrigo Bonome, Eolo Pons, Buenos Aires, 1973 (translated from the original Spanish). He died in Buenos Aires on October 28, 2009. (en)
  • Eolo Pons (Buenos Aires, 1914-2009) es pintor argentino. Estudió en la Academia Nacional de Bellas Artes “Manuel Belgrano”. A partir de 1935, Eolo Pons estudió, junto con otros alumnos incluyendo: Leopoldo Presas, Luis Lusnich, Alberto Altalef, Andrés Calabrese, Antonio D'Amato, y Bruno Venier, en el Instituto Argentino de Artes Gráficas bajo la dirección del maestro Lino Enea Spilimbergo. Frecuentó el taller de José Planas Casas y Juan Batlle Planas, y el del grabador Pompeyo Audivert. Fue discípulo y amigo del pintor Carlos Giambiagi. Desde 1958 a 1964 fue profesor de dibujo y pintura en la Escuela Provincial de Artes Plásticas de Jujuy, de la cual fue, junto con Medardo Pantoja y Jorge Gnecco, uno de sus fundadores. Expuso en salones provinciales y nacionales y en más que 250 exposiciones en galerías privadas e institucionales. En 1992, realizó una muestra retrospectiva en las Salas Nacionales (Palais de Glace) en Buenos Aires. Obras de Eolo Pons se encuentran en numerosas instituciones culturales y museos de Perú y de la Argentina y en colecciones privadas del país y del exterior. Sus paisajes del norte del país y de la ciudad de Buenos Aires mantienen las huellas del surrealismo argentino. “Hay algo que no hemos de soslayar y que se hace evidente en la trayectoria plástica de Eolo Pons y ese algo alude al elemento humano que aparece en su obra no como simple referencia sino como un hecho inevitable. El hombre y el paisaje configuran los dos extremos de una perfecta armonía. Entre una punta y la otra, está la subjetividad que es producto de su rara sensibilidad de pintor.” -- Rodrigo Bonome, “Eolo Pons”, Buenos Aires, 23 de octubre de 1973. . (es)
dbo:thumbnail
dbo:wikiPageID
  • 8841276 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageLength
  • 4118 (xsd:nonNegativeInteger)
dbo:wikiPageRevisionID
  • 1089082874 (xsd:integer)
dbo:wikiPageWikiLink
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
dcterms:subject
gold:hypernym
rdf:type
rdfs:comment
  • Eolo Pons (Buenos Aires, 1914-2009) es pintor argentino. Estudió en la Academia Nacional de Bellas Artes “Manuel Belgrano”. A partir de 1935, Eolo Pons estudió, junto con otros alumnos incluyendo: Leopoldo Presas, Luis Lusnich, Alberto Altalef, Andrés Calabrese, Antonio D'Amato, y Bruno Venier, en el Instituto Argentino de Artes Gráficas bajo la dirección del maestro Lino Enea Spilimbergo. Frecuentó el taller de José Planas Casas y Juan Batlle Planas, y el del grabador Pompeyo Audivert. Fue discípulo y amigo del pintor Carlos Giambiagi. . (es)
  • Eolo Pons (1914–2009) was an Argentine painter. Eolo Pons was born in Buenos Aires. He studied from 1935-38 in the studio of the influential Argentine painter and teacher Lino Enea Spilimbergo; among Pons' fellow students were his close friends figurative painters Leopoldo Presas (b. 1915) and (1911–1995). Subsequently, Eolo Pons worked in the printmaking studio of Surrealist graphic artists (1900–1960), Juan Batlle Planas (1911–1966) and (1900–1977). He died in Buenos Aires on October 28, 2009. (en)
rdfs:label
  • Eolo Pons (es)
  • Eolo Pons (en)
owl:sameAs
prov:wasDerivedFrom
foaf:depiction
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
is dbo:wikiPageRedirects of
is dbo:wikiPageWikiLink of
is foaf:primaryTopic of
Powered by OpenLink Virtuoso    This material is Open Knowledge     W3C Semantic Web Technology     This material is Open Knowledge    Valid XHTML + RDFa
This content was extracted from Wikipedia and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License