Lacy Duarte

Elvira Lacy Duarte Cardoso (15 September 1937 – 27 December 2015) was a Uruguayan visual artist.[1]

Lacy Duarte
Born
Elvira Lacy Duarte Cardoso

15 September 1937
DiedDecember 27, 2015(2015-12-27) (aged 78)
NationalityUruguayan
OccupationVisual artist
AwardsFigari Award

Biography

Elvira Lacy Duarte Cardoso was born in Mataojo, Salto Department in Uruguay on 15 September 1937 near the border with Brazil, a rural area that would come to characterize her artwork. In 1952, she moved to the City of Salto and two years later entered the Horacio Quiroga Association's Figari Workshop, where she attended classes with painters José Cziffery, himself trained in the Paris workshop of Henri Matisse,[2] and Ernesto Aroztegui.[3]

In 1959 Duarte married fellow painter Aldo Peralta and had two children, Pablo and Pedro, who both also became painters.[4] In 1962, this family moved to San Carlos in Maldonado Department where Duarte began teaching secondary education drawing classes and began to learn weaving. In 1975, the family fled from the civic-military dictatorship of Uruguay to Porto Alegre, Brazil, and left the Duarte Tapices tapestry workshop to local weavers. Aldo died in 1981, and Duarte returned Montevideo shortly thereafter and resumed painting. In 1986, she was selected to represent Uruguay at the 1987 Havana Biennial and her art would exhibit in the United States and Europe.[5][3]

In 1990, Duarte started a series of artwork that included paintings and objects such as wood carvings, bread crumbs, ragged bedspreads, the condition of women and their children in the countryside and people performing rural tasks (Farmers, hunters, trappers, etc.). This project, entitled Memoria y ritos en el espacio de la mujer campesina, referred to the differences Duarte observed between urban and rural Uruguayans. This series would exhibit at the Juan Manuel Blanes Museum in the Prado neighborhood of Montevideo, Rio Grande do Sul Museum of Art in Porto Alegre, Linda Moore Gallery in San Diego, California and at the biennials in Paris and Cuenca among other examples of Uruguayan art.[2]

In 2011, Duarte joined the National Visual Arts Commission of the Uruguayan Ministry of Education and Culture.[6]

In 2012, Duarte exhibited Pensado Campo: Recurrencias de Lacy Duarte at the Museo Figari and Tiempo y Tiempo at the Museo Gurvich, both in Montevideo.[7]

Lacy Duarte died in Montevideo, aged 78.[2]

Awards

In 2002, the Central Bank of Uruguay awarded Duarte the Figari Award, named in honor of Uruguayan painter Pedro Figari, in recognition of her career of art.[8]

In 2005, she represented Uruaguay at the Venice Biennale with an installation that "reflected the neat poverty" of the Uruguayan countryside.[5]

Citations

  1. "Tiempo y tiempo". La Diaria (in Spanish). 28 December 2015. Retrieved 28 December 2015.
  2. "Biografía de Lacy Duarte" (PDF). muva.elpais.com.uy (in Spanish). El País. Retrieved 26 January 2013.
  3. "Lacy Duarte". mnav,gub.uy (in Spanish). Museo Nacional de Artes Visuales. Retrieved 6 November 2017.
  4. Rodríguez Guglielmone, Malena (April 2010). "El arte en la sangre: Lacy Duarte y sus hijos, Pablo y Pedro Peralta". Revista Dossier (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 2013-04-21. Retrieved 4 February 2013.
  5. "Lacy Duarte en Venecia". La República (in Spanish). 16 July 2008. Retrieved 26 January 2013.
  6. "Comisión Nacional de Artes Visuales" (PDF). cultura.mec.gub.uy (in Spanish). Uruguayan Ministry of Education and Culture. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 28 December 2015.
  7. ""TIEMPO + TIEMPO" DE LACY DUARTE". fadu.edu.uy (in Spanish). Faculty of Architecture, University of the Uruguayan Republic. 10 July 2012. Retrieved 6 November 2017.
  8. "Pensado Campo: Recurrencias de Lacy Duarte". cultura.mec.gub.uy (in Spanish). Museo Figari. Archived from the original on 5 January 2016. Retrieved 26 January 2013.
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