- Lorenzo Homar
Lorenzo Homar (
10 September ,1913 -16 February ,2004 ), is considered by many to be Puerto Rico's greatest graphicartist .Early years
Homar, born in the "
Barrio " Puerta de Tierra ofSan Juan, Puerto Rico , inherited his love for the arts from both of his parents. His father was an arts promoter and his mother a pianist. He went to grammar school in San Juan. At a young age he moved with his family toNew York . Because of the financial situation of his family, Homar quit high school and went to work for a textile factory. In 1931, he attended theStudents Art League where he learned the art of drawing under the guidance ofGeorge Brant Bridgeman .Homar joined the jeweler House of Cartier in 1936 in New York as an apprentice designer. This was of great significance for his artistic development because during this time he studied engraving, drawing and history of design in a traditional workshop system. Furthermore, income from his position at Cartier allowed Homar to take night classes in painting, design and typography at
Pratt Institute .World War II
When the
United States enteredWorld War II , Homar joined the Army. He saw action in thePhilippines where he was wounded and for which he received thePurple Heart . Homar continued to broaden his skills during the War, in which he served in an Army Intelligence Unit. He developed a talent for cartography working for the Second Amphibious Combat Engineers Brigade, and published military sketches in numerous American journals. When he returned from the war, he enrolled in the School of theBrooklyn Museum of Art in 1946. While there, he was able to meet and learn from such artists asBen Shahn ,Rufino Tamayo and Gabor Peterdi.Early Career in Puerto Rico
Homar returned to Puerto Rico in 1950, where together with other artists, such as
Rafael Tufiño ,Julio Rosado del Valle andRene Marques , was the co-founder of the "Centro de Arte Puertorriqueño " (Puerto Rican Arts Center, or CAP). He was later named the director of the Graphics Studio of the Graphic Art Division of Puerto Rico's Department of Community Education (DivEdCo). This is when he created most of his greatest works of art. Homar designed the logo of the "Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña " (Institute of Puerto Rican Culture ) known as the ICP, and he also established the Institute's Graphic Arts Workshop. During the decade of the 1960s Homar began to show his growing mastery of the techniques of graphic printmaking, particularly in silkscreen. In 1975, he established his own printing studio, and among his many works are the posters he designed in 1979, for the VIII Pan American Games.The admiration that Homar felt for the masters of the graphic arts led him to distinguish himself as a designer of multiple works of art. His posters, drawings and graphics elevated Puerto Rican graphic arts to a new level of worldwide admiration.
Honors and recognitions
Among the honors and recognitions that Homar received were the exhibition of his works in the
Ponce Museum of Art in 1979. TheMetropolitan Museum of Art purchased some of his works. TheUniversity of Puerto Rico proclaimed him a Doctorate "Honoris Causa" and the Puerto Rican Institute of Culture presented him with the National Medal of Honor in 2003.Lorenzo Homar died in the city of San Juan, Puerto Rico. He was cremated and his ashes were scattered in the sea. He was survived by his wife Dorothy, two daughters, Susan and Laura, and four grandchildren.
ee also
*
List of famous Puerto Ricans References
* [http://www.nyu.edu/calabash/vol1no2/Espana%20inmortal.pdf] Brown, Michael A., "España inmortal: Lorenzo Homar's Prints for Cultural Institutions in Puerto Rico," in Calabash: A Journal of Caribbean Arts and Letters (2001).
*Tio, Teresa, "El Cartel: Arma de resistencia cultural," in Puerto Rico: Arte e Identidad (San Juan: UPR Press, 1998), pp. 213-256.External links
* [http://diglib.princeton.edu/xquery?_xq=getCollection&_xsl=collection&_pid=gc151-homar The Lorenzo Homar Collection at Princeton University]
* [http://www.zonai.com/promociones/biografias/0901/index.asp El Nuevo Dia]
* [http://www.puertoricanposters.com/artists/2 Examples of Homar's work]
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