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‪My take on one of my favorite artists, Angel Botello. Mine is called Botello's Menagerie. #Abstractfigure #figurativeart #animalart #catart #birdart #procreateillustration
#EastCoastKin #botello #dailyart #art #procreateart #painting #drawing #artchallenge #artprompt #orangesun #color

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Made sometime between 1940 and 1950, this portrait fits the period after Spanish artist Ángel Botello-Barros, born in Galicia, left Spain amid the upheavals of the Civil War and began working in the Caribbean. He wrote of his desire to “paint the tropics.” He was drawn to its light and saturated color, and he often returned to the human figure as his main subject.

This almost square oil painting presents the face of a young unidentified Black woman. Her head turns and dips slightly forward, suggesting quiet concentration rather as her narrow eyes focus on something out of frame to our right. Her mouth is closed, with full lips in a muted brick red. Warm ochres and coppery highlights model her deep brown skin across the cheekbones and nose, while shadowed planes define the jaw and temples. Long, straight, shoulder-length dark hair falls in a smooth, graphic mass that frames her face and lengthened neck. Only a hint of clothing appears: a pale lavender top with a dark, curved neckline. Behind her, cool blue and violet strokes form an atmospheric field that is softly brushed so attention stays on her expression and silhouette. Botello favors bold contour lines, simplified geometry, and flattened color over fine detail. The reduction feels deliberate and intimate while subtle shifts from teal to purple around her shoulders create a quiet halo effect.

The lowered gaze and measured planes convey dignity and interiority, even as the modernist flattening edges toward type. With the sitter unnamed, the painting asks us to be alert to the power dynamics of looking as admiration can coexist with exoticizing fantasy. Reading it with care means holding both truths while keeping the subject’s calm self-possession at the center.

Made sometime between 1940 and 1950, this portrait fits the period after Spanish artist Ángel Botello-Barros, born in Galicia, left Spain amid the upheavals of the Civil War and began working in the Caribbean. He wrote of his desire to “paint the tropics.” He was drawn to its light and saturated color, and he often returned to the human figure as his main subject. This almost square oil painting presents the face of a young unidentified Black woman. Her head turns and dips slightly forward, suggesting quiet concentration rather as her narrow eyes focus on something out of frame to our right. Her mouth is closed, with full lips in a muted brick red. Warm ochres and coppery highlights model her deep brown skin across the cheekbones and nose, while shadowed planes define the jaw and temples. Long, straight, shoulder-length dark hair falls in a smooth, graphic mass that frames her face and lengthened neck. Only a hint of clothing appears: a pale lavender top with a dark, curved neckline. Behind her, cool blue and violet strokes form an atmospheric field that is softly brushed so attention stays on her expression and silhouette. Botello favors bold contour lines, simplified geometry, and flattened color over fine detail. The reduction feels deliberate and intimate while subtle shifts from teal to purple around her shoulders create a quiet halo effect. The lowered gaze and measured planes convey dignity and interiority, even as the modernist flattening edges toward type. With the sitter unnamed, the painting asks us to be alert to the power dynamics of looking as admiration can coexist with exoticizing fantasy. Reading it with care means holding both truths while keeping the subject’s calm self-possession at the center.

“Mujer haitiana (Haitian woman)” by Ángel Botello-Barros (Spanish) - Oil on wood / 1940s - Museo de Arte de Puerto Rico (San Juan, Puerto Rico) #WomenInArt #MAPR #ÁngelBotelloBarros #AngelBotelloBarros #Botello #PortraitofaWoman #HaitiArt #art #artText #arte #MuseoDeArteDePuertoRico #RetratoDeMujer

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Original post on centraldoprog.blogspot.com

José Luis Fernández Ledesma Q., Margarita Botello – Sol Central (2000, CD, Mexico) Tracklist: Sol Central (35:45) 1 Datura Inoxia 2 Amnesia 3 El Avatar 4 Por Los Cuatro Costados 5 La Gran Feria...

#avant #prog #José #Luis #Fernández #Ledesma […]

[Original post on centraldoprog.blogspot.com]

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