Eduardo Kingman

Eduardo Kingman Riofrío (February 23, 1913 – November 27, 1997) was an Ecuadorian artist.

He is considered one of Ecuador's greatest artists of the 20th century, among the art circles of other master artists such as Oswaldo Guayasamín and Camilo Egas.

Eduardo Kingman
Eduardo Kingman
Born
Eduardo Kingman Riofrío

February 23, 1913
Loja, Ecuador
DiedNovember 27, 1997 (1997-11-28) (aged 84)
Quito, Ecuador
NationalityEcuadorian
AwardsPremio Eugenio Espejo (1986)

Background

Kingman was born in Loja, Ecuador on February 23, 1913. His father, Edward Kingman, had moved to Ecuador from Newton, Connecticut. Kingman was the elder brother of journalist Nicolás Kingman Riofrío.

Kingman first studied at the Escuela de Bellas Artes, in Quito, under Victor Mideros. Further studies took him to Venezuela, Peru, Bolivia; and finally to the San Francisco Art Institute, California (from 1945 to 1946).[citation needed]

Art career

Eduardo Kingman 
Kingman Paintings

People from the United States first became acquainted with Kingman's art in 1939, when he assisted Camilo Egas with the paintings and decorations for the Ecuadorian Pavilion at the New York World's Fair.

For a period of twenty years, Eduardo Kingman held the post of principal professor at Quito's Escuela de Bellas Artes (School of Fine Arts) as well as Director of the Museo de Arte Colonial de Quito. In 1940, Kingman founded the Caspicara Gallery in Quito. At this time and later his original prints and paintings were exhibited internationally in such cities as Paris, Washington, D.C., San Francisco, Mexico City, Caracas and Bogotá. Near the end of his career, Kingman was honored with a one-man exhibition of his art at the United Nations, New York City.

Eduardo Kingman 
Los Guandos (1939), oil painting. MuNa, Quito.

The unifying theme of Kingman's paintings, lithographies and woodcuts in expressing the social realities of Ecuador's indigenous peoples. He was known as "the painter of hands."

Kingman was also active as a writer and social activist.

He died in Quito in 1998. Two of his paintings were stolen from the Posada de las Artes Kingman Museum in 2003 but were safely recovered.

Published works

  • Albornoz, Miguel and Eduardo Kingman. Orellana: El Caballero de las Amazonas. Editorial Herrero (1965). ASIN B001FCLO4I.
  • Icaza, Jorge, author. Kingman, Eduardo, illustrator. Huairapamushcas. Quito : Casa de la Cultura Ecuatoriana, 1948.
  • El Choclo the Corn

See also

References

Tags:

Eduardo Kingman BackgroundEduardo Kingman Art careerEduardo Kingman Published worksEduardo KingmanCamilo EgasEcuadorOswaldo Guayasamín

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Hunter SchaferTenerife airport disasterRashida JonesTyla (South African singer)Messier 87GoogleGriselda BlancoSocial mediaTitanicJennifer LopezYG MarleyPorno y heladoIslamic State – Khorasan ProvinceTruman CapoteRoyal Challengers BangaloreYodha (2024 film)CleopatraCrucifixion of JesusBrian Cox (actor)Edward VIIIBenjamin NetanyahuMarylandRed heiferMiley CyrusWhatsAppOne Day (TV series)Elizabeth IIHouse of the DragonVon Erich familyLewis HamiltonLondonKendrick LamarViralRebecca FergusonThe First OmenIslamic StateUnited Arab EmiratesCrew (film)MoonFrance national football teamDamsel (2024 film)2026 FIFA World Cup qualificationMosesThe Gentlemen (2019 film)Joe BidenArgentinaKim Sae-ronTeri Baaton Mein Aisa Uljha JiyaPiyush ChawlaThe Dark ForestComstock lawsYouTubeBarack Obama1999 F-117A shootdownTed BundyDrag Me to HellJim CarreyLara LoganLee GreenwoodZach HymanRuth KearneyRichard RamirezRobert De NiroRoad House (1989 film)Russell SimmonsJesusHenry CavillGoogle MapsCharles IIIBlessyHeath LedgerSolar eclipse of April 8, 2024Jimmy CarterLisa (rapper)Ninja (gamer)List of presidents of the United StatesNatalie PortmanBrittany SnowPat Kelsey🡆 More