Ecuador Contemporary art
Oswaldo Guayasamín is an Ecuadorian painter, muralist and sculptor.
Oswaldo's father was an Indian, and the family was very poor, but the future artist was educated at the School of Fine Arts of Quito. Soon, literally in two years, he created a cycle of 103 paintings dedicated to the life of oppressed Indians in Latin America. Oswaldo Guayasamin also painted portraits of famous contemporaries, including Fidel Castro, whom he admired. He also created murals, frescoes, landscapes, and symbolic images.
The artist's works were exhibited in Paris, Moscow and in Leningrad, among other cities around the world, with amazing success. In 1957, at the Fourth Biennial in São Paulo, he was named the best South American artist.
Guayasamin was also a passionate collector. In 1978, the then famous artist donated to the State of Ecuador some 500 colonial paintings and sculptures, pre-Columbian archaeological sites, Goya and Picasso paintings that he had collected.
Judith Gutiérrez Moscoso was an Ecuadorian painter who lived and worked in Ecuador and Mexico. Along with other female artists, she formed part of the Guayaquil School for Contemporary Plastic Arts (Escuela de Guayaquil en las Artes Plásticas Contemporáneas) and was active in militant groups such as the Union of the Women of Guayas (Unión de Mujeres del Guayas), a precursor to Ecuadorian feminist organizations.
Luis Potosi, full name Luis Aníbal Potosí Suárez, is a modernist sculptor from Ecuador known for his abstract carved wood sculptures.
Potosí studied at the Daniel Reyes Institute of Fine Arts, where he honed his knowledge of art and specialized in sculpture. He graduated in 1957 and founded his own studio school, where he taught more than a hundred craftsmen.
The sculptor's work has gained a place in the cultural sphere of Ecuadorian society, contributing to the development and promotion of tourism in the country. Luis Potosi has exhibited in various cities in America and Europe.