Eduardo Rosales

Eduardo Rosales (1867); portrait by Federico de Madrazo

Eduardo Rosales Gallinas (4 November 1836, Madrid – 13 November 1873, Madrid) was a Spanish painter. He was an adherent of the Italian-based art movement known as "Purismo" and specialized in historical scenes.

Biography

He was the second son of a minor official and began his education in a private school operated by the Escolapios, later attending the Instituto de San Isidro. He was orphaned as a teenager and enrolled in the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando, where he studied under Federico de Madrazo in 1851.[1]

He accompanied some friends to Rome in 1857, without a fellowship or other financial support, until he received a special stipend from the government to continue his studies in 1861.[1] He joined a group of Spanish painters who gathered in the Antico Caffè Greco, which included José Casado del Alisal, Dióscoro Puebla and Marià Fortuny. There he began to associate with followers of the Nazarene movement, but soon abandoned his interest in them and produced his first important work "Tobías y el angel".

Doña Isabel the Catholic Dictating Her Will (1864)

However, he continued to be interested in developing a more realistic style, which was achieved in his masterpiece "Doña Isabel la Católica dictando su testamento". He took it to the International Exposition (1867) in Paris[1] and later returned to Rome, where he sent a telegram to his friends Martín Rico and Raimundo de Madrazo telling them that the painting had been an outstanding success; taking the First Gold Medal for work by a foreigner. He was also named a Chevalier in the Legion d'Honneur.[2]

Final years

He married his cousin Maximina in 1868. They had two children, one of whom, Eloisa, died in infancy and was memorialized in his painting "Primeros pasos" (First Steps). Rosales was in poor health himself, having had tuberculosis for many years, and made frequent visits to Panticosa in the Pyrenees, where the water was famous for its curative properties.[3] In 1869, he left Rome for good and opened a studio in Madrid. The harsh criticism he received for his work "La Muerte de Lucrecia" (1871) left him discouraged and he never painted another large-scale canvas.[3]

The following year, hoping to find a climate that would more amenable to his health, he moved to Murcia. Upon the declaration of the First Spanish Republic, he was offered positions at the Museo del Prado, which he rejected, and at the new Academia de España en Roma, which he accepted but never filled, due to his worsening condition. He died shortly thereafter.[3]

In 1922, Madrid honored him with a memorial statue, sculpted by Mateo Inurria and placed on a street named after him, the Paseo del Pintor Rosales.

Other selected paintings

References

  1. 1 2 3 Museo del Prado: Brief biography.
  2. Colleciones Artísticas: Brief biography.
  3. 1 2 3 EcuRed: Brief biography.

Further reading

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