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{{Short description|Dominican Republic painter, sculptor, and educator (1861–1940)}}
[[File:Desangles-Selfportrait.jpg|thumb|215px|Self-portrait (1900)]]
{{Ibid|date=December 2023}}
[[File:Desangles-Duarte.jpg|thumb|315px|Juan Pablo Duarte Contemplating the Birth of the Republic]]
{{Infobox person
'''Luis Desangles Lubiles''', known as "'''Sisito'''" (8 February 1861, [[Santo Domingo]] - 13 April 1940, [[Santiago de Cuba]]) was a Dominican painter who specialized in portraits and patriotic scenes. He is also credited with introducing the [[Costumbrista]] style there and created several church murals.
| name = Luis Desangles Lubiles
| image = Luis Desangles photo.jpg
| imagesize =
| alt =
| caption =
| birth_name = Luis Desangles Lubiles
| birth_date = 8 February 1861
| birth_place = [[Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic]]
| death_date = 13 April 1940
| death_place = [[Santiago de Cuba, Cuba]]
| othername =
| occupation = painter, educator, sculptor
}}


'''Luis Desangles Lubiles''' (8 February 1861 – 13 April 1940) was a [[Dominican Republic|Dominican]] painter, sculptor, and educator born in Santo Domingo, [[Dominican Republic]]. Instructor to many of the great native artists of the era, Desangles is remembered as one of the forerunners of Dominican national art and initiators of the country's [[Costumbrista|c''ostumbrismo'']] style.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|title=Luis Desangles, Sisito (1861-1940)|url=https://www.museobellapart.com/obras/luis%20desangles.pdf|website=Museo Bellapart}}</ref>
==Biography==
His father Pedro (Pierre) came from France. He initially studied art with a local painter named León Cordero. After Cordero's death in 1874, aged barely sixteen, he travelled to Italy to complete his studies. In 1883, he opened his first workshop in Santo Domingo.<ref>[https://dominicancult.blogspot.com/2018/08/luis-desangles-primer-maestro-de-pintura-dominicana.html Biographical notes] @ Dominican Art Blog.</ref>


His artistic subjects range from portraits, pictorial daily life, religious iconography, historical depictions, naturalist landscapes, and still life. Many of his portraits are of influential political figures, such as [[Juan Pablo Duarte]], [[Buenaventura Báez|Buenaventura Báez Méndez]], [[Matías Ramón Mella]], [[Francisco del Rosario Sánchez]], [[Gregorio Luperón]], [[Ulises Francisco Espaillat]], and [[Eugenio María de Hostos]]. He is also credited for painting many religious paintings and murals in cathedrals throughout [[Cuba]], such as in [[Cathedral Basilica of Our Lady of the Assumption, Santiago de Cuba|Santiago de Cuba Cathedral]] and the Cathedral of San Salvador in [[Bayamo]].<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1">Patrimonio Cultural Santiago de Cuba. “ Obras plásticas de los artistas dominicanos, Luis Desangles Sebillí y Carlos Ramírez Guerra”. Youtube video. Aug 22, 2021.https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=UVR66UpeCts&t=91s</ref>
Banished by [[Ulises Heureaux]], he first went to Puerto Rico, where he befriended [[Eugenio María de Hostos]], then to the United States, where he made the acquaintance of the exiled [[José Martí]].<ref name="E">[https://www.ecured.cu/Luis_Desangles_Lubiles Biography] @ EcuRed.</ref> He returned home in 1904, but was there only briefly before being appointed [[Consul]] for Santiago de Cuba by President [[ Carlos Morales Languasco|Carlos Morales]].


In 1893, dictator [[Ulises Heureaux|Ulises Hereaux]] deemed Desangles a [[Conspiracy|conspirator]] and exiled him from the country after his students painted public works of the leader hanged.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":2">Danilo de los Santos. Memoria de la Pintura Dominicana. (Colección Centenario Grupo León Jimenes) 8v: il. Grupo León Jimenes. Santo Domingo, 2003. pg 180</ref> His travels after exile led him to [[Puerto Rico]], [[New York City]], and [[Cuba]].<ref name=":0" /> Some of the most recognizable names that studied under Desangles include [[Abelardo Rodríguez Urdaneta]], [[Ramón Frade]], [[Arturo Grullón]], [[Leopoldo Navarro (painter)|Leopoldo Navarro]], Adolfo García Obregón, Manuel María Sanabia, Arquímedes de la Concha, Carlos Ramírez Guerra, and Francisco González Lamarche.<ref name=":0" /><ref>Danilo de los Santos. Memoria de la Pintura Dominicana. (Colección Centenario Grupo León Jimenes) 8v: il. Grupo León Jimenes. Santo Domingo, 2003. pg 177</ref>
He would live in Cuba for the rest of his life and it became his second homeland. In 1912, he was appointed Director of the "Escuela Superior de Varones de San Cristóbal" (a boys' school) and later taught at the "Academia Municipal de Bellas Artes".<ref name="E" /> In 1935, he was appointed Honorary Director of the "Escuela Provincial de Artes Plásticas de Santiago de Cuba" (now the "Escuela Provincial de Artes Plásticas [[José Joaquín Tejada]]")


In 1912, he was appointed director of the Municipal Academy of Fine Arts in [[San Cristóbal, Cuba|San Cristóbal]] and in 1935 he became Head of the Provincial School of Painting in [[Santiago de Cuba]].<ref name=":1" /> In 1940, Desangles died due to complications from [[diabetes]] at the age of 79. In October 2018, a major retrospective of his work was presented at the [[Museo Bellapart]] in Santo Domingo.<ref>[https://listindiario.com/la-vida/2018/10/04/535894/luis-desangles-su-vida-y-su-obra Listin Diario]</ref>
He created numerous portraits of famous political figures, posthumously and from life, including [[Juan Pablo Duarte]], [[Buenaventura Báez Méndez]], [[Matías Ramón Mella]], [[Ulises Francisco Espaillat]], [[Francisco del Rosario Sánchez]] and [[Gregorio Luperón]].<ref name ="E" /> Several well-known artists were among his students; notably [[Abelardo Rodríguez Urdaneta]] and [[Ramón Frade]].


==Early life==
In October 2018, a major retrospective of his work was presented at the [[Museo Bellapart]] in Santo Domingo.<ref>[https://listindiario.com/la-vida/2018/10/04/535894/luis-desangles-su-vida-y-su-obra Listin Diario]</ref>
Luis Desangles was born on 8 February 1861 in Santo Domingo to Juan Pedro Desangles, a native of the [[Pyrenees]] region in [[France]] living in the country since the 1830s and Teresa Sibilly, who was born in [[Curaçao]] to [[French people|French]] parents, with whom he had four children: Epifanio (1858), Luis (1861), Pedro Nicolás (1863) and María Ana (1865).<ref>^ Ibid. pg 206</ref> Desangles was born in the same year in which Dominican conservatives [[Spanish occupation of the Dominican Republic|annexed]] the country to [[Spain]]. As a child he showed a fondness for painting which his father encouraged, enrolling him in art classes with Leon Cordero, a Spanish painter living in the country, from 1870-1874, until Cordero died in 1874.<ref name=":0" />

He married Altagracia Vallejo in 1882, who modeled for several portraits, and together they would go on to have seven children: Constancia Mercedes (b. 1883), María Luisa (b. 1885), Juan Pedro (b. 1886), María Altagracia (b. 1888), Ana Teresa (b. 1889), Luis Rafael (b. 1890) and Julio Alfredo (b. 1893).<ref name=":3">^ Ibid. pg 209</ref> Those who treated Luis Desangles familiarly called him Sisito.

In 1883 he opened an art workshop in Santo Domingo, Casa-Taller, on Padre Billini street, where he instructed many of the great names that go on to define the early era of art in the country.<ref name=":3" /> In short time, Desangles’s workshop became a cultural epicenter of the city where intellectuals like [[Eugenio María de Hostos|Eugenio Maria de Hostos]], [[Francisco Henríquez y Carvajal]], Américo Lugo, [[José Rufino Reyes y Siancas|José Rufino Reyes]], and [[Emilio Prud'Homme]] gathered. His house-workshop became an environment of learning and bohemian artistic encounters. Artists and intellectuals often met there.<ref name=":3" />

Desangles worked as a teacher of various disciplines: in addition to teaching art, he gave musical instruction as a musician with command of various instruments; he established a gymnasium where he taught exercise classes; and he’s remembered as one of the first collectors of pre-Hispanic objects, colonial antiquities and works of art of his time.<ref name=":3" />

==Exile==

In 1893, some students of Desangles who were strongly opposed to Heureaux conceived of making several paintings depicting the dictator hanged.<ref name=":2" /> The paintings were made and sprang up in different public places. Heureaux’s investigation eventually led him to the well-founded suspicion that the paintings came from the workshop of Desangles, which produced immediate consequences. The first was the [[Expatriate|expatriation]] of Desangles, who was given 24 hours to leave the Republic. The second consequence was the closure of the painter's studio-school, of the home space as a place for cultural gatherings, and the closure of the Municipal School that he directed. The third consequence was the planned execution of Arquímedes de la Concha, who was later sparred.<ref name=":2" /> The general archive of the nation houses the official act by which the dictator expels him from the country as a “conspirator”. Desangles goes into exile in [[Ponce, Puerto Rico|Ponce]], Puerto Rico, where he participates in the exhibition of the Fourth Centennial of the Discovery of the Island. He obtains the first prize with Caonabo.<ref name=":2" />

Desangles traveled to the United States as well, where he made the acquaintance of [[José Martí]]. He returned to his native country in 1904, but was there only briefly before being appointed [[Consul (representative)|Consul]] for Santiago de Cuba by President [[ Carlos Morales Languasco|Carlos Morales]].{{citation needed|date=August 2022}}

==Cuba==
Desangles had his most prolific artistic production in Cuba. He carries out notable works such as the Mural of the Cathedral of San Salvador, in the Province of Bayamo, and ten paintings of biblical matters, located in the same ecclesiastical enclosure. The cathedral mural is titled The Oath of the Flag, measuring 850 x 450 centi- It was commissioned in 1918 by the Archbishop of Santiago de Cuba, Monsignor Félix Ambrosio Guerra y Guerra, to be placed inside the main parish of Bayamo.<ref name=":1" />

He would live in Cuba for the rest of his life and it became his second homeland. In 1912, he was appointed Director of the "Escuela Superior de Varones de San Cristóbal" (a boys' school) and later taught at the "Academia Municipal de Bellas Artes".{{citation needed|date=August 2022}} In 1935, he was appointed Honorary Director of the "Escuela Provincial de Artes Plásticas de Santiago de Cuba" (now the "Escuela Provincial de Artes Plásticas [[José Joaquín Tejada]]").<ref name=":1" />

==Gallery==
<gallery widths="200px" heights="200px" perrow="6">
File:Desangles Colon engrillado.jpg|Colon engrillado. Luis Desangles without date.
File:Desangles-Woss.png|Desangles-Woss
File:Desangles-Selfportrait.jpg|Self-portrait (1900)
File:Desangles naturaleza muerta.jpg|Luis Desangles. Naturaleza Muerta. Date unknown
File:Desangles Las Mendigas.jpg|Luis Desangles. Lad Mendigas. Date unknown
File:Desangles-Duarte.jpg|Juan Pablo Duarte Contemplating the Birth of the Republic
</gallery>


==References==
==References==
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==External links==
==External links==
{{commonscat inline|Luis Desangles}}
* {{commonscat inline|Luis Desangles}}


{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}
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[[Category:1940 deaths]]
[[Category:1940 deaths]]
[[Category:Dominican Republic portrait painters]]
[[Category:Dominican Republic portrait painters]]
[[Category:19th-century Dominican Republic artists]]
[[Category:20th-century Dominican Republic artists]]
[[Category:20th-century Dominican Republic painters]]
[[Category:Male painters]]
[[Category:Immigrants to Cuba]]
[[Category:Immigrants to Cuba]]
[[Category:People from Santo Domingo]]
[[Category:Artists from Santo Domingo]]
[[Category:Dominican Republic people of French descent]]
[[Category:White Dominicans]]

Latest revision as of 19:05, 20 December 2023

Luis Desangles Lubiles
Born
Luis Desangles Lubiles

8 February 1861
Died13 April 1940
Occupation(s)painter, educator, sculptor

Luis Desangles Lubiles (8 February 1861 – 13 April 1940) was a Dominican painter, sculptor, and educator born in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. Instructor to many of the great native artists of the era, Desangles is remembered as one of the forerunners of Dominican national art and initiators of the country's costumbrismo style.[1]

His artistic subjects range from portraits, pictorial daily life, religious iconography, historical depictions, naturalist landscapes, and still life. Many of his portraits are of influential political figures, such as Juan Pablo Duarte, Buenaventura Báez Méndez, Matías Ramón Mella, Francisco del Rosario Sánchez, Gregorio Luperón, Ulises Francisco Espaillat, and Eugenio María de Hostos. He is also credited for painting many religious paintings and murals in cathedrals throughout Cuba, such as in Santiago de Cuba Cathedral and the Cathedral of San Salvador in Bayamo.[1][2]

In 1893, dictator Ulises Hereaux deemed Desangles a conspirator and exiled him from the country after his students painted public works of the leader hanged.[1][3] His travels after exile led him to Puerto Rico, New York City, and Cuba.[1] Some of the most recognizable names that studied under Desangles include Abelardo Rodríguez Urdaneta, Ramón Frade, Arturo Grullón, Leopoldo Navarro, Adolfo García Obregón, Manuel María Sanabia, Arquímedes de la Concha, Carlos Ramírez Guerra, and Francisco González Lamarche.[1][4]

In 1912, he was appointed director of the Municipal Academy of Fine Arts in San Cristóbal and in 1935 he became Head of the Provincial School of Painting in Santiago de Cuba.[2] In 1940, Desangles died due to complications from diabetes at the age of 79. In October 2018, a major retrospective of his work was presented at the Museo Bellapart in Santo Domingo.[5]

Early life

[edit]

Luis Desangles was born on 8 February 1861 in Santo Domingo to Juan Pedro Desangles, a native of the Pyrenees region in France living in the country since the 1830s and Teresa Sibilly, who was born in Curaçao to French parents, with whom he had four children: Epifanio (1858), Luis (1861), Pedro Nicolás (1863) and María Ana (1865).[6] Desangles was born in the same year in which Dominican conservatives annexed the country to Spain. As a child he showed a fondness for painting which his father encouraged, enrolling him in art classes with Leon Cordero, a Spanish painter living in the country, from 1870-1874, until Cordero died in 1874.[1]

He married Altagracia Vallejo in 1882, who modeled for several portraits, and together they would go on to have seven children: Constancia Mercedes (b. 1883), María Luisa (b. 1885), Juan Pedro (b. 1886), María Altagracia (b. 1888), Ana Teresa (b. 1889), Luis Rafael (b. 1890) and Julio Alfredo (b. 1893).[7] Those who treated Luis Desangles familiarly called him Sisito.

In 1883 he opened an art workshop in Santo Domingo, Casa-Taller, on Padre Billini street, where he instructed many of the great names that go on to define the early era of art in the country.[7] In short time, Desangles’s workshop became a cultural epicenter of the city where intellectuals like Eugenio Maria de Hostos, Francisco Henríquez y Carvajal, Américo Lugo, José Rufino Reyes, and Emilio Prud'Homme gathered. His house-workshop became an environment of learning and bohemian artistic encounters. Artists and intellectuals often met there.[7]

Desangles worked as a teacher of various disciplines: in addition to teaching art, he gave musical instruction as a musician with command of various instruments; he established a gymnasium where he taught exercise classes; and he’s remembered as one of the first collectors of pre-Hispanic objects, colonial antiquities and works of art of his time.[7]

Exile

[edit]

In 1893, some students of Desangles who were strongly opposed to Heureaux conceived of making several paintings depicting the dictator hanged.[3] The paintings were made and sprang up in different public places. Heureaux’s investigation eventually led him to the well-founded suspicion that the paintings came from the workshop of Desangles, which produced immediate consequences. The first was the expatriation of Desangles, who was given 24 hours to leave the Republic. The second consequence was the closure of the painter's studio-school, of the home space as a place for cultural gatherings, and the closure of the Municipal School that he directed. The third consequence was the planned execution of Arquímedes de la Concha, who was later sparred.[3] The general archive of the nation houses the official act by which the dictator expels him from the country as a “conspirator”. Desangles goes into exile in Ponce, Puerto Rico, where he participates in the exhibition of the Fourth Centennial of the Discovery of the Island. He obtains the first prize with Caonabo.[3]

Desangles traveled to the United States as well, where he made the acquaintance of José Martí. He returned to his native country in 1904, but was there only briefly before being appointed Consul for Santiago de Cuba by President Carlos Morales.[citation needed]

Cuba

[edit]

Desangles had his most prolific artistic production in Cuba. He carries out notable works such as the Mural of the Cathedral of San Salvador, in the Province of Bayamo, and ten paintings of biblical matters, located in the same ecclesiastical enclosure. The cathedral mural is titled The Oath of the Flag, measuring 850 x 450 centi- It was commissioned in 1918 by the Archbishop of Santiago de Cuba, Monsignor Félix Ambrosio Guerra y Guerra, to be placed inside the main parish of Bayamo.[2]

He would live in Cuba for the rest of his life and it became his second homeland. In 1912, he was appointed Director of the "Escuela Superior de Varones de San Cristóbal" (a boys' school) and later taught at the "Academia Municipal de Bellas Artes".[citation needed] In 1935, he was appointed Honorary Director of the "Escuela Provincial de Artes Plásticas de Santiago de Cuba" (now the "Escuela Provincial de Artes Plásticas José Joaquín Tejada").[2]

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f "Luis Desangles, Sisito (1861-1940)" (PDF). Museo Bellapart.
  2. ^ a b c d Patrimonio Cultural Santiago de Cuba. “ Obras plásticas de los artistas dominicanos, Luis Desangles Sebillí y Carlos Ramírez Guerra”. Youtube video. Aug 22, 2021.https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=UVR66UpeCts&t=91s
  3. ^ a b c d Danilo de los Santos. Memoria de la Pintura Dominicana. (Colección Centenario Grupo León Jimenes) 8v: il. Grupo León Jimenes. Santo Domingo, 2003. pg 180
  4. ^ Danilo de los Santos. Memoria de la Pintura Dominicana. (Colección Centenario Grupo León Jimenes) 8v: il. Grupo León Jimenes. Santo Domingo, 2003. pg 177
  5. ^ Listin Diario
  6. ^ ^ Ibid. pg 206
  7. ^ a b c d ^ Ibid. pg 209
[edit]