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Ignacio Zuloaga
Eibar, Gipuzkoa, 1870-Madrid, 1945
1913
Oil on canvas, 152 x 195.5 cm
Donated by Ramón de la Sota y Llano in 1919
Portrait of the Countess Mathieu de Noailles depicts Anna Elisabeth de Brancovan, a Parisian poetess of Greek and Romanian origin. Heavy curtains serve as a frame for the portrait, emphasizing the theatrical nature of the portrait. Even so, Zuloaga opens the painting up to a backdrop of clouds, itself inspired by El Greco’s backgrounds, as a way of concentrating our interest on the sensual figure of the sitter. In the lower right corner, the artist gifts us a small still-life consisting of a table with books, evoking the Countess’s devotion to literature, a necklace of pearls—a sign of passion—and a broad vase full of roses, symbol of love: both a brief symbolic compendium of the Countess’s personality and an updating of the Spanish baroque theme of the vanitas. Despite being hailed by international art critics of the early 20th century as one of the finest painters of the time, in Spain Zuloaga was accused of exalting the country’s perceived backwardness. His training, far from the academic world, the influence of the intellectual circles in Paris and his association with Spain’s highly critical "Generation of "98" literary movement, led him to take popular culture and Spanish 17th century painting and Goya as his references. These influences imbued his works with a remarkable expressiveness and powerful psychological insight, which, together with the Romantic vision and his undeniable skills as a painter, were the essential factors in Zuloaga’s subsequent output. [J.N.G.]

Antique Bronze Figures at the Bilbao Fine Arts Museum. Taramona-Basabe Collection
The 96 ancient bronze figures in the Museum constitute one of its most unique groups of works. They were donated in 1942 by Mercedes Basabe y Cotoner, widow of Manuel Taramona and in accordance with her late husband’s wishes. In 2011, having published 30 articles in the first 5 issues of its Bulletin, the Museum published in first Addenda, conceived as a vehicle for monographic studies of collections too long to be published as single articles. On this occasion Professor Ramón Corzo, senior professor at Seville University and a notable archaeologist, has been commissioned to study the bronzes. The result is an exceptionally rigorous and in-depth text.

International Museum Day. 18 May
05|14|12
Special opening Monday 30th April
04|27|12
Practices: Manterola Scholarships 12/13
04|23|12