born May 4, 1622, Seville died Oct. 15, 1690, Seville painter, president of the Seville Academy, and the major figure in Sevillian painting for many years, known for his dramatic, inventive, and often violent paintings. His father was Portuguese, and he was educated in Crdoba under the guidance of Antonio del Castillo and worked there until 1653. For the next few years he painted both in Crdoba and Seville. Moving to the latter city in 1656, he became in 1660 an original member of the Academy there (founded by Murillo), and later (166366) he served as its president. After the death of Murillo he was the principal painter in Seville. In his early work he was markedly influenced by Francisco de Herrera the Elder and by Castillo. Paintings such as the St. Andrew of 1645 (San Francisco, Crdoba) and La Vrgen de los Plateros (Museo Provincial de Bellas Artes, Crdoba) are marked by their exotic colours, dramatic lighting, and vigorous brushstrokes. The paintings from Seville show even more clearly elements that prefigure the Spanish Rococo: hectic movement, immaterial forms, and brilliant colouring. Influenced in this period both by Seville painters and by Herrera the Younger and Madrid painters, he produced such works as the Vanitas (1660), the Finis Gloriae Mundi and the Triumph of Death (1660 and 1672), and Jesus Disputing with the Doctors (1686), all characterized by their macabre subject matter, dynamic energy, and theatrical violence. The violence of his subjects has often distracted attention from the inventiveness of his execution.
VALDS LEAL, JUAN DE NISA
Meaning of VALDS LEAL, JUAN DE NISA in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012