The Medalla de la Orden del Quinto Centenario (meaning: the "Medal of the Order of the 5th Century") in 1987.
Tomás Batista (born December 7, 1935) is a Puerto Rican sculptor. He is the creator of some of Puerto Rico's most notable monuments.
Early years
Batista (birth name: Tomás Batista Encarnación) was born and raised in Luquillo, Puerto Rico, a town located in the northeastern coast of Puerto Rico. His family was poor, but he did well in school and finished high school. His family recognized that their son had talent as an artist at a young age. After graduating from high school, he moved to San Juan to continue his education. There he met and went to work with the Spanish artist, Ángel Botello. In 1955, while working with Botello, Batista discovered that he had a natural talent to work with the restoration process in wood. He learned from Botello the secrets of restoration and how to work with gold on wood. In 1957, he realized his first work of art, the Crucifixion.[1]
He created is Monumento al Jíbaro Puertorriqueño (Monument to the Common Puerto Rican Countryman) in Cayey. In this monument Batista reflects the humbleness and hard working nature of the typical Puerto Rican farmer and his family. The monument is located by the Luis A. Ferré Highway in Cayey.[3]
He received a second place prize in sculpture in "Concurso Esso para Artistas Jóvenes" held in San Juan in November 1964. His stone sculpture, "Caracol," subsequently traveled to Washington, DC, where it was part of the Puerto Rican delegation in the Esso Salon of Young Artists, a contest held in 1965 for young Latin American artists sponsored by the Pan American Union and Esso.[5] In 1976, he was named "The Most Outstanding Young Man in Puerto Rico" by the Junior Chamber of Commerce.[citation needed] In 1987 Batista was awarded the "Medalla de la Orden del Quinto Centenario" ("Medal of the Order of the 5th Century"), during the commemoration of Puerto Rico's discovered by Christopher Columbus.[1]
The City of Bayamón is the sponsor of Batista's work with a permanent exposition in the Salón Batista.[citation needed] In 1991, a permanent exhibition of his works was also established in his native city of Luquillo. Tomás Batista's works of art are found in museums in Puerto Rico,[citation needed] New York[citation needed] and Washington, D.C.,[citation needed] and also in private collections. Batista currently travels around the island and abroad giving conferences about his art.[1]
^Concurso Esso para artistas jóvenes, exh. cat.,(San Juan, Puerto Rico: Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña, November 1964); ESSO SALON OF YOUNG ARTISTS/SALONG ESSO DE ARTISTAS JOVENES. Sponsored by the Pan-American Union and Esso, (Washington, DC: Pan-American Union, 1965).