Joaquín Agrasot y Juan (24 December 1836 – 8 January 1919) was a Spanish painter of the Realistic style who produced many works in the Costumbrismo genre.
After three years, he returned to Orihuela, then lived in Granada at an artists' commune, got married, and went back to Italy, remaining until early 1875, when he returned to Spain upon hearing that his friend, Fortuny, had died. This time, he settled permanently in Valencia.[1] The following year, he received a medal at the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia. Later, he became a member of both the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando and his alma mater, San Carlos.[2] He often served as a jury member for the Academies' exhibitions. He died in Valencia, aged 82.
Although he largely devoted himself to Costumbrismo paintings, which were often criticized as being too commercial, his paintings on historical subjects were very popular. In 1884, the Spanish government bought his painting "The Death of the Marqués del Duero" for display in the Senate.
Vicente Aguilera Cerni, José Garneria, Seis maestros de nuestra pintura, Joaquín Agrasot, José Benlliure, Benjamín Palencia, Ignacio Pinazo, Juan Bautista Porcar, Joaquín Sorolla, Valencia, Vicent García Editores, 1981 ISBN84-85094-28-X
Lorenzo Hernández Guardiola, Joaquín Agrasot y Juan (1836-1919), exhibition catalog, Alicante, Diputación Provincial, 2002 ISBN84-870328-3-4