Manolita Piña Torres-Garcia (née Rubies24 February 1883 – 11 June 1994) was a Spanish-Uruguayan painter and supercentenarian. She was known as "Doña Manolita" in Uruguay. She was the wife of Uruguayan painter Joaquín Torres García.[1]She was considered to be an "inseparable companion" to Torres García,[2] accompanied him to conferences, exhibitions and supported all of his artistic endeavors.[3] In many ways, she was "like his shadow."[3] She was the founder of Museo Torres Garcia in Montevideo.[4]
Biography
Piña Torres was born in Barcelona, Spain on 24 February 1883. Piña Torres was classically educated by her wealthy parents and she played piano into her late years.[4]
She married Joaquín Torres García on 20 August 1908 in Barcelona.[5] She and her husband lived throughout Europe as well as New York City and then settled in Montevideo.[1]
Piña Torres's art, along with her husband's, has been collected by Emilio Ellena.[6] Ellena describes her art as creative and beautiful, but Piña Torres stopped painting after she was married.[6] Piña Torres states that she stopped painting so that she would not become a better painter than her husband or disturb his work, which would have been shameful to their family during her time and in her culture.[4] She felt that although she had stopped painting herself, that her opinion on art was always welcome.[3] She may have continued to do some art, since there is a record of a master quality woodcut in a book, Notes on Art by Torres Garcia (1913).[3]
She says that politics were one of the few things she argued about with her husband.[7] She was known to help artists who were suffering from political persecution.[3] Two of her grandchildren were imprisoned and in exile and her home was searched for them.[7] Piña Torres also refused to move back to Barcelona because of the crimes against art that were committed there, such as destroying frescoes.[8] She died at the age of 111 and has a death date of June 11th
,1994, being the oldest person in Uruguay at the time of her death.[9]
Legacy
In 1951, Piña Torres created a group in Montevideo, called MAOTIMA (standing for the names of the participants, Manolita, Otilia, Iphigenia and Maria Angelica) which was dedicated to working on embroidered tapestries.[3]
Piňa Torres was a tireless collector of her husband's work and later helped promote much of his formerly unseen art.[10] She also inventoried his work, a list of over 350 pieces of art.[11] Piña Torres felt that after her husband's death, she should ensure his legacy and therefore created a museum dedicated to her husband's art and legacy which she accomplished at age 106.[4][12] Piña Torres set up the foundation to support the Museo Torres Garcia and helped found the museum which was initially opened on 29 July 1953.[13] The museum went through a long, difficult history until the government of Uruguay stabilized and the museum was inaugurated in its current form in 1986.[13] Piña Torres was credited with enthusiasm and strength in working towards the creation of the museum.[14] In addition to creating the foundation and the museum, she also set up an archive to document his life's work.[12] She was often a subject of portraiture for her husband[1] and the subject of others'other's paintings, as well, including artist, Rafael Barradas.[15]
She was posthumously honored in 2000 by the Cultural Center Foundation, Caixa Terrassa.[3]