Teodoro Vidal Santoni (1923–2016) was a Puerto Rican government official, art historian, and folklorist who collected Puerto Rican art. His donation of objects to the Smithsonian Institution in 1997 remains the largest donation from a single donor.[1][2]
During his tenure in government, Vidal worked on historic preservation at La Fortaleza and served as a founding member of the board of directors for the Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña. When Muñoz Marín retired in 1964, Vidal committed solely to working on Puerto Rico's cultural heritage through independent research, publishing, and collecting. He was honored throughout his lifetime in both Puerto Rico and in mainland United States for his work on the island's folk art. He died on January 16, 2016, in San Juan, Puerto Rico at the age of 92.[4]
Collector
Vidal began collecting Puerto Rican art one day when he was on his way to La Fortaleza and saw storefronts on the Calle del Cristo that were selling sculpted saints and other folkloric objects. His collection began with objects of this sort including furniture, masks, canes, tools, instruments, textiles, woodworking, and other decorative objects. He also collected fine art, including important paintings by José Campeche. He hoped that one day Puerto Rico would have a national museum for its art and traditions.[5]
By the early 1990s, his collection amounted to over 6,000 objects and he began to look for an institution that would be willing to house the collection. He believed the objects would begin to deteriorate if he did not find a suitable preservation solution for them.[5] He initially tried to keep the objects on the island, looking for local institutions that would take his collection. In 1996 Marvette Pérez, a curator from the National Museum of American History, offered to take the entire collection on behalf of the Smithsonian Institution. About 4,000 objects from Vidal's collection were shipped and officially donated to the Smithsonian in 1997. This gift is the largest donation by a single individual to the National Museum of American History to date. Objects from Vidal's collection were featured in a 1997–2000 exhibition titled Puerto Rico: A Collector’s Vision. Some of the objects are installed in the permanent collection displays of the Smithsonian American Art Museum and the National Museum of American History.[1][6][7][8] In his book The Puerto Rican Nation on the Move: Identities on the Island and in the United States, scholar Jorge Duany has carefully analyzed this collection, its relationship to Vidal, and its exhibition.[9]
The remaining objects from Vidal's collection that were left behind on the island were donated to the Luis Muñoz Marín Foundation. This included around 1,500 objects. Many of objects are on display in the foundation's center in San Juan, Puerto Rico.[10]
Scholar
In addition to collecting Puerto Rican art, Vidal also wrote numerous books and articles about the subject. He was considered an expert on José Campeche, as well as santo and other folkloric traditions on the island. He also studied the oral traditions, literature, and spirituality of Puerto Rico.[5]
Publications
La Fortaleza, o Palacio de Santa Catalina. (San Juan, 1964.) OCLC78102697
Los milagros en metal y en cera de Puerto Rico. (Photographs by Pablo Delano. San Juan: Ediciones Alba, 1974.) ISBN0960071415
Santeros puertorriqueños. (San Juan: Ediciones Alba, 1979.) ISBN0960071423
Las caretas de cartón del Carnaval de Ponce. (San Juan: Ediciones Alba, 1982.) ISBN0960071431
San Blas en la tradición puertorriqueña. (San Juan: Ediciones Alba, 1986.) ISBN0960071474
Las caretas de los vejigantes ponceños: modo de hacerlas. (San Juan, 1988.) OCLC30360301
Tres retratos pintados por Campeche. (San Juan: Ediciones Alba, 1988.) ISBN0960071458
Tradiciones en la brujería puertorriqueña. (San Juan: Ediciones Alba, 1989.) OCLC21484316
Los Espada: escultores sangermeños. (San Juan: Ediciones Alba, 1994.) OCLC31496176
Cuatro puertorriqueñas por Campeche. (San Juan: Ediciones Alba, 2000.) ISBN9780960071463
La bruja puertorriqueña. (2002)
La Monserrate negra con el niño blanco: una modalidad iconográfica puertorriqueña. (San Juan: Ediciones Alba, 2003.) ISBN9781596086838
El vejigante ponceño. (San Juan: Ediciones Alba, 2003.) OCLC52789734
José Campeche: portrait painter of an epoch. (2004)
José Campeche: retratista de una época. (San Juan: Ediciones Alba, 2005.) OCLC65193060
Los reyes magos: tradición y presencia. (San Juan: Ediciones Alba, 2005.) OCLC63256749
El caballo en la obra de Campeche. (San Juan: Museo de las Américas, 2006.) OCLC170968557
Escultura religiosa puertorriqueña. (San Juan: Ediciones Alba, 2006.) ISBN096007144X
El control de la naturaleza mediante la palabra en la tradición. (San Juan: Ediciones Alba, 2008.) ISBN1596084898
Oraciones romancísticas. (San Juan: Ediciones Alba, 2009.) ISBN9781596087248
Oraciones, conjuros y ensalmos en la cultura popular puertorriqueña. (San Juan: Ediciones Alba, 2010.) ISBN9781596086838
Cuatro campeches de regreso en Puerto Rico. (San Juan: Ediciones Alba, 2011.) OCLC782127340
El Museo Nacional de Artes y Tradiciones Puertorriqueñas (2012)
Pinturas y esculturas puertorriqueñas antiguas. (San Juan: Ediciones Alba, 2015.) ISBN9781618877161
El arte de la miniatura en Puerto Rico (San Juan: Ediciones Alba, 2015.) ISBN9781618875310[11]
^ abVelasquez, L. Stephen (2001). "The Teodoro Vidal Collection: Creating Space for Latinos at the National Museum of American History". The Public Historian. 23 (4): 113–124. doi:10.1525/tph.2001.23.4.113 – via JSTOR.
^Tsang, Jia-sun. A Closer Look: Santos from Puerto Rico: Santos from the Vidal Collection, National Museum of American History. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Center for Materials Research and Education, 1998. OCLC80687167
^Duany, Jorge. "Collecting the Nation: The Public Representation of Puerto Rico's Cultural Identity." In The Puerto Rican Nation on the Move: Identities on the Island and in the United States, pp. 137-65. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2003. ISBN9780807861479