Tomàs Padró (1877); from La Llumanera de Nova York
Tomàs Padró i Pedret (11 February 1840, Barcelona - 16 April 1877, Barcelona) was a Catalan painter, graphic artist and illustrator.[ 1]
Biography
He was born to a family of artists. His father, Ramon Padró i Pijoan [ca ] , was a sculptor. His younger brother, Ramon [ca ] , also became a painter.[ 1] He studied at the Escola de la Llotja with Claudi Lorenzale , then at the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando in Madrid, where his instructors included Carlos Luis de Ribera and Federico de Madrazo . His fellow student, Marià Fortuny , introduced him to the drawings of Paul Gavarni .
In 1867, he went to France with the writer, Francisco José Orellana [es ] , to illustrate his work La Exposición Universal de París . In 1868, he painted the stained glass windows in the apse of the church of Santa Maria del Pi and a portrait of the abbess at the convent of San Juan de Jerusalén . The following year, he entered and won a competition for a position as Professor of drawing at the school for deaf-mutes . He taught there, periodically, until his resignation in 1875.
The peak period of his work as an illustrator coincided with the "Glorious Revolution " of 1868. He married in 1870, and had three children.[ 1] During the short reign of King Amadeo I , he lived in Cartagena , where he worked as an artistic correspondent for La Ilustración Española y Americana .
From La Flaca : A satire on the short-lived First Spanish Republic . Emilio Castelar (at the lectern) and Francisco Pi y Margall (on the chair), were its two presidents.
His most significant book illustrations were for La Historia de España , by Modesto Lafuente , and his best remembered journalistic drawings were for the satirical magazine, La Flaca [ca ] . Also notable were those for El Museo Universal and La Campana de Gracia ; as well as for magazines outside Spain, such as L'Illustration , the Illustrirte Zeitung and Le Monde Illustré .
References
Further reading
Salvador Bori, Tres maestros del lápiz de la Barcelona ochocentista: Padró, Planas, Pellicer , Librería Milla, 1945 (Google Books )
Antonio Elias de Molins, Diccionario biográfico y bibliográfico de escritores y artistas catalanes del siglo XIX , Fidel Giró, 1889 (Online )
Joaquim Fontanals i del Castillo, Recuerdo al artista Tomás Padró , C. Verdaguer, 1877 (Online )
External links
Media related to Tomàs Padró at Wikimedia Commons
International National Artists Other