Agustín Ibarrola
Agustín Ibarrola (born 1930) is a Spanish Basque painter and sculptor.[1]
He was born in Basauri (Biscay), Spain. In 1948, the Delegation of Biscay and the city council of Bilbao granted him a scholarship to study in Madrid, where he lived until 1955.
He has had various exhibitions in Spain and in 1955 was transferred to Paris. In 1957, he was a member of the group Equipment 57 with Duarte, Serrano, and others. This was in the time of the constructivism.
Due to his communist militancy, he was imprisoned for several years in the prison of Burgos. In 1963, when an exhibition of his work in London was mounted, a critic compared his work with Goya's The Disasters of War.
In the 1980s he began sculpting; his singular vision of the pictorial work the Forest of Oma, near Guernica, perhaps his best known work.
His work combines the Basque spirit with the social commitment of the humblest workers, people who tend towards expressionism.[citation needed]
One of his last and most spectacular works was Cubes of Memory, in the port of Llanes.
In recent year he has been tied to the founder of the platform ¡Basta Ya!, a civic group fighting against terrorism in the Basque Country. Due to his bitter opposition to ETA, a group proscribed as terrorist by the Spanish state, Ibarrola has been threatened by ETA.[2]
He has been awarded the Medal of the Order of the Constitutional Merit.[citation needed]
References
- ^ "Agustín Ibarrola: 'El cubismo es el movimiento que más influye en el arte de la vanguardia'". elmundo.es. Retrieved 2010-07-16.
- ^ Rocío Blázquez (2010-06-03). "Agustín Ibarrola: "Los amenazados por ETA hemos estado hasta ahora eliminados de la sociedad vasca" - Nacional_Terrorismo - Nacional". Salamanca: ABC.es. Retrieved 2010-07-16.