:The Hispanic Society of America is exhibiting watercolors,
gouaches and illustrations of Daniel Urrabieta Vierge (1851-1904)
from February 16 to April 23.
Although largely forgotten today, Vierge had attained a
distinguished position at his death in 1904, with critics
praising the elegance, immediacy and realism of his work. This
exhibition of almost 50 works offers a rare opportunity to
reappraise this talented figure.
In Vierge's lifetime, connoisseurs prized his drawings for their
technical mastery and realism. Furthermore, he created them to
illustrate books and journals and, as such, they found a large
admiring public. Technological advances also meant that
publishers could offer increasingly faithful versions of his
works, so that these volumes provided an authentic representation
of his images. Vierge thus presents two faces to modern viewers,
his original sketches and the prints made after them. This
exhibition will examine the relation between the two by drawing
on the Hispanic Society's collection to exhibit both his
watercolors and gouaches and the prints made after them.
Throughout his career, Vierge offered a realistic, yet vivid,
vision of Spain and its literary characters. His compositions for
the classics of Spanish literature, in particular Cervante's
Don Quixote and Quevedo's El buscon (The
Swindler), occupy a special place in the history of art.
Daniel Urrabieta Vierge, "And Filled with Hatred," illustration
for José Zorrilla's El escultor y el duque, gouache.
Vierge's Don Quixote successfully incorporates some
more adventurous features within a fundamentally realist and
conservative vision. His objective characterization of the humble
inns, rooms in the duke's palace, or the broad expanses of La
Mancha reflect his firsthand observations in Spain.
Vierge's illustrations for Quevedo's El buscon constituted
his greatest achievements in the eyes of his contemporaries. In
these images, Vierge masterfully evokes the underworld of thieves
and criminals. Because Vierge includes no details of costumes or
buildings that explicitly evoke the Spain of his day as he had
done in Don Quixote, Quevedo's characters inhabit a past
that seems more distant than that of Cervantes's knight.
Vierge did not work exclusively illustrating Spanish classics but
illustrated a broad range of French literature of his day. Here,
too, he displayed great flair capturing many different moods and
scenes. For instance, his designs for the novel The Tavern of
Three Virtue, admirably capture the suspense of key moments
in the plot: coaches being held up, sword fights and the rescue
of maidens.
The Hispanic Society of America is at 613 West 155th Street. For
information, www.hispanicsociety.org or 212-926-2234.