| Enrique
Zañartu, Chile (1921 - 2000)
Born in Paris, France in 1921, Zañartu moved to his
native Chile in 1938, establishing himself as an artist. In
1944 he traveled to New York to study with Stanley W. Hayter
in the Atelier 17, becoming associate director of the studio
in New York until 1949 and subsequently in the Paris studio
from 1950 to 1957. He taught printmaking, painting and drawing
in various prestigious institutions.
He held numerous one man and collective shows in Europe, the
United States and Latin America. Solo shows include Galerie
Springer, Berlin (1952), Pan-American Union, Washington DC
(1956); Galerie Karl Flinker, París (1962), Instituto
de Arte Contemporáneo, Lima (1963), Galería Buchholz,
Munich (1967), and Retrospective 1946-1993 at the Galería
Tomás Andreu, Santiago, Chile (1994).
Collective shows include the Sao Paulo Biennial (1957); the
Tokyo Biennial of Graphic Art (1957), Internationale Grafik,
Oldenburg Kunsteverein, Germany (1968), Artistes Latino-Americains
de Paris, Grand Palais, París (1974), and Latin America
and Surrealism, Bochum Museum, Germany.
His work creates the illusion of spaces of psychological tension
through organic rather than figurative objects.
Artist's Showroom
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