Null ANTONIO DE BRUGADA (Madrid, 1804-San Sebastián, 1863).
"Marina".
Oil on can…
Description

ANTONIO DE BRUGADA (Madrid, 1804-San Sebastián, 1863). "Marina". Oil on canvas. Attached certificate issued by Enrique Arias Anglés. It has restorations and faults on the edge of the canvas. It has a period frame with damage. Signed in the lower right corner. Measurements: 64 x 53 cm; 90 x 80 cm (frame). In this canvas the painter offers us a view of idealised aesthetics, dominated by a warm and bright atmosphere. The space is organised in depth, based on clear diagonals that guide our gaze towards the background, articulating the large planes that make up the blue masses of the water and the sky, which seem to reflect each other with their rich tonal nuances. Antonio de Brugada was a Romantic painter born in Madrid, but of Valencian origin, and trained at the San Fernando Academy (1818-21). He is best known for his marine and naval battles, a genre he perfected under the guidance of Jean Antoine Théodore de Gudin. Politically, he was aligned with the Liberals, to the point of forming part of the National Militia of Madrid during the Constitutional Triennium (1820-1823). As a result, he had to take refuge in Bordeaux after 1823 together with his friend Francisco de Goya. He returned to Spain in 1834, except for a brief stay to inventory the Black Paintings of the Quinta del Sordo when Goya died (1828). From 1844 he was the painter to Isabella II. He took part in the National Exhibitions of Fine Arts, where he received an honourable mention in 1856 and a "second-class" honourable mention in 1858. In 1892 a painting by Brugada was exhibited in the historical section of the National Exhibition of Fine Arts entitled "Goya's Burial in Bordeaux".

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ANTONIO DE BRUGADA (Madrid, 1804-San Sebastián, 1863). "Marina". Oil on canvas. Attached certificate issued by Enrique Arias Anglés. It has restorations and faults on the edge of the canvas. It has a period frame with damage. Signed in the lower right corner. Measurements: 64 x 53 cm; 90 x 80 cm (frame). In this canvas the painter offers us a view of idealised aesthetics, dominated by a warm and bright atmosphere. The space is organised in depth, based on clear diagonals that guide our gaze towards the background, articulating the large planes that make up the blue masses of the water and the sky, which seem to reflect each other with their rich tonal nuances. Antonio de Brugada was a Romantic painter born in Madrid, but of Valencian origin, and trained at the San Fernando Academy (1818-21). He is best known for his marine and naval battles, a genre he perfected under the guidance of Jean Antoine Théodore de Gudin. Politically, he was aligned with the Liberals, to the point of forming part of the National Militia of Madrid during the Constitutional Triennium (1820-1823). As a result, he had to take refuge in Bordeaux after 1823 together with his friend Francisco de Goya. He returned to Spain in 1834, except for a brief stay to inventory the Black Paintings of the Quinta del Sordo when Goya died (1828). From 1844 he was the painter to Isabella II. He took part in the National Exhibitions of Fine Arts, where he received an honourable mention in 1856 and a "second-class" honourable mention in 1858. In 1892 a painting by Brugada was exhibited in the historical section of the National Exhibition of Fine Arts entitled "Goya's Burial in Bordeaux".

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Antonio de BRUGADA 1804-1863 Coastal landscapes Pair of oil paintings on canvas signed and dated "1843". Height 64 cm. Width 90 cm. Framed. "Antonio de Brugada Vila - Madrid, 1804 - San Sebastian, 1863 Spanish painter, trained at the San Fernando School of Fine Arts in Madrid between 1818 and 1821. Between 1820 and 1823, he was the National Militia of Madrid and, due to the political upheavals of the time, was taken prisoner and political persecution at the hands of the absolutists. In 1823, he was forced to seek asylum in France. He settled in Bordeaux, later the home of Goya, with whom he struck up a close friendship. He remained in France for eleven years, sporadic visits to Spain. There, he continued his artistic apprenticeship and political activism. Brugada embodied the Romantic image of the liberal artist in exile, fighting against tyranny. In 1828, after Goya's death, and at the request of the latter's son, he returned to Madrid to inventory the paintings in the Quinta del Sordo. A he returned to Bordeaux. Dedicated to landscapes, especially seascapes, he competed in the National Fine Arts Exhibitions, where he received an "honorable" mention in 1856, and a second-class "honorable" mention in 1858. honorable mention. In 1892, one of his paintings, entitled "La Sépulture de Goya, à Bordeaux", was exhibited in the historical section of the Exposition Nationale des Beaux-arts. Isabel II's chamber painter, his historical seascapes His historic seascapes are on display at the Naval Museum in Madrid, the Royal Palace and the Santamarca Foundation in Madrid. Source: Museo Nacional del Prado Biographical Note