Carlos Nadal, (1917-1998)
La plage/The Beach, c. 1982
Oil and acrylic on canvas
46 x 55.5 cm., 18 1/8 x 21 7/8 in.
Private collection
Carlos Nadal (24 April 1917 – 6 June 1998) was a Spanish painter of the Fauvist school
Nadal studied at the School of Arts and Crafts and the Senior Fine Art Academy of St George, both in Barcelona. He was conscripted into the Spanish Republican Army and fought in the Spanish Civil War, including imprisonment and escape from a concentration camp, before finally returning to his art studies.
Nadal was particularly influenced by Henri Matisse whom he met as a child, and Georges Braque who was a close acquaintance in the 1940s, and maintained a love of the Fauvist style.
His first solo exhibition was in 1942 at La Pinacoteca in Barcelona. His early work was mainly of scenes in Spain or Belgium but when established as a successful artist he travelled extensively, making paintings which often featured modes of transport as well as leisure scenes.
On 1 December 1948 he married Flore Augusta Zoe Joris a Belgian sculptor, moving with her to Brussels in 1949. In 1958. They moved residence between Brussels and Barcelona. He died in Barcelona on 6 June 1998. More on Carlos Nadal
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