Eduardo Vera Cortés
Utuado, Puerto Rico, 1926-2006
Utuado, Puerto Rico, 1926-2006
Graphic artist, painter, illustrator, and sculptor. Vera Cortés began his working life as a simple cabinetmaker, but he pursued training in art under Julio Rosado del Valle, Irene Delano, Fran Cervoni, and Félix Bonilla Norat, from whom he learned silkscreen technique. He later studied sculpture under Spaniard Francisco Vázquez Díaz, known always as “Compostela,” at the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture. He is considered a member of the “Fifties Generation” of Puerto Rican artists. In 1960, he received a scholarship from the Department of Public Education to pursue studies in Mexico, at the Escuela Nacional de las Artes del Libro, the Escuela La Esmeralda (a school within the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes), and the Centro Superior de Artes Aplicadas. Until 1990 he was an illustrator at the Graphic Arts Workshop of DIVEDCO. Very well known among his paintings and sculptures is a series of works on the subject of stray dogs. The dogs are intended as symbols of the marginalization of underprivileged sectors in our society, and are an expression of Vera Cortés’ social conscience.
“My preferences, in terms of the greatest maestros, tend to El Greco and Picasso. And my paintwork should be a message. Must be expressionist, to communicate what I have within.
Eduardo Vera Cortés
Source: Gaya Nuño, Juan Antonio. Puerto Rican Painting. Centro de Estudios Sorianos (C.S.I.C.), Spain, 1994.
1960
1959
s.f.
1959
1949-1990
2012
2007
1985
1963
1959
1958
1957
1960
1954
Hermandad de Artistas Gráficos de Puerto Rico. Puerto Rico Arte e Identidad. San Juan, P.R.: Editorial de la Universidad de Puerto Rico, 1998.
Los tesoros de la pintura puertorriqueña. Museo de Arte de Puerto Rico. San Juan, P.R. 2000.