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Julio Vicente Agapito Abril Mayorga (20 August 1911 – 24 April 1979) was a Colombian sculptor, painter, and draughtsman.


Biography


Beginnings in the arts

Julio Abril was born in Moniquirá on 20 August 1911. He studied in 1928 at the Salesian school Central Technical Institute of Bogotá and during 1929 was the student of Colombian cartoonist Lisandro Serrano's mother in Moniquirá. In 1933 he completed his studies at the school founded by the prominent educator Alfonso Ramirez who in timely fashion stimulated the budding artist in Abril. From 1934 to 1939, on scholarship from the Department of Boyacá he studied sculpture under the direction of artists Gustavo Arcila Uribe, José Domingo Rodríguez and Carlos Reyes at the School of Fine Arts of the National University in Bogotá, Colombia. In 1936 he held his first exhibition where he presented his wood sculpture ''Cabeza de India'' (Head of an Indian Woman) (1936), which was comprehensively commented by Leon Angel for '' El Tiempo'' (Colombia) and for which he received first prize at the Exhibition of Barranquilla in 1938. His appreciation and talent for drawing led him to produce, in collaboration with artists Luis Alberto Acuña and Gonzalo Ariza, the illustrations for the book ''La roma de los chibchas'' (The Rome of the Chibchas) by Gabriel Camargo Pérez in 1937, and starting in 1938 he began publishing his drawings in the Sunday pages of ''El Tiempo''. He continued until his death to publish illustrations and drawings in the newspapers and magazines of Colombia. In 1939 he won the national competition for the monument to the Chibcha race in Boyacá, Monumento al Indio (Monument to the Indian), with his project ''Monument to Quemuenchatocha'' (1939). The same year he organized and participated in the Exhibit of Artists of Boyacá on the IV Centennial of Tunja where he exhibited 4 sculptures: ''Cabeza de India Boyacense'' (Head of Boyacense Indian Woman) (1936), ''Maternidad'' (Maternity) (1939), ''Alfarera de Ráquira'' (Potter Woman of Ráquira) (1938), ''Project for the Monument to the Indian'' (1939), and 3 drawings: ''Bañista'' (Bather), ''Project for the Monument to the Races'', ''Project for the Monument to the Quimbayas''. Following these events, the interview "Julio Abril, the interpreter in stone of autochthonous motifs" in which Abril reveals his concepts on Colombian artists, is published in the newspaper ''La Razón'', and in the magazine ''Estampa'', an article is published about his intensely autochthonous works as strong representatives of a Colombianist art.


Years in Mexico and the United States

In 1939 the Department of Boyacá awarded Abril a scholarship to further his studies in sculpture at a school of fine arts in Italy or Mexico. For reasons of the generalized war in Europe he moved to Mexico City to continue his art studies at the Academy of San Carlos of the National Academy of Fine Arts and the School of Painting, Sculpture and Engraving "La Esmeralda", where he specialized in sculpture and casting under the direction of
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, Ortiz Monasterio and Rómulo Rozo. Despite his absence from Colombia, he participated in the II Salon of Colombian Artists and obtained an honorable mention for his ''Indio Sibundoy'' (Sibundoy Indian) (1941), one of his first works of his period in Mexico. In 1941 he participated with
Luis Alberto Acuna Luis is a given name. It is the Spanish form of the originally Germanic name or . Other Iberian Romance languages have comparable forms: (with an accent mark on the i) in Portuguese and Galician, in Aragonese and Catalan, while is archai ...
, Rómulo Rozo,
Leo Matiz Leonet Matiz Espinoza (April 1, 1917 – October 24, 1998) was a Colombian photographer, caricaturist, newspaper publisher, painter and gallery owner. Early life Matiz was born in the small village of Aracataca in the Magdalena Department of C ...
, and Juan Sanz Santamaría in the Exhibition of Paintings, Sculptures and Prints of Colombian Artists living in Mexico, at the Palacio de Bellas Artes (Palace of Fine Arts) where among his sculptures and prints, he exhibited: ''Familia de Mineros'' (Family of Miners) (1940) and ''Karl Marx'' (1940). The Chilean poet
Pablo Neruda Ricardo Eliécer Neftalí Reyes Basoalto (12 July 1904 – 23 September 1973), better known by his pen name and, later, legal name Pablo Neruda (; ), was a Chilean poet-diplomat and politician who won the 1971 Nobel Prize in Literature. Nerud ...
spoke at the opening ceremony and Jose Reyes wrote about the Colombian artists in Mexico. During his years in Mexico, Abril befriended Colombian writer
Porfirio Barba-Jacob Miguel Ángel Osorio Benítez (July 29, 1883 – January 14, 1942), better known by his pseudonym, Porfirio Barba-Jacob, was a Colombian poet and writer. Born in Santa Rosa de Osos, Antioquia, to parents Antonio María Osorio and Pastora ...
in the final years of the poet's life. Following Barba-Jacob's death on 14 January 1942, Abril produced the poet's funeral mask, which later passed into the possession of Colombian painter
Dario Jimenez Villegas Dario is a masculine given name, etymologically related to Darius. Given name *Dario Allevi (born 1965), Italian politician *Dario Argento (born 1940), Italian film director *Dario Badinelli (born 1946), Italian triple jumper *Dario Bellezza (194 ...
. Years later, Abril paid tribute to his friend Barba-Jacob with his sculpture ''Acuarimántima''. In Mexico, he married the American sculptor Viola Louise Horpel "Violeta", with whom he had three children: Andino Ilych, Obsidiana, and Jan Eddy. Abril and Viola Horpel held their first joint exhibition at the Art Gallery of Benjamin Franklin Library, where they exhibited 14 sculptures in bronze, stone, and wood. Most notable among them were the project for the "Monumento a los Comuneros" (1942) by Julio Abril and the project for the monument "Earth is for All" by Viola Horpel. The Mexican poet
Carlos Pellicer Carlos Pellicer Cámara (10 January 1897 – 16 February 1977) was part of the first wave of modernist Mexican poets and was active in the promotion of Mexican art, pictures, and literature. An enthusiastic traveler, his work is filled with ...
delivered the opening speech at the inaugural event. Luis Alberto Acuña wrote about Abril's artistic work. Abril published his text "Sobre el Arte de Colombia" in the Mexican magazine ''Noticia de Colombia''. It would be the first of numerous articles on the plastic arts that he would publish in the Mexican and Colombian newspapers and magazines. He died in
Villavicencio Villavicencio () is a city and municipality in Colombia. Capital of Meta Department, it was founded on April 6, 1840. The city had an urban population of approximately 531,275 inhabitants in 2018.https://www.dane.gov.co/files/varios/informacion ...
on 24 April 1979.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Abril, Julio 1911 births 1979 deaths People from Moniquirá Colombian painters Colombian male painters 20th-century Colombian sculptors Modern painters Modern sculptors