Manuel Tovar Siles

Autoportrait, 1921.[1]
"La situación de Italia", in El Imparcial, 1914.
Caricature in La Voz, 1920.

Manuel Tovar Siles (10 August 1875,[2] in Granada[3] 10 April 1935,[4] in Madrid[2]) was a Spanish cartoonist and caricaturist. He used the pseudonym "Don Hermógenes".[3] He was described by Mariano Sánchez de Palacios as «one of the most representative figures of the journalistic Madrid of the first quarter-century».[5] The newspaper La Libertad described him with "Manolo Tovar was for Madrid his popular cartoonist".[3]

Manuel Tovar stated in an interview that his education was self-taught, as well that one of the artists that more influenced him was Ramón Cilla.[4] Although he collaborated in his starts for magazines of Valencia and Barcelona,[6][3] he moved early to Madrid.[3] He cultivated diverse areas, like caricature, political satire or costumbrismo,[5] in addition to oil and watercolour paintings, facet this last less known.[3] He illustrated publications like Madrid Cómico, Gedeón, La Correspondencia de Españan, El Liberal, ABC, El Sol, La Voz, La Esfera, Blanco y Negro,[2] Nuevo Mundo, Mundo Gráfico,[5] Buen Humor,[7] El Imparcial, La Hoja de Parra, Gutiérrez, La Risa, ¡Oiga usted...!, Heraldo de Madrid, España Nueva, La Bandera Federal or Don Quijote,[8] among others.

He was married to Concepción Rodríguez and had two children, Manuel and Conchita.[3] After his death on 10 April 1935, he was buried in the cemetery of La Almudena.[3]

References

Bibliography

Media related to Manuel Tovar Siles at Wikimedia Commons

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