Roberto Fabelo

Viaje Fantástico, sculpture by Roberto Fabelo, 2012, Plaza Vieja, Havana

Roberto Fabelo (born 1951 Camagüey, Cuba) is a contemporary Cuban painter, sculptor, and illustrator.

Born in Guáimaro, Camagüey,[1] Fabelo studied at The National Art School and at the Superior Art Institute of Havana. He was a professor and a jury member for very important national and international visual arts contests. The Cuban state awarded him a medal for National Culture and the Alejo Carpentier medal for his outstanding artistic career. Fabelo's art consists of nude women, who often appear with bird-like features, including a beak and wings. He drew in textbooks, and created figures out of the pictures already in the textbook. Another example of his art was water colored markers used to draw on silk embroidered fabric.

His work is exhibited at the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes in Havana,[2] and in the Cuban embassy in Mexico.[3] His 2009 sculpture of a group of human-headed cockroaches can be found climbing one of the walls of the Havana Fine Arts Museum, entitled Survival.[4] He also illustrated a 2007 edition of Gabriel García Márquez's novel Cien años de soledad.[5] He was described by the Dallas Morning News in 2002 as "one of Cuba's premier artists", with high demand for his paintings in the United States and elsewhere.[6]

References

  1. Moore, Robin D. (2006) Music and Revolution: Cultural Change in Socialist Cuba, University of California Press, ISBN 978-0-520-24711-6, p. 81
  2. Lascom, Caroline & Cameron, Sarah (2002) Havana, Footprint Handbooks, ISBN 978-1-903471-49-4, p. 62
  3. "Cuban Visual Arts Salon to be Inaugurated in Mexico", cubaheadlines.com, October 27, 2010, retrieved 2010-10-31
  4. Almaguer, Osmel (2009) "Fabelo’s Cockroaches", Havana Times, April 25, 2009, retrieved 2010-10-31
  5. "Cuban painter Roberto Fabelo illustrates Cien años de soledad", cubaheadlines.com, December 30, 2007, retrieved 2010-10-31
  6. Eaton, Tracey (2002) "Cuban art leaps onto world scene: Collectors take notice as artists use work for political mouthpiece", Dallas Morning News, April 28, 2002


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