Generated by DeepSeek V3.2| José María Sert | |
|---|---|
| Name | José María Sert |
| Caption | Sert in 1930 |
| Birth date | 21 December 1874 |
| Birth place | Barcelona, Spain |
| Death date | 27 November 1945 |
| Death place | Barcelona, Spain |
| Nationality | Spanish |
| Field | Painting, Mural |
| Training | Academy of Fine Arts of Barcelona |
| Movement | Monumental art |
| Spouse | Misia Godebska, Roussadana Mdivani |
| Patrons | Rockefeller, Vanderbilt, Alba families |
José María Sert. He was a renowned Spanish muralist and painter, celebrated for his monumental, dramatic works that adorned the interiors of major public buildings, churches, and private mansions across Europe and the Americas. Active during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, his distinctive style blended Baroque grandeur with modernist sensibilities, earning him prestigious commissions from aristocracy, industrial magnates, and the Catholic Church. Sert's vast canvases and frescoes, characterized by imposing figures, dynamic composition, and a monochromatic palette often accented with gold leaf, secured his reputation as the "painter of kings and the king of painters."
Born into a wealthy textile family in Barcelona, he studied at the Academy of Fine Arts of Barcelona before moving to Paris in 1899, immersing himself in its vibrant artistic scene. His early work attracted the attention of influential figures like Eugène Carrière and the Baron de Meyer, leading to his first major commission in 1900 to decorate the Vich Cathedral. This project established his career as a monumental decorator. Throughout the 1910s and 1920s, his reputation soared, with significant projects including the Waldorf Astoria in New York City and the Rockefeller Center, where he painted the monumental mural *American Progress* in the International Building. He served as a diplomat for the Spanish Republic during the Spanish Civil War but returned to his artistic work, completing his final masterpiece, the redecoration of the Vich Cathedral, which was finished posthumously.
Sert developed a highly personal style, often described as "Baroque revival," marked by epic scale, vigorous movement, and a theatrical use of chiaroscuro. He frequently worked on vast canvases that were later affixed to architectural surfaces, depicting historical, allegorical, and religious themes with robust, sculptural figures. A defining characteristic was his limited palette, favoring sepia, umber, and black, heightened with applications of gold leaf to create luminous, dramatic effects. Among his most celebrated works are the murals for the Palace of Liria in Madrid, the ballroom of the Vanderbilt mansion in New York City, and the extensive cycle for the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine in New York. His redecoration of the Vich Cathedral in Catalonia remains his most ambitious religious undertaking.
José María Sert is remembered as one of the last great masters of monumental decorative painting, bridging the tradition of Tiepolo with the modern age. His work had a significant impact on the field of mural painting and interior design for opulent spaces during the Interwar period. While his style fell out of favor with the rise of abstract expressionism and modernism, there has been a renewed scholarly interest in his contributions to 20th-century Spanish art. His murals remain in situ in locations like the Rockefeller Center, Círculo de Bellas Artes in Madrid, and the Barcelona City Hall, serving as a testament to his grandiose vision. Exhibitions at institutions like the Museo Nacional del Prado have helped reassess his position within art history.
His personal life was as dramatic as his art, marked by high-society connections and tumultuous relationships. His first marriage was to the renowned Polish pianist and patron Misia Godebska, a central figure in the Parisian cultural circle that included Sergei Diaghilev, Jean Cocteau, and Coco Chanel. After their divorce, he married the Georgian princess Roussadana Mdivani, a member of the celebrated "Marrying Mdivanis." Sert was a prominent socialite, dividing his time between his studio in Paris, commissions across Europe and North America, and his native Catalonia. He was a close friend of Salvador Dalí, who admired his technical prowess, and his patrons included the Duke of Alba, John D. Rockefeller Jr., and King Alfonso XIII of Spain.
* *The Apotheosis of the Spanish Monarchy* (Ballroom mural, Palace of Liria, Madrid) * *American Progress* (Mural in the International Building, Rockefeller Center, New York City) * *The Glory of the Catalan Saints* (Main altarpiece, Vich Cathedral, Catalonia) * *The Conquest of Tananarive* (Mural for the Musée des Colonies, Paris, now lost) * *The Ballroom Murals* (Former Vanderbilt mansion, New York City) * *Scenes from the Old Testament* (Cathedral of Saint John the Divine, New York City) * *The Council of Trent* (Mural in the Círculo de Bellas Artes, Madrid)
Category:Spanish muralists Category:Spanish painters Category:1874 births Category:1945 deaths