Watch this item
Please wait
Image not available
Mouse here to zoom in
Please wait
Image not available
 

BYRON GALVEZ UNTITLED

Item condition:--
Price:US $1,500.00Buy It NowBuy It NowBuy It Now

or
Best Offer:Make OfferMake OfferMake Offer
Shipping:Read item description or contact seller for details.See more services 

 See discounts 

 |  See all details
Estimated delivery time varies. Seller ships within 5 days
Returns:
14 day merchandise credit, buyer pays return shipping | Read details
Coverage:
Pay with and your full purchase price is covered | See terms

A reserve price is the minimum price the seller will accept. This price is hidden from bidders. To win, a bidder must have the highest bid and have met or exceeded the reserve price.

 
Seller info
100% Positive feedback
Other item info
Item number:370229110216
Item location:Troy, Michigan, United States
Ships to:United States
Payments:
Item specifics - Prints
Original/Reproduction: --Print Type: --
Listed By: Dealer or ResellerSubject: --
Signed?: SignedStyle: --
Size Type/ Largest Dimension: --Edition Type: Limited Edition
Date of Creation: --Edition Size: 250

This work is done on hand made paper 24x34".

 

The works of graphic nature worked on by Byron Gálvez he has called acrylography. Having as a foundation the same principles of all graphic work, Byron Gálvez has discovered a new lode that he has named thus. This process shows some similarity to Rufino Tamayo’s mixiographic work.

Rufino Tamayo worked on mixiography in wax plates upon which the Oaxacan artist engraved, drew on and created unusual textures, using a wide palette, akin to the prehispanic semantics and the language that had been imposed for many years the universe of contemporary art. The density of these textures allowed Tamayo to construct from these pieces matrices that were later turned to metal, smelted by the technique of "lost wax". That is to say, the plate is created, it is poured under enormous pressure and a copy of the work is obtained. However, in the making of mixiography, all the tonal differences are solved in one plate.

When Byron Gálvez enters acrylography, he creates a specific plate for each of the colors in his graphic. Part of the realization involves a lithograph as a ordering plate, black, given that acrylography is a mixed technique that starts as a drawing on stone. Over the lithograph, he prints each color, and as a final process he introduces a plate that contains the coarser textures, otherwise when putting it on the press the texture would become flat and loose it’s contusive sense.

The fact is that in his acrylographs, Byron Gálvez also shows an immense three dimensional capability and a great luminosity in color, something which is hard to obtain and he manages it precisely because he uses one plate for each color. Therefore the colors do not smudge or sully when printing.

Acrylography is a technique that consists of using a number of acrylic plates that contain textures created with resins, powdered marble or coal that give consistency to the texture. This technique has the great advantage that as the artist is working each plate he can enrich tones and textures at the moment of printing

In addition to Acrylography, Byron’s graphic work includes etching, dry point, smooth varnish, aquatint and other techniques. All of them are different ways of incising the metal with acids. A great part of the mystery of the etching is the fact that the artist is working in negative, to put it in photography terms. This means that in the metal, everything that will be white upon printing is black and everything that will be black is white. The dexterity and the mastering in this confine can really be seen once the artist enters the universe of the half tone.

More information is available @byrongalvez.com

Byron Gálvez was born in 1941 in Mixquiahuala, State of Hidalgo, and since very young displayed his artistic yearnings. His father, who was a merchant and farmer, was a enthusiast of literature and, also, played the violin in a local jazz band. It is in this manner that the painter naturally grew in an environment tied to culture.

At 16 he decided to move to Mexico City, with a central objective: to study art at the Academy of San Carlos. It was there, between 1958 and 1962 where he studied and had as teachers, among others, the Spanish painter Antonio Rodriguez Luna, etching master Francisco Moreno Capdevila, Luis Nishizawa, Santos Balmori and Antonio Ramirez. He was shaped, as can be seen, with a generation of first rate teachers, and this motivated him to follow his vocation as a plastic artist steadily and tenaciously.

Between 1962 and 1964 he pursued post-graduate studies, specializing in painting. At the same time he was a founding member of the workshop of metal sculpture of the National School of Visual Arts of the Autonomous National University of Mexico.

In 1964 he assembled his first individual exhibit and since then has had over 60 in different venues in Mexico and various cities in the United States, Europe and Latin-America. His work has also been part of innumerable collective exhibits. A singular moment occurred when, being very young, the famous American actor Vincent Price bought every work of his first individual exhibit. In order for the show to go on, the artist showed his amazing creative capacity and in a week created 45 new pieces. Astounded at Byron Gálvez’s work, Price called him a "Mexican Picasso". Since then he has been presented with over 15 awards and honorary tributes recognizing his vast and diverse work.

Throughout his intense career as a plastic artist he participated in special programs filmed for the Office of Radio, Television and Cinematography. Traveling many times to the European continent and visiting the most important museums of the old world has been instrumental in the development of Byron Gálvez’s plastic schooling, he considers this activity an unavoidable formative experience it the growth of an artist.

Since 1995 he is a member of the National Art and Culture Council of the State of Hidalgo, having been appointed by the governor of the state.

His plastic work, which includes sculpture, etching, lithography, sketching and painting, is part of important private collections in Mexico and abroad.

Among those who have written about his work we include Jorge Juan Crespo de la Serna, Alejandro Aura, Berta Taracena, Santos Balmori, Pablo Fernandez Marquez, Enrique F. Gual and Margarita Nelken.

Public Art

1968

Sculptured Mural in Los Angeles, California, USA.

1970

Mural in the National Conservatory of Music, Mexico City, Mexico.

1971

30 feet high sculpture, Unidad Morelos, Mexico City, Mexico.

1984

Hand hammered copper triptych, private residence, Mexico City, Mexico.
Hand Hammered sculpture, private residence, Acapulco, Mexico

1985

Sculptural Door. Private residence, México City, México.

1986

Award winning sculpture, currently at private residence in New York, USA.

1998

Reclined Torso. Lobby Hotel Nikko Mexico.

1999

Torso II. 19 feet high sculpture at the entrance of the Altiva Building, Mexico City, Mexico.

2000

Millennium. Inaugurated on 12/31/1999, this 30 feet high bronze sculpture/fountain stands by the highway as a doorway to the capital city of Pachuca, Hidalgo.

Ongoing

Sculptural Garden, Mixquiahuala, Hidalgo.

2001-2005

Master plan and central mosaic. David Ben Gurion Cultural Park in Pachuca Hidalgo.

Individual Exhibits

Starting his individual exhibits in 1964, to date Byron has had over 55 individual exhibits, some of the more notable ones:

1967

Gallery of the National School of Art at the National University, Mexico City, Mexico.

1972

Paintings and Drawings at the Sterenberg Galleries. Chicago, Illinois, USA.

1973

"Eye Corporation".Chicago, Mineapolis, New York, Los Angeles and San Franciso. USA.

1978

Paintings. Polyforum Cultural Siqueiros, Mexico City, Mexico.

1982

Paintings. "Aspects of a Theme: Woman". Museo Nacional de Arte Moderno, Mexico City, Mexico.

1983

Paintings. Hooks, Epstein Galleries, Houston, Texas, USA.
Paintings. Harcourts Contemporary Gallery, San Francisco, California, USA.

1984

Art-Forum Gallery, Mexico City, Mexico.

1989

Bishop Gallery, Phoenix Arizona, USA.

1990

Hartcourts Gallery. Sausalito, California, USA.

1991

Merryl Chase Gallery, Washington, DC. USA.

1992

Suhan Galleries. San Diego, California, USA.
Merryl Chase Galleries. Atlanta, Georgia, USA.

1994

"Pictoric Tauromaquia" Alberto Misrachi Gallery at the Nikko Hotel, Mexico City, Mexico.

1995

Pictoric and graphic work, San Francisco Theater, Pachuca, Hidalgo, Mexico

1996

"Profiling 30 years of pictorial work", Museum of the National Palace of Fine Arts, Diego Rivera Hall, Paul Westheim Hall and Justino Fernández Hall, Mexico City, Mexico.

Group Exhibits

Aside from the individual exhibits, Byron has also participated in over 75 group exhibits around the world. Some of these are:

1967

"Solar 68", National Fine Arts Institute, Mexico City, Mexico.

1970

"Six-Artists", Museum of Modern Art, Mexico City, Mexico.

1972

"Mexican Painting", at the House of the Americas, La Habana, Cuba.
"Mexican Drawing", Viva Mexico Gallery, Caracas, Venezuela.

1976

"City and Man". Salon de la Plastica Mexicana, Mexico City, Mexico.
Salon de la Plastica Mexicana, Canada.

1978

Keweer Gallery, Rotterdam, Holland.

1981

"Art-Expo", New York City, New York, USA.

1984

Three Mexican Painters", Carmen Llewellyn Gallery, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.

1987

"Janukiot". Art-Forum Gallery, Mexico City, Mexico.

1989 - 1994

Art-Expo, New York City, New York, and Los Angeles California, USA.

1989

"25th Anniversary of the Museum of Modern Art", Mexico City, Mexico.
"Homage to Santos Balmori". Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, Mexico City, Mexico.

1990

"Day of the Dead". Museum of Modern Art, Mexico City, Mexico.

1993

National Museum of Fine Arts. Salon de la Plastica Mexicana. Mexico City, Mexico.

1994

"Images in the Century of Aids". University of Colorado, Colorado. USA.

1995

The Mexico Valley, a contemporary vision of Landscape, Contemporary Museum of Art of the National Autonomous University of Mexico, Mexico City, Mexico

Awards

Byron has received numerous awards throughout his career, among them are:

1963

Unique Award in Painting. Given by the Museum of Arts and Science of the National University, Mexico City, Mexico.

1965

First and Third Award in Sculpture. Given by the National School of Art of the National University, Mexico City, Mexico.

1966

First Award in Sculpture. Given by the Ford Foundation, Mexico City, Mexico.

1967

First Award in Sculpture. Given by the National Youth Institute, Mexico City, Mexico.

1971

Honorable Mention. Won in a national contest promoted by the Federal Comission of Steel, held at the Camino Real, Mexico City, Mexico.

1986

First Award in Sculpture. Given in a Group show for the "Salon Anual de la Plastica Mexicana", Mexico City, Mexico.

Other Activities

1973

Special program filmed for the Ministry of Radio entitled "Artists, Museums and Galleries", Mexico City, Mexico.

1980

"The Litograph in Mexico" Participation in documentary film and portfolio of graphics with four other artists, Mexico City, Mexico.

1982

Publishing of the book: Byron, with text by Octavio Vazques and Marco Julio Linares.

1997

Publishing of the book: Byron Gálvez: to touch the untouchable, with text by Roberto Vallarino



00031
Domestic handling time
Will usually ship within 5 business days of receiving cleared payment.
Return policy
Item must be returned within
Refund will be given as
Return policy details
14 days after the buyer receives it
Merchandise Credit
Must be returned in original crate, with original packing materials
The buyer is responsible for return shipping costs.

Payment details
Payment methodPreferred/AcceptedBuyer protection on eBay
Credit or debit card through PayPal
Accepted
Pay with and your full purchase price is covered | See terms
Seller assumes all responsibility for this listing.

About eBay | Announcements | Security Center | Resolution Center | eBay Toolbar | Policies | Government Relations | Site Map | Help
Copyright © 1995-2009 eBay Inc. All Rights Reserved. Designated trademarks and brands are the property of their respective owners. Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of the eBay User Agreement and Privacy Policy.
eBay official time