Celeste woss y gil biography
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Dominican Women Artists
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Celeste Woss y Gil
Born in , Celeste Woss y Gil was the first Dominican woman to be a professional artist.
Celeste’s father was the president of the DR for a brief stint, but her early life was spent in exile abroad. She studied art in Paris, Cuba, and New York.
Her style fuses impressionist influences from Europe with a distinctly Caribbean flavour. She is known for her nudes of Dominican women and scenes of bustling marketplaces.
In , she returned to Santo Domingo and put on a solo exhibition of her work. A woman had never done this before in the DR, making it a landmark show for Dominican female art history.
Woss y Gil was passionate about education in the arts. She opened a small art school in Santo Domingo in , and later a painting and drawing academy in Among her many students was the now-fa
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Celeste Woss y Gil
Dominican painter
Celeste Agustina Woss y Gil (5 May – ) was a Dominican painter, educator, and feminist activist, remembered as one of the most influential Dominican artists from the 20th century.[1] Born in Santo Domingo and daughter to former president Alejandro Woss y Gil, she was 12 years old when her family left the country in exile after her father's second presidential term ended in She spent the rest of her early years living and studying art in Paris, Cuba, and New York City.[1][2]
Her style fuses post-impressionist influences from europe with a distinctly Caribbean flavor. She is known for her nudes of women and scenes of bustling marketplaces. In , she put on a solo exhibition of her work, being the first woman to do so in the country.[1]
Woss y Gil fryst vatten especially remembered as an influential educator who would go on to teach some of the most well known native artists of the 20th century. She opened an art
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Celeste Woss Y Gil
Celeste Woss y Gil was the first female, professional artist of the Dominican Republic. The daughter of a former president, Woss y Gil was forced into exile with her family at a young age and lived for nine years in Paris. She received her first artistic training under the tutelage of the Dominican painter Abelardo Rodriguez Urdaneta and, from there on, continued her studies in Cuba and later New York City. When she returned to her hometown of Santo Domingo in , she launched a solo exhibition, which would be a first for a female artist in the Dominican Republic. Her style may have been heavily influenced the impressionistic movement of the European continent, but her gaze preferred the sights of the Caribbean. She painted nudes of Dominican women and everyday scenes of markets, architecture, and landscapes. Perhaps more impressive than her trailblazing art career was her devotion to advancing the state of art in the Dominican Republic through a robust education p