Rafael Yela Günther

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Rafael Yela Günther
Yelagunther2.jpg
Rafael Yela Gunther, ca. 1910
Born(1888-09-18)September 18, 1888
DiedApril 17, 1942(1942-04-17) (aged 53)
NationalityGuatemalan
Known forpainting, sculpture. architecture
Notable work

Rafael Yela Günther (September 18, 1888 in Quetzaltenango – April 17, 1942 in Guatemala City) was a Guatemalan painter and sculptor.

Biography[]

Yela Günther working in his studio. Photograph by Carmen Yela.

Yela studied sculpture under his father Baldomero Yela Montenegro (1859–1909), a sculptor and marble-carver, and afterwards under the Venezuelan (1850–1909). The Italian taught him bronze casting techniques. In his early life he made the acquaintances of notable artists like Carlos Mérida, Carlos Mauricio Valenti Perrillat and Jaime Sabartés.

He was a member of the 1910 Generation in Guatemala[a]

Around 1921, after being disappointed of the Unionist Party that overthrew president Manuel Estrada Cabrera, and in which he had been actively involved in Quetzaltenango,[1] he moved to México, where he met Diego Rivera and came in contact for the first time with Maya art and Aztec art through the famous archeologist Manuel Gamio. Over the years of Gambio's large anthropological and archeological project, besides Mexican scholars a group of intellectual from all over the world came to Teotihuacan and help him in several ways; Yela Günther was one of them, working for Gamio from 1921 to 1925.[2]

In Teotihuacan, Yela Gúnther worked in several tasks, working on the large Auditorium project, the museum murals and the sculptor known as "Tríptico de la Raza" ("Race triple sculpture");[3] regarding the Auditorium, besides building it, he was in charge of its ancient native motif decorations in which it is evident the influence that Diego Rivera]] had on his work.[3] After completion of the building, Yela continued workin in Mexico for the old Secretariat of Anthropology ;[3] about his work, Diego Rivera said that Yela Günther was the best representative of the Mexican sculpture movement at the time.[4]

In 1926, Gamio was forced to leave Mexico due to serious accusations that he had been bribing his superiors; he left for New York City and then, thanks to Yela -who had come along as his private secretary- moved to Guatemala City where he worked on the ruins of Kaminal Juyú.[3] In that mayan city they made several stratigraphic wells that were later used by Alfred Kidder to work on the systematic excavation of the site.[3]

From 1927 to 1930 the lived in the United States, where the worked with Edgar Lee Hewett, who had already worked in Guatemala in the Quiriguá Maya site between 1910 and 1913 and who had been a mentor to other famous archeologist such as Sylvanus Morley and Kidder.[3] In 1930, Yela Günther went back to México as the cultural attaché of the Guatemalan Embassy and in 1935, the government of general Jorge Ubico appointed him as director of the Plastic Arts Academy «Rafael Rodríguez Padilla» where he worked until his death in 1942.[5]

Regarding his relationship with president Ubico there are diverse opinions; while Ubico was a despotic leader that did not tolerate any opposition but that was in search of all kinds of contemporary culture -such as Mexican Muralism at the time-, and Yela -after having spent a few years with Gamio- was more inclined to the ideals of the Mexican Revolution, art was one of the few means by which a Guatemalan could earn a decent living at the time.[6]

Selected works[]

Notes and references[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ Schálvezon, Daniel (2008). "Rafael Yela Günther y Manuel Gamio en Teotihuacán: una historia desconocida para el arte y la arqueología mexicanos" (PDF). Anales del Instituto de Investigaciones Estéticas (in Spanish). México. The 1910 generation was also known as the "Comet Generation" or "Los Modernos".

References[]

  1. ^ Arévalo Martínez 1945, p. 252.
  2. ^ Schávelzon 2008, p. 220
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Shávelzon 2008, p. 231
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b Shávelzon 2008, p. 232
  5. ^ Yela Günther, Rafael, Literatura Guatemalteca.
  6. ^ Shávelzon 2008, p. 233
  7. ^ Jump up to: a b Shávelzon 2008, p. 235
  8. ^ Shávelzon 2008, p. 236

Bibliography[]

External links[]

Retrieved from ""