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Néstor Martín-Fernández de la Torre, generally known simply as Néstor (4 May 1887, Las Palmas - 6 February 1938, Las Palmas) was a Canarian painter and theatrical designer who worked in the Symbolist and Art Deco styles.


Biography

He began his artistic development at the age of seven, when he attended the "Colegio San Agustín" and was given drawing lessons by Nicolás Massieu (1876-1954),[1] who would later become a well-known painter. In 1899, he received his first formal art instruction from the peripatetic Spanish landscape painter Eliseu Meifrèn. When still only fifteen, he received a grant from the city of Las Palmas to study in Madrid, but the entrance exams for the Academia were too difficult, so he taught himself by making copies in the Museo del Prado. He eventually found a position in the workshop of Rafael Hidalgo de Caviedes (1864-1950).[1] He then travelled extensively, visiting París, Brussels and London, among other places, to perfect his technique. While in Paris, he also designed theater sets and clothing.[2]
Set design for
Don Giovanni (1931)

He established a studio in Barcelona in 1907 and his first exhibition came in 1908, at the "Círculo Ecuestre", a sporting and social club, where he displayed a series of portraits, influenced by his stay in England.[2] The following year, he presented four decorative panels at the Sala Pares, which he had designed for the dance hall in Tibidabo, inspired by the poems of Jacinto Verdaguer. He continued to exhibit widely, in Paris and London, as well as Madrid. In 1915, he had his solo début as a theatrical designer, creating sets and costumes for a production of El amor brujo by Manuel de Falla in Madrid. He moved his studios to Paris in 1928 and did more designing for ballets, operas and other productions, including costumes for Cécile Sorel, Grace Moore and Conchita Supervía.[1]

After more travelling, including excursions through the Spanish colonies in Africa,[2] he returned to Las Palmas and established a studio there in 1934. In addition to his paintings, he decorated the "Casino de Tenerife" and the "Teatro Pérez Galdós" and initiated a campaign to promote tourism, which he called "Tipismo" (picturesqueness).[1] He died suddenly, from complications related to pneumonia, leaving several major projects unfinished.

In 1956, the "Museo Néstor" was inaugurated. It is located in the "Pueblo Canario", a cultural complex designed by his brother, Miguel, an architect. The complex includes decorations by Néstor and contains the majority of his works.[1]
Selected paintings

Night (c.1920)

Hercules (1920s)

Untitled (1910s)

Spring (1910s)

Untitled (1910s)

References

Timeline @ the Museo Néstor website.

Brief biography @ Spanish Arts.

Further reading

Saro Alemán Hernández, El pintor Néstor Martín Fernández de la Torre : (1887-1938), Cabildo Insular de Gran Canaria (1991) ISBN 84-85628-80-2
Pedro Almeida Cabrera, Néstor : Néstor Martín Fernández de la Torre Gobierno de Canarias, Viceconsejería de Cultura y Deportes (1991) ISBN 84-7947-052-6
Néstor: un canario cosmopolita (1887-1938) Biography by Pedro Almeida Cabrera (digitalized by the "Memoria digital de Canarias" (mdC) at the Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria).

External links

Museo Néstor homepage.
Interview with Daniel Montesdeoca, Director of the Museo Néstor on Croma Cultura.
Biography by Daniel Montesdeoca García-Sáenz @ the Teatro Pérez Galdós website, including a selection of photographs.[1]

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