Loló Soldevilla 
			Period: The Vanguard 
			1901 - 1971 
			 
			Untitled (Abstraction) 
 Sin Titulo (Abstracción), 1956
 mixed media on board
 11 x 14 inches    
			 
			Born in 1901 in Havana, Cuba, Loló Soldevilla was a virtuosic painter, sculptor, collage artist and draughtsman. She graduated from the Falcón Conservatory for singing and violin, and founded a group known as La Orchestra de Loló before turning her attention to visual art. Soldevilla began painting in 1948. In 1949, she traveled to Paris as Cuba's cultural attache, a position which allowed her to travel extensively throughout Europe and Latin America, and absorb a wide-ranging influence of the international avant-garde and abstract movements.
 In 1956, Soldevilla returned to Cuba and founded Galeria Color-Luz, an establishment dedicated to abstract art, alongside her husband and fellow artist, Pedro de Oraá. Soldevilla, Oraá, and other Cuban luminaries would go on to becomes founders of the group Los Diez Pintores Concretos, (the Ten Concrete Painters), the pioneers of concrete abstraction in 1950s Cuba. Although Los Diez and Color-Luz were only active from 1957-1961, their movement was tremendously influential within Latin American art. In the late fifties to early sixties, she was the professor of Fine Arts in the School of Architecture at the University of Havana. Loló Soldevilla died in 1971.
  
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