Enrique Serra y Auque Art
Enrique Serra Auqué was famous for his landscapes and showed his artistic talent early. He attended the Escuela de Bellas Artes in Barcelona and was a pupil of Ramon Marti Alsina, now considered the founder of the Catalan landscape school, and the sculptor Domingo Talarn. At the age of 20, in 1879, Auqué received a scholarship on merit and moved to Rome, where he remained there for the rest of his life. Here he attended the Chigi Academy, became a friend of Mariano Fortuny, one of the greatest Spanish painters of the 19th century after Goya, and became one of the favorite painters of Pope Leo XIII, who purchased The Virgin of Monserrato and made him a member of the Academy of Arcadia. Rome and the Roman countryside offered Auqué the locations for his works. Thus, he succeeded in developing that pictorial sensitivity for sunsets, marshes, marshes, ponds with sculptures that are still tangible today.
Early 20th Century Enrique Serra y Auque Art
Oil
Early 20th Century Impressionist Enrique Serra y Auque Art
Oil, Canvas
1810s Enrique Serra y Auque Art
Board, Oil
Mid-20th Century Post-War Enrique Serra y Auque Art
Canvas, Oil
1910s American Impressionist Enrique Serra y Auque Art
Board, Oil
1920s Impressionist Enrique Serra y Auque Art
Oil
19th Century Old Masters Enrique Serra y Auque Art
Oil
Late 19th Century Victorian Enrique Serra y Auque Art
Oil, Canvas
1780s Old Masters Enrique Serra y Auque Art
Oil
Early 20th Century American Impressionist Enrique Serra y Auque Art
Oil, Board
Late 19th Century Impressionist Enrique Serra y Auque Art
Oil
Mid-19th Century Enrique Serra y Auque Art
Oil, Wood Panel
1890s Post-Impressionist Enrique Serra y Auque Art
Oil, Canvas