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Wikipedia

Baruj Salinas

Baruj Salinas (born July 6, 1935) is a Cuban-American contemporary visual artist and architect. He is recognized as a central figure in the establishment of the modern Latin American art market in South Florida.

Baruj Salinas
Salinas with one of his paintings
Born (1935-07-06) July 6, 1935 (age 88)
Havana, Cuba
Alma materKent State University
Occupation(s)Artist, architect
Known forAbstract visual art
Notable workLanguage of the Clouds series, Penca de Palma Triste series, the Torah Project
MovementAbstract Expressionism (art), Modernism (architecture)
Websitebarujsalinas.com

Background

Salinas' family is of Sephardic Jewish origins. His ancestors came from a small salt mining town in northern Spain and they derive their name from these origins with "sal" meaning salt in Spanish.[1] They resettled to Silibria, Turkey, another small town, following the 1492 expulsion of the Jews in Spain.[2] They remained in Turkey until the Greco-Turkish Wars of the early 20th century, after which they emigrated first to Marseilles, France in 1918 and then to Cuba in 1920, within the area of Old Havana, which had a substantial Jewish community.[3][2][1]

Early life

Upbringing in Cuba

Salinas was born in Havana, Cuba on July 6, 1935. He began painting early in life and was influenced and supported in the arts by his mother. Regina was a painter whose work consisted of still life scenes of flowers as her main subject in oil paint. This was Salinas’ first exposure to art and by the age of six he began to assist with his mother's painting. Salinas would also draw and sketch, such as tracing newspaper comics. His early sketches included Tarzan, Dick Tracy, and Superman.[4]

By age eleven, Salinas had begun painting landscapes based on his observations of scenery in Cuba. This was followed by scenes of life and people in Havana such as fish salesmen, ice cream salesmen, and children on buses. These evolved into busier market scenes that he would sketch in person and apply paint to afterwards. His early works were made in his childhood bedroom as he did not have a studio at the time and he first exhibited his works at his school. At fourteen, he attended the Círculo de Bellas Artes behind the National Capitol Building in Havana and was the only teenager in attendance, surrounded by older professional painters.[3]

Kent State and architecture

His mother encouraged his progression as a self-taught artist and he continued developing in this way (“unrestrained”) until he received a scholarship to study painting in Kent State University. Upon attending, he felt socio-economically excluded from the fine art world due to his background, though he remained strongly dedicated to design. Therefore, he followed in his father's footsteps and switched his major to architecture, continuing to paint as a personal hobby and minor income source.[3]

While in America, he had begun painting portraits to supplement his income. His subjects were largely his friends and their family and they continued in his early realist vein. Salinas later admitted that in these commissions he would idealize his subject's likeness for a more flattering representation and overall did not enjoy painting portraits.[4] In his personal painting, however, his style had begun to evolve away from realism and representational imagery as his architecture studies impacted him creatively. During this period he became exposed to the Abstract Expressionist movement, which would influence his later art. He began to explore facades and structures and gradually dabble into abstraction, which would become his most identifiable style later in his career. He began by depicting buildings around him in America and eventually delved into depicting imagined buildings, which would take him further into three dimensional representation and the conceptual.[3]

After he received his degree in architecture from Kent State in 1958, Salinas pursued architecture professionally in different cities, identifying as a Modernist, while also continuing to paint and exhibit his work. For the remainder of the decade he would work as an architect while residing in Mexico City (1957–59) and San Antonio, Texas (1959–61).[3] In 1959 he participated in an exhibition at the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, Havana.[5] In 1960 he exhibited at the Circulo de Bellas Artes in Havana as well as the Witte Museum in San Antonio and was well received.[3][5] During this period of the early 1960s Salinas began winning awards for his art and also began feeling restrained by the rigidity and form of architecture.[3] This combination led him to stray from architecture and embrace the arts more directly, a process that would continue into the 1960s.

Art career

First Miami period

Having emigrated from Cuba in 1959, Salinas joined the Cuban diaspora in exile as a result of Fidel Castro's rise to power in the Cuban Revolution, joining them in Miami after his stays in Mexico City and San Antonio.[6][7] Once in Miami, he first mainly worked professionally as an architect to sustain himself but also continued to paint. Salinas had the advantage of being already fluent in English by that point, but still struggled economically as most early exiles had, particularly in the arts. By 1963-64 he was selling his works for as little as $25[4] (about $200 in 2020, adjusted for inflation),[8] during the period well before the establishment of an organized market for Cuban art in South Florida.[6] As a result, even those relatively low rates were often paid in installments, such as five dollars a week or month. Some buyers were previous collectors of Cuban art in Cuba looking to restart their collection after losing their paintings to the Castro regime.[4] Others were new collectors.

Throughout the 1960s Salinas was increasingly active in exhibiting his painting in art venues throughout the United States (Florida, Texas, Missouri) as well as internationally in Mexico and Guatemala.[5] His artwork continued his self-imposed evolution away from architectural influences and saw him directly embrace abstraction for the first time. He drew inspiration from the Space Race and Apollo XIII and painted pieces inspired by outer space and astronomy, such as nebulas and constellations.[4]

Salinas was also increasingly active in the Cuban and Latin American art market in Miami. A significant development came in the mid-1960s when Salinas co-founded (with Enrique Riveron) and subsequently led the Grupo GALA (an acronym for Grupo de Artistas Latino Americanos), the first formal professional organization of Latin American artists established is South Florida.[6][9] GALA members (Salinas, Enrique Riveron, Rafael Soriano, José María Mijares, Roxanna McAllister, and Osvaldo Gutiérrez) would gather bi-monthly to discuss their individual art projects, sponsorships, and organize bi-annual group exhibitions.[6]

Through most of the 1960s, while he continued to deepen his commitment to art, Salinas still worked in architecture as his main profession.[4] This would change by the turn of the decade as he received increasing recognition for his art. In 1968, Salinas won a First Prize award for Watercolor from the Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art.[10] In 1969 he received the Cintas Fellowship for art and then for a second time in 1970,[11] which Salinas has credited in interviews with giving him the initiative to ultimately quit architecture as his main profession and fully dedicate himself to fine art in the 1970s.[4] In 1971, Salinas had a solo exhibition in Washington D.C. at the B.I.D. Gallery.[5]

During this period Salinas was neighbors with fellow prominent Cuban artist Juan Gonzalez and taught him the airbrush painting technique González used to achieve the large-scale hyperrealism style that would soon gain him recognition by leading art institutions in following decade.[12] Salinas also introduced González to Jesus and Marta Permuy, in 1969.[12] This facilitated the launch of Permuy Gallery in 1972 as Gonzalez relocated permanently to New York City and the Permuys assumed the lease to González's Coral Gables art studio and converted it into one of the first Cuban art galleries in the United States.[12] Salinas and the individual Grupo GALA members would be active participants in the gallery's activities as well as in other early Latin American art events and activities, which contributed to the gradual growth of that market in the region during the late 1960s and 1970s.[12][13]

Spanish period

In 1974, Salinas relocated from Miami to Barcelona, Spain where he would remain for the following two decades. The move signaled the end of the GALA group and a new phase of Salinas’ career.[6] In Spain, Salinas became associated with leading art dealer Juana Mordó, who was an essential contact for Salinas and opened her vast network to him within Madrid and Barcelona. This critical exposure helped him become established in Spain and develop a regular stream of collectors there. Salinas also became associated with prominent Spanish painters, including Joan Miró, Antoní Tàpies, as well as American Alexander Calder. He also became immersed in Spain's literary community and developed close friendships with several writers including María Zambrano, José Angel Valente, Vahe Godel, Ramon Dachs, Pere Gimferrer, and Michel Butor.[14][4][15][16][7]

This period saw Salinas venture further into total abstraction and free form styles.[17] It also saw his color palette shift toward more subtle and neutral tones with a strong emphasis on whites and grays, often inspired by and symbolizing clouds.[18] Salinas would call this concept “The Language of the Clouds,” which became a series of works exploring this color palette and approach to abstraction.[18][19] During his Spain period, Salinas would also explore the pictographs of China and Japan as well as foreign alphabets including Greek, Iberian, and Hebrew. These alphabets reflected the influence of the writers he was exposed to and his interest in reducing patterns to fundamentals and abstracting them with his palette of white, which he associated with purity and cleanliness, particularly in the context of its prevalence in Barcelona.[3][4]

Collaborations

Collaborations were a significant mark of this phase of Salinas’ career, particularly interdisciplinary collaborations, and several won awards.

In the 1980s, Salinas actively worked with several writers, particularly poets. In 1980 Salinas partnered with José Ángel Valente on Tres lecciones de Tinieblas (Three Lessons of Darkness), a book inspired by the Jewish mysticism of the Kabbalah and utilized fourteen Hebrew letters along with Valente's poetic interpretation of each. The first letter (Aleph) was called "first blood", while "Beth" corresponded with the concept of home or dwelling. The book won Spain's National Prize of Poetry for its year.[3][4][7]

He also did two books with María Zambrano, one of which, Antes de la ocultación: los mares (1983), was noteworthy for its four lithographs by Salinas that involved a complex double process: the first being the lithographic process while the second was the incorporation of texture into the book.[4] The pair had a long-running collaboration that would grow to include a second book, Arbol (Tree), in 1985 as well as a number of other projects through editor and gallerist Orlando Blanco.[20][21][15] In 1988 Salinas worked with Michel Butor on the book Trois enfants dans la fournaise. The book featured etchings by Salinas and accompanying poetry by Butor and was shown in the Museum of Bayeux in France.[4]

Salinas also established long-running creative relationships with Barcelona printmakers and artists. One was Rufino Tamayo, who specialized in lithographs and engravings.[15] He also worked with Japanese artist and printmaker Masafumi Yamamoto for 15 years, during which time Salinas refined his own printmaking processes. The collaboration would also impact the development of his paintings as he would factor in more closely the etching and printmaking process that would follow in replicating his artworks. A poet associate of Salinas at the time described this influence as his being “yamamotisized,” and Salinas would in turn influence Yamamoto's work while in Barcelona.[4]

Second Miami period and later career

Salinas returned to Miami in 1992 and would reside in Coral Gables, Florida.[15] Since returning to the United States, he has exhibited in New York City, Chicago, Spain, France, Switzerland, Japan, Egypt, Panama, Venezuela, and elsewhere.[17]

His style since his second Miami period has seen Salinas gradually re-embrace color. He attributed the widening of his color palette and increased use of contrast and saturation to the difference in light between Spain and Miami, as well as the cultural differences between how each city uses color.[3] Upon his return to the United States in 1992, Salinas also met his second wife Marilyn C. Fonts, who was then employed in a South Florida fine art gallery; the couple would wed in 2004.[22][23]

From 1993 to 1998, and again in 2000 and 2002–03, Salinas served as the Arts Coordinator for the International Committee for Human Rights in Miami. He is currently a fine art professor at Miami Dade College and began teaching in the MDC Interamerican campus in 2001.[7] In that role, he has been active in curating and facilitating student exhibitions of art there.[24]

From 2015 to 2017 Salinas was recruited to be part of The Torah Project which was then compiled in the book The Torah Project Humash.[19] The book featured 27 images of his work. The book was presented in 2017 to Pope Francis at a ceremony in the Vatican with Salinas in attendance.[25]

Style

Salinas’ artwork and architecture design have their foundation in mid-century movements which he has interpreted and updated with a number of personal influences and themes. As an architect, Salinas is part of the Modernist tradition and before his retirement had prominently utilized concrete-heavy designs that drew influence from Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater, Le Corbusier, and Erich Mendelsohn.[3] Architecture had also influenced his early art.[26]

Salinas’ art is noted for its spiritual, philosophical, cultural, and symbolic layerings. He is identified with the Abstract Expressionism movement,[19][27] having first been exposed to the work of its leading members (Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko, Zao Wou-Ki) while at Kent State University.[3] Salinas has occasionally taken to forays of figurative and representational abstraction.[3] His various artistic periods are generally marked by gradual rather than radical style shifts, often incorporating many degrees of subtlety. His art is also noted for its collaborative nature and the occasional influence of other artists. Salinas described abstract painters Albert Rafols Casamada and Tàpies as influences on his work in Barcelona and also considered Miró a mentor while maintaining that they each had differing styles and approaches.[3][27]

A core theme of Salinas' body of artwork has been the exploration of personal identity and the various cultural identities he embraces. One is his Cuban identity and he is considered part of the original wave of the La Vieja Guardia (the Old Guard) generation of Cuban artists that followed the Vanguardia movement in Cuba.[6][28][9] His “Penca de Palma Triste” (Leaf of a Sad Palm) series of the late 1980s expressed his Cuban identity in exile as Salinas depicts a single leaf of a palm tree, a longtime quintessential symbol of Cuba, as symbolic of a piece removed from the whole, while also using his abstract method to create ambiguous images that can also be interpreted as waterfalls or the tail feathers of an exotic bird.[3] Salinas also described color is a key acknowledgment of his Cuban identity.[20][4]

Another identity he explores is his Jewish heritage. His expression of Jewish identity are seen in his themes and concepts of solitude, individuality, movement (diaspora), as well as his exploration of Jewish mysticism through the Kabbalah.[4][2] Key Jewish-inspired series' of Salinas work include his award-winning collaboration with José Angel Valente, Tres Lecciones de Tinieblas, as well as his paintings for the Torah Project in 2015.[3][4][7][1]

In regards to his interpretation of the cross-cultural themes of globalism in Contemporary art, Salinas has stated "Art has become a universal language and the modern artist attempts to embrace the idea of a language that has no barriers."[20]

In describing Salinas' style, art critic Carlos M. Luis stated: "Baruj uses color and all its intense chromatism as a channel or filter (in the manner of alchemists) to distill a world of a romantic nature, but of a Romanticism closer to Turner than to Corot. That which Novalis called 'the adoration of chaos' was based in his belief that 'the more impenetrable was the chaos, so much more splendid was the star that would come out of it'."[29] Luis believes Salinas' early experiments with color and abstraction were in the general vein of Kandinsky and that Salinas later developed a style akin to the "calculated spontaneity of Zen brushwork."[6] In her 2004 book Cuban American Art in Miami: Exile, Identity, and the Neo-Baroque, SUNY art historian Lynette Bosch wrote that technique and emotion are both central to Salinas' body of work, as well as the development of "an integral aesthetic language of gesture, color, form, space, and movement."[6]

Speaking on his own approach to art, Salinas has said “I strive to find a language that people can recognize in me by the work and not by my signature.“ He elaborated: “To me, painting is not work. It is something that transcends labor [...] like a meditation. I enjoy seeing a wide blank space being developed into something that has life.”[28][27]

Gallery

Exhibitions and publications

Salinas has had over 100 solo exhibitions of his artwork and has exhibited in over 20 countries throughout Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas.[27][30] These include multiple exhibitions in Cuba, the United States, Spain, France, Italy, Switzerland, Egypt, Israel, Japan, Mexico, Argentina, and elsewhere.[5][17]

Salinas has been covered by several media outlets, including Art Now,[31] Arte Al Día Internacional Magazine,[32] Art in America,[33] Art News,[34] The Washington Post,[35] The Miami Herald[1] and El Nuevo Herald.[14] His artwork has also been discussed and featured on several books of Contemporary American art,[36][37] Cuban,[38][39][40][41] Latin American,[42][43][44] and Jewish art.[45][2][46]

He was the subject of the book BARUJ SALINAS, first published in Spanish in 1979 and republished in 1988, when it was translated into English and French.[47][48]

In 2000, his career was the subject of the film Baruj Salinas, 21st Century Master.[49] In 2019 he participated in the second “Art + Architecture” exhibition in Coral Gables, Florida, where he was the main featured artist alongside his late fellow Grupo GALA member José Mijares.[50]

In 2022, The American Museum of the Cuban Diaspora hosted a 50-year retrospective of Salinas' career from May to August. The exhibition, titled Baruj Salinas: 1972-2022, included works from several of Salinas' most high-profile series, including The Language of the Clouds and The Torah Project.[51] The retrospective was produced by the Cuban Legacy Gallery, MDC Special Collections at Miami Dade College, and the American Museum of the Cuban Diaspora.[51] Originally intended to be held at the Miami Freedom Tower, Salinas stated that the retrospective was "the best and most comprehensive exhibition of my career” noting that, in comparing the venues, the Museum allowed for considerably more work to be featured.[52]

Awards and reputation

Throughout his career, Salinas has received numerous international fine art awards for his paintings. They include: Best Transparent Watercolor award from the Texas Watercolor Society (San Antonio, 1964), First Prize for Watercolor in the Hortt Memorial Exhibition at the Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art (1968), the Cintas Fellowship (twice; 1969, 1970), the Prize to Excellency at the VII Grand Prix International de Peinture in Cannes (1971), First Prize at the IV Pan American Exhibition in Miami, First Prize in the VI Latin American Print Biennial (Puerto Rico, 1983), and the National Prize of Engraving from the National Calcography of Madrid (1996).[11][10][53]

Salinas' artwork has been sold on fine art brokerage institutions including Sotheby's, Artnet, and others.[54][55][56]

Contemporary art collector Dr. Arturo F. Mosquera, stated to the Miami Herald that Salinas is “one of the most prolific and important painters of the third generation [La Vieja Guardia] of Cuban artists.”[1] while Cuban art critic Carlos Luis considers Salinas to be "one of the finest Cuban exponents of Abstract Expressionism."[6]

In 2021, Salinas was awarded the 2021 Premio Amelia Pelaez by the Cuban Cultural Center of New York. The award presentation event was co-sponsored by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs.[57]

Collections

Salinas' work is featured in several international fine art collections including:

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Miami Herald Profile". Miamiherald.com.
  2. ^ a b c d "The Torah Project Humash Illustrated By The Master Baruj Salinas". Esefarad.com. 30 January 2018. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "Interview with Baruj Salinas". Buffalo.edu.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "Interview 2" (PDF). Sunypress.edu. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  5. ^ a b c d e "Baruj Salinas". Cubaartny.org.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i Bosch, Lynette (2004). Cuban-American Art In Miami: Exile, Identity And The Neo-Baroque. Lund Humphries. ISBN 9780853319078.
  7. ^ a b c d e "Mediodía (High Noon) - Baruj Salinas". Google Arts & Culture.
  8. ^ "$25 in 1963 → 2021 | Inflation Calculator". In2013dollars.com.
  9. ^ a b Tatum, Charles M., ed. (2013). Encyclopedia of Latino Culture: From Calaveras to Quinceaneras. Greenwood. ISBN 9781440800993.
  10. ^ a b "Baruj Salinas triptych NICE well listed Cuban artist | #493257003". Worthpoint.
  11. ^ a b "Salinas, Baruj". Cintasfoundation.org.
  12. ^ a b c d "Art Reviews". www.barujsalinas.com. Baruj Salinas. 2021.
  13. ^ "Marta Cazañas Permuy – Obituary". Legacy.com. from the original on 2020-06-17.
  14. ^ a b "El Nuevo Herald Profile". Elnuevoherald.com.
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  18. ^ a b O'Reilly Herrera, Andrea (2011). Cuban Artists Across the Diaspora: Setting the Tent Against the House. University of Texas Press. ISBN 9780292773332.
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  20. ^ a b c "Saw Palm - Visions of Baruj Salinas". Saw Palm: florida literature and art.
  21. ^ "Arbol (with woodcuts by Baruj Salinas) de Zambrano, Maria (Baruj Salinas): (1985) Signed by Author(s) | Cole & Contreras / Sylvan Cole Gallery". Iberlibro.com.
  22. ^ Martin, Lydia. "Hector Elizondo: In His Stride". www.aarp.org. AARP.
  23. ^ "Archives of American Art: Baruj Salinas Papers". www.aaa.si.edu. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution.
  24. ^ "Veteran - MDC College Forum - Volume 20, Number 1". Mdc.edu.
  25. ^ "Torah ilustrada por el pintor Baruj Salinas le fue entregada al Papa Francisco - Diario Judío México". Diariojudio.com. March 2, 2017.
  26. ^ a b c d "Artnet Bio". Artnet.com.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Inverted And Lamed Reversed, Painting by Baruj Salinas | Artmajeur". Artmajeur.com. Artmajeur
  28. ^ a b Garcia, Jorge; Bosch, Lynette; Alvarez Borland, Isabel (2008). Identity, Memory, and Diaspora: Voices of Cuban-American Artists, Writers, and Philosophers. SUNY Press. ISBN 9780791473177.
  29. ^ "Baruj Salinas". Cubaartny.org.
  30. ^ "Baruj Salinas". latinamericaart.com. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  31. ^ "Art Now Gallery Guide". Art Now Gallery Guide. Art Now, Incorporated. 8 (1–3). 1988.
  32. ^ "Arte Al Día Internacional: International Magazine of Latin American Art and Antiques, Issues 84-88". Arte al Día Internacional: International Magazine of Latin American Art and Antiques. Editorial Arte al Día. 84–88. 2001.
  33. ^ Fairchild Sherman, Frederic (1998). "Baruj Salinas". Art in America. Brandt Art Publications. 86: 89.
  34. ^ "ARTnews". ARTnews Associates. 12 November 2004. Retrieved 12 November 2021 – via Google Books.
  35. ^ . The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 2020-07-25. Retrieved 2020-07-24.
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  38. ^ Alvarez Borland, Isabel; Bosch, Lynette (2009). Cuban-American Literature and Art: Negotiating Identities. SUNY Press. ISBN 978-0791493748.
  39. ^ Fuentes-Pérez, Ileana; Cruz-Taura, Graciella; Pau-Llosa, Ricardo (1989). Outside Cuba: Contemporary Cuban Visual Artists (1st ed.). Transaction Publishers. ISBN 9780935501131.
  40. ^ Gómez Sicre, José (1987). Art of Cuba in Exile. Ediciones Universal. ISBN 978-0897294676.
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  42. ^ Unterburger, Amy L. (1994). Who's Who Among Hispanic Americans (3 ed.). Gale Research Incorporated. ISBN 9780810385504.
  43. ^ Stavans, Ilan; Augenbraum, Harold (2005). Encyclopedia Latina: History, Culture, and Society in the United States, Volume 3. Grolier Academic Reference. ISBN 9780717258185.
  44. ^ Ruiz-Ramón, Astrid (1987). Recent Developments in Latin American Drawing: The Art Institute of Chicago. Image Publications.
  45. ^ Zerivitz, Marcia Jo (2020). Jews of Florida: Centuries of Stories. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9781467142533.
  46. ^ "Pope Francis Receives 1st Torah Project Book". PR.com.
  47. ^ "Book Details". Abebooks.com.
  48. ^ Signed Baruj Salinas: Pinturas Y Grabados Recientes, Noviembre-Diciembre, 1988. Amazon.com.
  49. ^ "Baruj Salinas, 21st Century Master (TV Movie 2000) - IMDb" – via m.imdb.com.
  50. ^ Releases, Community News (January 20, 2020). "Gables architecture firm combines holiday party with art exhibition". Miami's Community News.
  51. ^ a b "Baruj Salinas: 1972-2022". www.thecuban.org. © 2021 American Museum of The Cuban Diaspora, Inc. Retrieved 9 August 2022.
  52. ^ Permuy, Antonio (3 August 2022). "Baruj Salinas: A Focus on the Infinite". www.contemporaryartissue.com. Belgium: Contemporary Art Issue, 2022. Retrieved 9 August 2022.
  53. ^ "Baruj Salinas - Untitled Abstract Cuban Painting Latin American Expressionist". 1stDibs.com.
  54. ^ "Baruj SALINAS (1935)". Artprice.com.
  55. ^ "Baruj Salinas | Artnet". Artnet.com.
  56. ^ "Baruj Salinas - 70 Artworks, Bio & Shows on Artsy". Artsy.net.
  57. ^ "Baruj Salinas: Premio Amelia Peláez 2021". ww.cubanculturalcenter.org. 2021 Centro Cultural Cubano de Nueva York.
  58. ^ . Archived from the original on 2022-01-21. Retrieved 2022-02-27.
  59. ^ "Baruj Salinas". The Art Institute of Chicago.
  60. ^ "Error - Permanent Collection". Artmuseumoftheamericas.org.
  61. ^ "Baruj Salinas". IMMA.
  62. ^ "Baruj Salinas (American, b.1935)". McNay Art Museum.
  63. ^ "Through the Ring". emuseum.ringling.org.
  64. ^ "Virtual Resources". NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale.
  65. ^ "Calas". November 11, 1999 – via artnet.
  66. ^ "Creative Pinellas". Creativepinellas.org. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  67. ^ Damian, Carol; Santis, Jorge H. (1997). Breaking Barriers: Selections from the Museum of Art's Permanent Contemporary Cuban Collection. Museum of Art Fort Lauderdale.
  68. ^ "Works – Baruj Salinas – People Search – eMuseum | University of Miami". emuseum1.as.miami.edu.

External links

  • Official website

baruj, salinas, born, july, 1935, cuban, american, contemporary, visual, artist, architect, recognized, central, figure, establishment, modern, latin, american, market, south, florida, salinas, with, paintingsborn, 1935, july, 1935, havana, cubaalma, materkent. Baruj Salinas born July 6 1935 is a Cuban American contemporary visual artist and architect He is recognized as a central figure in the establishment of the modern Latin American art market in South Florida Baruj SalinasSalinas with one of his paintingsBorn 1935 07 06 July 6 1935 age 88 Havana CubaAlma materKent State UniversityOccupation s Artist architectKnown forAbstract visual artNotable workLanguage of the Clouds series Penca de Palma Triste series the Torah ProjectMovementAbstract Expressionism art Modernism architecture Websitebarujsalinas wbr com Contents 1 Background 2 Early life 2 1 Upbringing in Cuba 2 2 Kent State and architecture 3 Art career 3 1 First Miami period 3 2 Spanish period 3 2 1 Collaborations 3 3 Second Miami period and later career 4 Style 5 Gallery 6 Exhibitions and publications 7 Awards and reputation 8 Collections 9 References 10 External linksBackground EditSalinas family is of Sephardic Jewish origins His ancestors came from a small salt mining town in northern Spain and they derive their name from these origins with sal meaning salt in Spanish 1 They resettled to Silibria Turkey another small town following the 1492 expulsion of the Jews in Spain 2 They remained in Turkey until the Greco Turkish Wars of the early 20th century after which they emigrated first to Marseilles France in 1918 and then to Cuba in 1920 within the area of Old Havana which had a substantial Jewish community 3 2 1 Early life EditUpbringing in Cuba Edit Salinas was born in Havana Cuba on July 6 1935 He began painting early in life and was influenced and supported in the arts by his mother Regina was a painter whose work consisted of still life scenes of flowers as her main subject in oil paint This was Salinas first exposure to art and by the age of six he began to assist with his mother s painting Salinas would also draw and sketch such as tracing newspaper comics His early sketches included Tarzan Dick Tracy and Superman 4 By age eleven Salinas had begun painting landscapes based on his observations of scenery in Cuba This was followed by scenes of life and people in Havana such as fish salesmen ice cream salesmen and children on buses These evolved into busier market scenes that he would sketch in person and apply paint to afterwards His early works were made in his childhood bedroom as he did not have a studio at the time and he first exhibited his works at his school At fourteen he attended the Circulo de Bellas Artes behind the National Capitol Building in Havana and was the only teenager in attendance surrounded by older professional painters 3 Kent State and architecture Edit His mother encouraged his progression as a self taught artist and he continued developing in this way unrestrained until he received a scholarship to study painting in Kent State University Upon attending he felt socio economically excluded from the fine art world due to his background though he remained strongly dedicated to design Therefore he followed in his father s footsteps and switched his major to architecture continuing to paint as a personal hobby and minor income source 3 While in America he had begun painting portraits to supplement his income His subjects were largely his friends and their family and they continued in his early realist vein Salinas later admitted that in these commissions he would idealize his subject s likeness for a more flattering representation and overall did not enjoy painting portraits 4 In his personal painting however his style had begun to evolve away from realism and representational imagery as his architecture studies impacted him creatively During this period he became exposed to the Abstract Expressionist movement which would influence his later art He began to explore facades and structures and gradually dabble into abstraction which would become his most identifiable style later in his career He began by depicting buildings around him in America and eventually delved into depicting imagined buildings which would take him further into three dimensional representation and the conceptual 3 After he received his degree in architecture from Kent State in 1958 Salinas pursued architecture professionally in different cities identifying as a Modernist while also continuing to paint and exhibit his work For the remainder of the decade he would work as an architect while residing in Mexico City 1957 59 and San Antonio Texas 1959 61 3 In 1959 he participated in an exhibition at the Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes Havana 5 In 1960 he exhibited at the Circulo de Bellas Artes in Havana as well as the Witte Museum in San Antonio and was well received 3 5 During this period of the early 1960s Salinas began winning awards for his art and also began feeling restrained by the rigidity and form of architecture 3 This combination led him to stray from architecture and embrace the arts more directly a process that would continue into the 1960s Art career EditFirst Miami period Edit Having emigrated from Cuba in 1959 Salinas joined the Cuban diaspora in exile as a result of Fidel Castro s rise to power in the Cuban Revolution joining them in Miami after his stays in Mexico City and San Antonio 6 7 Once in Miami he first mainly worked professionally as an architect to sustain himself but also continued to paint Salinas had the advantage of being already fluent in English by that point but still struggled economically as most early exiles had particularly in the arts By 1963 64 he was selling his works for as little as 25 4 about 200 in 2020 adjusted for inflation 8 during the period well before the establishment of an organized market for Cuban art in South Florida 6 As a result even those relatively low rates were often paid in installments such as five dollars a week or month Some buyers were previous collectors of Cuban art in Cuba looking to restart their collection after losing their paintings to the Castro regime 4 Others were new collectors Throughout the 1960s Salinas was increasingly active in exhibiting his painting in art venues throughout the United States Florida Texas Missouri as well as internationally in Mexico and Guatemala 5 His artwork continued his self imposed evolution away from architectural influences and saw him directly embrace abstraction for the first time He drew inspiration from the Space Race and Apollo XIII and painted pieces inspired by outer space and astronomy such as nebulas and constellations 4 Salinas was also increasingly active in the Cuban and Latin American art market in Miami A significant development came in the mid 1960s when Salinas co founded with Enrique Riveron and subsequently led the Grupo GALA an acronym for Grupo de Artistas Latino Americanos the first formal professional organization of Latin American artists established is South Florida 6 9 GALA members Salinas Enrique Riveron Rafael Soriano Jose Maria Mijares Roxanna McAllister and Osvaldo Gutierrez would gather bi monthly to discuss their individual art projects sponsorships and organize bi annual group exhibitions 6 Through most of the 1960s while he continued to deepen his commitment to art Salinas still worked in architecture as his main profession 4 This would change by the turn of the decade as he received increasing recognition for his art In 1968 Salinas won a First Prize award for Watercolor from the Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art 10 In 1969 he received the Cintas Fellowship for art and then for a second time in 1970 11 which Salinas has credited in interviews with giving him the initiative to ultimately quit architecture as his main profession and fully dedicate himself to fine art in the 1970s 4 In 1971 Salinas had a solo exhibition in Washington D C at the B I D Gallery 5 During this period Salinas was neighbors with fellow prominent Cuban artist Juan Gonzalez and taught him the airbrush painting technique Gonzalez used to achieve the large scale hyperrealism style that would soon gain him recognition by leading art institutions in following decade 12 Salinas also introduced Gonzalez to Jesus and Marta Permuy in 1969 12 This facilitated the launch of Permuy Gallery in 1972 as Gonzalez relocated permanently to New York City and the Permuys assumed the lease to Gonzalez s Coral Gables art studio and converted it into one of the first Cuban art galleries in the United States 12 Salinas and the individual Grupo GALA members would be active participants in the gallery s activities as well as in other early Latin American art events and activities which contributed to the gradual growth of that market in the region during the late 1960s and 1970s 12 13 Spanish period Edit In 1974 Salinas relocated from Miami to Barcelona Spain where he would remain for the following two decades The move signaled the end of the GALA group and a new phase of Salinas career 6 In Spain Salinas became associated with leading art dealer Juana Mordo who was an essential contact for Salinas and opened her vast network to him within Madrid and Barcelona This critical exposure helped him become established in Spain and develop a regular stream of collectors there Salinas also became associated with prominent Spanish painters including Joan Miro Antoni Tapies as well as American Alexander Calder He also became immersed in Spain s literary community and developed close friendships with several writers including Maria Zambrano Jose Angel Valente Vahe Godel Ramon Dachs Pere Gimferrer and Michel Butor 14 4 15 16 7 This period saw Salinas venture further into total abstraction and free form styles 17 It also saw his color palette shift toward more subtle and neutral tones with a strong emphasis on whites and grays often inspired by and symbolizing clouds 18 Salinas would call this concept The Language of the Clouds which became a series of works exploring this color palette and approach to abstraction 18 19 During his Spain period Salinas would also explore the pictographs of China and Japan as well as foreign alphabets including Greek Iberian and Hebrew These alphabets reflected the influence of the writers he was exposed to and his interest in reducing patterns to fundamentals and abstracting them with his palette of white which he associated with purity and cleanliness particularly in the context of its prevalence in Barcelona 3 4 Collaborations Edit Collaborations were a significant mark of this phase of Salinas career particularly interdisciplinary collaborations and several won awards In the 1980s Salinas actively worked with several writers particularly poets In 1980 Salinas partnered with Jose Angel Valente on Tres lecciones de Tinieblas Three Lessons of Darkness a book inspired by the Jewish mysticism of the Kabbalah and utilized fourteen Hebrew letters along with Valente s poetic interpretation of each The first letter Aleph was called first blood while Beth corresponded with the concept of home or dwelling The book won Spain s National Prize of Poetry for its year 3 4 7 He also did two books with Maria Zambrano one of which Antes de la ocultacion los mares 1983 was noteworthy for its four lithographs by Salinas that involved a complex double process the first being the lithographic process while the second was the incorporation of texture into the book 4 The pair had a long running collaboration that would grow to include a second book Arbol Tree in 1985 as well as a number of other projects through editor and gallerist Orlando Blanco 20 21 15 In 1988 Salinas worked with Michel Butor on the book Trois enfants dans la fournaise The book featured etchings by Salinas and accompanying poetry by Butor and was shown in the Museum of Bayeux in France 4 Salinas also established long running creative relationships with Barcelona printmakers and artists One was Rufino Tamayo who specialized in lithographs and engravings 15 He also worked with Japanese artist and printmaker Masafumi Yamamoto for 15 years during which time Salinas refined his own printmaking processes The collaboration would also impact the development of his paintings as he would factor in more closely the etching and printmaking process that would follow in replicating his artworks A poet associate of Salinas at the time described this influence as his being yamamotisized and Salinas would in turn influence Yamamoto s work while in Barcelona 4 Second Miami period and later career Edit Salinas returned to Miami in 1992 and would reside in Coral Gables Florida 15 Since returning to the United States he has exhibited in New York City Chicago Spain France Switzerland Japan Egypt Panama Venezuela and elsewhere 17 His style since his second Miami period has seen Salinas gradually re embrace color He attributed the widening of his color palette and increased use of contrast and saturation to the difference in light between Spain and Miami as well as the cultural differences between how each city uses color 3 Upon his return to the United States in 1992 Salinas also met his second wife Marilyn C Fonts who was then employed in a South Florida fine art gallery the couple would wed in 2004 22 23 From 1993 to 1998 and again in 2000 and 2002 03 Salinas served as the Arts Coordinator for the International Committee for Human Rights in Miami He is currently a fine art professor at Miami Dade College and began teaching in the MDC Interamerican campus in 2001 7 In that role he has been active in curating and facilitating student exhibitions of art there 24 From 2015 to 2017 Salinas was recruited to be part of The Torah Project which was then compiled in the book The Torah Project Humash 19 The book featured 27 images of his work The book was presented in 2017 to Pope Francis at a ceremony in the Vatican with Salinas in attendance 25 Style EditSalinas artwork and architecture design have their foundation in mid century movements which he has interpreted and updated with a number of personal influences and themes As an architect Salinas is part of the Modernist tradition and before his retirement had prominently utilized concrete heavy designs that drew influence from Frank Lloyd Wright s Fallingwater Le Corbusier and Erich Mendelsohn 3 Architecture had also influenced his early art 26 Salinas art is noted for its spiritual philosophical cultural and symbolic layerings He is identified with the Abstract Expressionism movement 19 27 having first been exposed to the work of its leading members Willem de Kooning Jackson Pollock Mark Rothko Zao Wou Ki while at Kent State University 3 Salinas has occasionally taken to forays of figurative and representational abstraction 3 His various artistic periods are generally marked by gradual rather than radical style shifts often incorporating many degrees of subtlety His art is also noted for its collaborative nature and the occasional influence of other artists Salinas described abstract painters Albert Rafols Casamada and Tapies as influences on his work in Barcelona and also considered Miro a mentor while maintaining that they each had differing styles and approaches 3 27 A core theme of Salinas body of artwork has been the exploration of personal identity and the various cultural identities he embraces One is his Cuban identity and he is considered part of the original wave of the La Vieja Guardia the Old Guard generation of Cuban artists that followed the Vanguardia movement in Cuba 6 28 9 His Penca de Palma Triste Leaf of a Sad Palm series of the late 1980s expressed his Cuban identity in exile as Salinas depicts a single leaf of a palm tree a longtime quintessential symbol of Cuba as symbolic of a piece removed from the whole while also using his abstract method to create ambiguous images that can also be interpreted as waterfalls or the tail feathers of an exotic bird 3 Salinas also described color is a key acknowledgment of his Cuban identity 20 4 Another identity he explores is his Jewish heritage His expression of Jewish identity are seen in his themes and concepts of solitude individuality movement diaspora as well as his exploration of Jewish mysticism through the Kabbalah 4 2 Key Jewish inspired series of Salinas work include his award winning collaboration with Jose Angel Valente Tres Lecciones de Tinieblas as well as his paintings for the Torah Project in 2015 3 4 7 1 In regards to his interpretation of the cross cultural themes of globalism in Contemporary art Salinas has stated Art has become a universal language and the modern artist attempts to embrace the idea of a language that has no barriers 20 In describing Salinas style art critic Carlos M Luis stated Baruj uses color and all its intense chromatism as a channel or filter in the manner of alchemists to distill a world of a romantic nature but of a Romanticism closer to Turner than to Corot That which Novalis called the adoration of chaos was based in his belief that the more impenetrable was the chaos so much more splendid was the star that would come out of it 29 Luis believes Salinas early experiments with color and abstraction were in the general vein of Kandinsky and that Salinas later developed a style akin to the calculated spontaneity of Zen brushwork 6 In her 2004 book Cuban American Art in Miami Exile Identity and the Neo Baroque SUNY art historian Lynette Bosch wrote that technique and emotion are both central to Salinas body of work as well as the development of an integral aesthetic language of gesture color form space and movement 6 Speaking on his own approach to art Salinas has said I strive to find a language that people can recognize in me by the work and not by my signature He elaborated To me painting is not work It is something that transcends labor like a meditation I enjoy seeing a wide blank space being developed into something that has life 28 27 Gallery Edit GENESIS CREATION 2014 by Baruj Salinas EXODUS RED SEA 2014 by Baruj Salinas LEVITICUS THE LAW 2014 by Baruj SalinasExhibitions and publications EditSalinas has had over 100 solo exhibitions of his artwork and has exhibited in over 20 countries throughout Europe Asia Africa and the Americas 27 30 These include multiple exhibitions in Cuba the United States Spain France Italy Switzerland Egypt Israel Japan Mexico Argentina and elsewhere 5 17 Salinas has been covered by several media outlets including Art Now 31 Arte Al Dia Internacional Magazine 32 Art in America 33 Art News 34 The Washington Post 35 The Miami Herald 1 and El Nuevo Herald 14 His artwork has also been discussed and featured on several books of Contemporary American art 36 37 Cuban 38 39 40 41 Latin American 42 43 44 and Jewish art 45 2 46 He was the subject of the book BARUJ SALINAS first published in Spanish in 1979 and republished in 1988 when it was translated into English and French 47 48 In 2000 his career was the subject of the film Baruj Salinas 21st Century Master 49 In 2019 he participated in the second Art Architecture exhibition in Coral Gables Florida where he was the main featured artist alongside his late fellow Grupo GALA member Jose Mijares 50 In 2022 The American Museum of the Cuban Diaspora hosted a 50 year retrospective of Salinas career from May to August The exhibition titled Baruj Salinas 1972 2022 included works from several of Salinas most high profile series including The Language of the Clouds and The Torah Project 51 The retrospective was produced by the Cuban Legacy Gallery MDC Special Collections at Miami Dade College and the American Museum of the Cuban Diaspora 51 Originally intended to be held at the Miami Freedom Tower Salinas stated that the retrospective was the best and most comprehensive exhibition of my career noting that in comparing the venues the Museum allowed for considerably more work to be featured 52 Awards and reputation EditThroughout his career Salinas has received numerous international fine art awards for his paintings They include Best Transparent Watercolor award from the Texas Watercolor Society San Antonio 1964 First Prize for Watercolor in the Hortt Memorial Exhibition at the Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art 1968 the Cintas Fellowship twice 1969 1970 the Prize to Excellency at the VII Grand Prix International de Peinture in Cannes 1971 First Prize at the IV Pan American Exhibition in Miami First Prize in the VI Latin American Print Biennial Puerto Rico 1983 and the National Prize of Engraving from the National Calcography of Madrid 1996 11 10 53 Salinas artwork has been sold on fine art brokerage institutions including Sotheby s Artnet and others 54 55 56 Contemporary art collector Dr Arturo F Mosquera stated to the Miami Herald that Salinas is one of the most prolific and important painters of the third generation La Vieja Guardia of Cuban artists 1 while Cuban art critic Carlos Luis considers Salinas to be one of the finest Cuban exponents of Abstract Expressionism 6 In 2021 Salinas was awarded the 2021 Premio Amelia Pelaez by the Cuban Cultural Center of New York The award presentation event was co sponsored by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs 57 Collections EditSalinas work is featured in several international fine art collections including The Americas Collection Coral Gables Florida 58 The Art Institute of Chicago 59 The Israel Museum Jerusalem Israel 1 The Vatican Secret Archives Vatican City 1 The Joan Miro Foundation Barcelona Spain 17 26 The Art Museum of the Americas Washington D C 60 The Villa du Parc Center for Contemporary Art Annemasse France 27 The National Museum of Catalonia Museu Nacional d Art de Catalunya Barcelona Spain 17 Alicante Museum of Contemporary Art Alicante Spain 27 Biblioteca Nacional Madrid Spain 27 The National Institute of Fine Arts Mexico City Mexico 17 The Museo de Arte Moderno Mexico City 27 Institute of International Education New York 27 Museo del Barrio New York 27 Villa de Montecatini Collection Italy 27 Cabinet des Estampes Geneva Switzerland 27 The Irish Museum of Modern Art Ireland 61 The Beit Uri and Rami Nehoshtan Museum Israel 17 The McNay Art Museum San Antonio Texas 62 The Phoenix Art Museum Arizona 17 26 Museo de Arte Contemporaneo Latinoamericano MACLA La Plata Argentina 27 The Museum of Fine Arts Budapest Hungary 17 26 John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art Sarasota Florida 63 The NSU Museum of Art Fort Lauderdale Florida 64 The Bacardi Collection Coral Gables Florida 65 The Permuy Collection Coral Gables Florida 66 The Pinedo Collection Miami Florida 67 The Lowe Art Museum Coral Gables Florida 68 References Edit a b c d e f g Miami Herald Profile Miamiherald com a b c d The Torah Project Humash Illustrated By The Master Baruj Salinas Esefarad com 30 January 2018 Retrieved 12 November 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Interview with Baruj Salinas Buffalo edu a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Interview 2 PDF Sunypress edu Retrieved 12 November 2021 a b c d e Baruj Salinas Cubaartny org a b c d e f g h i Bosch Lynette 2004 Cuban American Art In Miami Exile Identity And The Neo Baroque Lund Humphries ISBN 9780853319078 a b c d e Mediodia High Noon Baruj Salinas Google Arts amp Culture 25 in 1963 2021 Inflation Calculator In2013dollars com a b Tatum Charles M ed 2013 Encyclopedia of Latino Culture From Calaveras to Quinceaneras Greenwood ISBN 9781440800993 a b Baruj Salinas triptych NICE well listed Cuban artist 493257003 Worthpoint a b Salinas Baruj Cintasfoundation org a b c d Art Reviews www barujsalinas com Baruj Salinas 2021 Marta Cazanas Permuy Obituary Legacy com Archived from the original on 2020 06 17 a b El Nuevo Herald Profile Elnuevoherald com a b c d Baruj Salinas Artelista com Artelista Baruj Salinas With Joan Miro and Others 19 from the Baruj Salinas papers 1971 1996 Aaa si edu a b c d e f g h i Baruj Salinas Artnet com Retrieved November 12 2021 a b O Reilly Herrera Andrea 2011 Cuban Artists Across the Diaspora Setting the Tent Against the House University of Texas Press ISBN 9780292773332 a b c Baruj Salinas Jewish Artist Biography Accartescritta wixsite com a b c Saw Palm Visions of Baruj Salinas Saw Palm florida literature and art Arbol with woodcuts by Baruj Salinas de Zambrano Maria Baruj Salinas 1985 Signed by Author s Cole amp Contreras Sylvan Cole Gallery Iberlibro com Martin Lydia Hector Elizondo In His Stride www aarp org AARP Archives of American Art Baruj Salinas Papers www aaa si edu Archives of American Art Smithsonian Institution Veteran MDC College Forum Volume 20 Number 1 Mdc edu Torah ilustrada por el pintor Baruj Salinas le fue entregada al Papa Francisco Diario Judio Mexico Diariojudio com March 2 2017 a b c d Artnet Bio Artnet com a b c d e f g h i j k l m Inverted And Lamed Reversed Painting by Baruj Salinas Artmajeur Artmajeur com Artmajeur a b Garcia Jorge Bosch Lynette Alvarez Borland Isabel 2008 Identity Memory and Diaspora Voices of Cuban American Artists Writers and Philosophers SUNY Press ISBN 9780791473177 Baruj Salinas Cubaartny org Baruj Salinas latinamericaart com Retrieved 12 November 2021 Art Now Gallery Guide Art Now Gallery Guide Art Now Incorporated 8 1 3 1988 Arte Al Dia Internacional International Magazine of Latin American Art and Antiques Issues 84 88 Arte al Dia Internacional International Magazine of Latin American Art and Antiques Editorial Arte al Dia 84 88 2001 Fairchild Sherman Frederic 1998 Baruj Salinas Art in America Brandt Art Publications 86 89 ARTnews ARTnews Associates 12 November 2004 Retrieved 12 November 2021 via Google Books Galleries the Washington Post The Washington Post Archived from the original on 2020 07 25 Retrieved 2020 07 24 Falk Peter H Lewis Audrey M 1999 Who was who in American art 1564 1975 400 years of artists in America Volume 3 Sound View Press ISBN 9780932087553 Bowker R R 1990 Who s who in American Art 19 ed American Federation of Arts ISBN 9780835228978 Alvarez Borland Isabel Bosch Lynette 2009 Cuban American Literature and Art Negotiating Identities SUNY Press ISBN 978 0791493748 Fuentes Perez Ileana Cruz Taura Graciella Pau Llosa Ricardo 1989 Outside Cuba Contemporary Cuban Visual Artists 1st ed Transaction Publishers ISBN 9780935501131 Gomez Sicre Jose 1987 Art of Cuba in Exile Ediciones Universal ISBN 978 0897294676 Santis Jorge H Damian Carol 1998 Breaking Barriers Selections from the Museum of Art s Permanent Contemporary Cuban Collection Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art Smithsonian Libraries Unterburger Amy L 1994 Who s Who Among Hispanic Americans 3 ed Gale Research Incorporated ISBN 9780810385504 Stavans Ilan Augenbraum Harold 2005 Encyclopedia Latina History Culture and Society in the United States Volume 3 Grolier Academic Reference ISBN 9780717258185 Ruiz Ramon Astrid 1987 Recent Developments in Latin American Drawing The Art Institute of Chicago Image Publications Zerivitz Marcia Jo 2020 Jews of Florida Centuries of Stories Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9781467142533 Pope Francis Receives 1st Torah Project Book PR com Book Details Abebooks com Signed Baruj Salinas Pinturas Y Grabados Recientes Noviembre Diciembre 1988 Amazon com Baruj Salinas 21st Century Master TV Movie 2000 IMDb via m imdb com Releases Community News January 20 2020 Gables architecture firm combines holiday party with art exhibition Miami s Community News a b Baruj Salinas 1972 2022 www thecuban org c 2021 American Museum of The Cuban Diaspora Inc Retrieved 9 August 2022 Permuy Antonio 3 August 2022 Baruj Salinas A Focus on the Infinite www contemporaryartissue com Belgium Contemporary Art Issue 2022 Retrieved 9 August 2022 Baruj Salinas Untitled Abstract Cuban Painting Latin American Expressionist 1stDibs com Baruj SALINAS 1935 Artprice com Baruj Salinas Artnet Artnet com Baruj Salinas 70 Artworks Bio amp Shows on Artsy Artsy net Baruj Salinas Premio Amelia Pelaez 2021 ww cubanculturalcenter org 2021 Centro Cultural Cubano de Nueva York Buy Original Art in Miami TAC Art Gallery Custom Framing Archived from the original on 2022 01 21 Retrieved 2022 02 27 Baruj Salinas The Art Institute of Chicago Error Permanent Collection Artmuseumoftheamericas org Baruj Salinas IMMA Baruj Salinas American b 1935 McNay Art Museum Through the Ring emuseum ringling org Virtual Resources NSU Art Museum Fort Lauderdale Calas November 11 1999 via artnet Creative Pinellas Creativepinellas org Retrieved 12 November 2021 Damian Carol Santis Jorge H 1997 Breaking Barriers Selections from the Museum of Art s Permanent Contemporary Cuban Collection Museum of Art Fort Lauderdale Works Baruj Salinas People Search eMuseum University of Miami emuseum1 as miami edu External links EditOfficial website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Baruj Salinas amp oldid 1158805212, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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