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Costumbrismo

Costumbrismo (in Catalan: costumisme; sometimes anglicized as costumbrism, with the adjectival form costumbrist) is the literary or pictorial interpretation of local everyday life, mannerisms, and customs, primarily in the Hispanic scene, and particularly in the 19th century. Costumbrismo is related both to artistic realism and to Romanticism, sharing the Romantic interest in expression as against simple representation and the romantic and realist focus on precise representation of particular times and places, rather than of humanity in the abstract.[1][2] It is often satiric and even moralizing, but unlike mainstream realism does not usually offer or even imply any particular analysis of the society it depicts. When not satiric, its approach to quaint folkloric detail often has a romanticizing aspect.

José Jiménez Aranda (1837–1903): The Bullring (1870)

Costumbrismo can be found in any of the visual or literary arts; by extension, the term can also be applied to certain approaches to collecting folkloric objects, as well. Originally found in short essays and later in novels, costumbrismo is often found in the zarzuelas of the 19th century, especially in the género chico. Costumbrista museums deal with folklore and local art and costumbrista festivals celebrate local customs and artisans and their work.

Although initially associated with Spain in the late 18th and 19th century, costumbrismo expanded to the Americas and set roots in the Spanish-speaking portions of the Americas, incorporating indigenous elements. Juan López Morillas summed up the appeal of costumbrismo for writing about Latin American society as follows: the costumbristas' "preoccupation with minute detail, local color, the picturesque, and their concern with matters of style is frequently no more than a subterfuge. Astonished by the contradictions observed around them, incapable of clearly understanding the tumult of the modern world, these writers sought refuge in the particular, the trivial or the ephemeral."[3]

Literary costumbrismo in Spain edit

Origins edit

 
Some of the work of Goya can be seen as prefiguring costumbrismo, especially as practiced in Madrid. Here, the Fight with Cudgels, one of Goya's Black Paintings.

Antecedents to costumbrismo can be found as early as the 17th century (for example in the work of playwright Juan de Zabaleta) and the current becomes clearer in the 18th century (Diego de Torres Villarroel, José Clavijo y Fajardo, José Cadalso, Ramón de la Cruz, Juan Ignacio González del Castillo). All of these writers have, in at least some of their work, an attention to specific, local detail, an exaltation of the "typical" that would feed into both costumbrismo and Romanticism. In the 19th century costumbrismo bursts out as a clear genre in its own right, addressing a broad audience: stories and illustrations often made their first or most important appearance in cheap periodicals for the general public.[4] It is not easy to draw lines around the genre: Evaristo Correa Calderón spoke of its "extraordinary elasticity and variety".[5] Some of it is almost reportorial and documentary, some simply folkloric; what it has in common is the effort to capture a particular place (whether rural or urban) at a particular time.[4]

 
Much as Goya influenced costumbrismo in Madrid, Murillo influenced costumbrismo in Seville.

Sebastián de Miñano y Bedoya (1779–1845) is considered by some a costumbrista, although arguably his writing is too political to properly fit the genre. According to Andrés Soria, the first incontestable costumbristas are the anonymous and pseudonymous contributors to La Minerva (1817), El Correo Literario y Mercantil (1823–33) and El Censor (1820–23). Later come the major figures of literary costumbrismo: Serafín Estébanez Calderón (1799–1867), Ramón de Mesonero Romanos (1803–82), and Mariano José de Larra (1809–37) who sometimes wrote under the pseudonym "Fígaro". Estébanez Calderón (who originally wrote for the abovementioned Correo Literario y Mercantil) looked for a "genuine" and picturesque Spain in the recent past of particular regions; Mesonero Romanos was a careful observer of the Madrid of his time, especially of the middle classes; Larra, according to José Ramón Lomba Pedraja, arguably transcended his genre, using the form of costumbrismo for political and psychological ideas. An afrancesado—a liberal child of the Enlightenment—he was not particularly enamored of the Spanish society that he nonetheless observed minutely.[4]

Costumbrismo was by no means without foreign influences. The work of Joseph Addison and Richard Steele nearly a century earlier in The Spectator had influenced French writers, who in turn influenced the costumbristas. Furthermore, Addison and Steele's own work was translated into Spanish in the early 19th century, and Mesonero Romanos, at least, had read it in French.[4] Still, an even stronger influence came by way of Victor-Joseph Étienne de Jouy (whose work appeared in translation in La Minerva and El Censor), Louis-Sébastien Mercier (especially for Le Tableau de Paris, 1781–88), Charles Joseph Colnet Du Ravel, and Georges Touchard-Lafosse.[4] In addition, there were the travelogues such as Richard Ford's A Handbook for Travellers in Spain, written by various foreigners who had visited Spain and, in painting, the foreign artists (especially, David Roberts) who had settled for a time especially in Seville and Granada and drew or painted local subjects.[2]

While Estébanez Calderón, Mesonero Romanos, and (insofar as he fits the genre) Larra were the major costumbrista writers, many other Spanish writers of the 19th century devoted all or part of their careers to costumbrismo. Antonio María Segovia (1808–74), who mainly wrote pseudonymously as "El Estudiante"[4] and who founded the satiric-literary magazine El Cócora;[6] his collaborator Santos López Pelegrín (1801–46), "Abenámar"; many early contributors to Madrid's Semanario Pintoresco Español (1836-57[7]), Spain's first illustrated magazine; and such lesser lights as Antonio Neira de Mosquera (1818–53), "El Doctor Malatesta" (Las ferias de Madrid, 1845); Clemente Díaz, with whom costumbrismo took a turn toward the rural; Vicente de la Fuente (1817–89), portraying the lives of bookish students (in between writing serious histories); José Giménez Serrano, portraying a romantic Andalusia; Enrique Gil y Carrasco,[4] a Carlist[8] from Villafranca del Bierzo, friend of Alexander von Humboldt, and contributor to the Semanario Pintoresco Español;[9] and many other regionalists around Spain.[4]

The Spanish Drawn By Themselves edit

 
An unsigned illustration from Los españoles pintados por sí mismos: a book shop in Madrid.

Much as literary costumbrismo had been influenced by English models, often by way of France, the same occurred with the equivalent in the visual arts, but with far more recent models. In a period when physiognomy was in vogue, Heads of the People or Portraits of the English was serialized in London starting in 1838 and was published in its entirety in 1840–41. It combined essays by such "distinguished writers" (the volume's own choice of words) as William Makepeace Thackeray and Leigh Hunt with pictures of individuals emblematic of different English "types". This was followed in France by a work first serialized as Les Français, Moeurs Contemporaines ("The French, Contemporary Manners", beginning in 1839) and published in a volume in 1842 as Les Français peints par eux-mêmes. Encyclopédie Morale du dixneuviéme siécle ("The French, drawn by themselves. Moral Encyclopedia of the 19th Century"). The Spanish soon followed with Los españoles pintados por sí mismos ("The Spanish Drawn By Themselves") serialized from 1842 and published in a volume in 1843.[4][10]

 
"El Coche Simón", unsigned illustration from Los españoles…

A collective and hence, necessarily, uneven anthology of "types", Los españoles… was a mixture of verse and prose, and of writers and artists from various generations. Illustrators included Leonardo Alenza (1807–45), Fernando Miranda y Casellas, Francisco Lameyer (1825–1877), Vicente Urrabieta y Ortiz, and Calixto Ortega. The writers included Mesonero and Estébanez as well as various less costumbrista writers and many not usually associated with the genre, such as Gabriel García Tassara (1817–75) or the conservative politician Francisco Navarro Villoslada (1818–95). Andrés Soria remarks that, except for the Andalusian "types", everything was from the point of view of Madrid. Unlike later costumbrismo, the focus remained firmly on the present day. In some ways, the omissions are as interesting as the inclusions: no direct representation of the aristocracy, of prominent businessmen, of the high clergy, or of the army, and except for the "popular" classes, the writing is a bit circumspect and cautious. Still, the material is strong on ethnological, folkloric, and linguistic detail.[4]

In an epilogue to Los españoles…, "Contrastes. Tipos perdidos, 1825, Tipos hallados, 1845" ("Contrasts. Types lost, 1825, types found, 1845"), Mesonero on the one hand showed that the genre, in its original terms, was played out, and on the other laid the ground for future costumbrismo: new "types" would always arise, and many places remained to be written about in this fashion. The book had many descendants, and a major reissue in 1871. A particularly strong current came out of Barcelona: for example, José M. de Freixas's Enciclopedia de tipos vulgares y costumbres de Barcelona ("Encyclopedia of vulgar types and customs of Barcelona", 1844) illustrated by Servat,[4][11] and El libro Verde de Barcelona ("The Green Book of Barcelona", 1848) by "José y Juan" (José de Majarrés and Juan Cortada y Sala. The very title of Los valencianos pintados por sí mismos (Valencia 1859) gave a nod of the hat to the earlier work,[4]

 
A woman from Montevideo, Uruguay, depicted by Francisco Pradilla y Ortiz in Las mujeres españolas, portuguesas y americanas…

A revival of collective works of costumbrismo in the time of the First Spanish Republic saw the reissue of Los españoles… (1872), as well as the publication of Los españoles de hogaño ("The Spanish these days", 1872), focused on Madrid, and the vast undertaking Las mujeres españolas, portuguesas y americanas… ("Spanish, Portuguese, and American Women…", published in Madrid, Havana, and Buenos Aires in 1872–1873 and 1876).[4][12] Also from this time was the satiric Madrid por dentro y por fuera ("Madrid from inside and outside, 1873) by Manuel del Palacio (1831–1906).[4][13]

Carlos Frontaura carried on costumbrismo in Madrid with Las tiendas ("Shops", 1886) and "Tipos madrileños" ("Madrid types", 1888). Ramón de Navarrete (1822–1897) writing variously as or "Asmodeo" (after Asmodeus, king of the demons), broke with the history of the genre by writing of the upper classes in Madrid during the Restoration, as in his Sueños y realidades ("Dreams and realities, 1878). Enrique Sepúlveda wrote about[4] both Madrid[13] and Barcelona, Narcís Oller (1846–1930) about Barcelona,[4] and Sabino de Goicoechea (1826–1901), known as "Argos", about the Basque Country.[4][14] Galicia was represented by the collective work El álbum de Galicia. Tipos, costumbres y leyendas ("The album of Galicia. Types, customs and legends", 1897).[4]

Yesterday, Today, and Tomorrow edit

 
Title page of Doce españoles de brocha gorda..., drawn by Fernando Miranda y Casellas

Poet, journalist and pamphleteer Antonio Flores Algovia (1821–65), one of the contributors to Los españoles... followed up in 1846 with Doce españoles de brocha gorda, que no pudiéndose pintar a sí mismos, me han encargado a mí, Antonio Flores, sus retratos[4][15] ("Twelve Spaniards with a broad brush, who not being able to portray themselves have put me, Antonio Flores, in charge of their portraits"), subtitled a "novel of popular customs" ("novela de costumbres populares"). Published in 1846 and reissued several times, the book merged the hitherto more essayistic costumbrista form with aspects of the novel (although not a particularly tightly plotted novel). Somewhat more novelistic was his Fe, Esperanza y Caridad ("Faith Hope and Charity"), published serially in La Nación in 1850–1851 and also much reprinted. Flores had been Eugène Sue's translator into Spanish, and Sue's influence is strong in this work. Flores turned to again to custumbrismo, of a sort, in 1853 with Ayer, hoy y mañana o la fe, el vapor y la electricidad (cuadros sociales de 1800, 1850 y 1899) ("Yesterday, today and tomorrow or faith, steam and electricity (social pictures of 1800, 1850, and 1899)") going Mesonero's "types lost" and "types found" one better by projecting a vision of the future influenced by the work of Émile Souvestre. His newspaper El Laberinto continued publishing his costumbrista work even posthumously, such as Tipos y costumbres españolas (1877).[4]

Eugenio de Ochoa (1815–72) carried costumbrismo in a different direction.[4] Born in the Basque country[16] and moving often between Spain and France, his 1860 book Museo de las familias. París, Londres y Madrid ("Museum of families. Paris, London, Madrid") created a sort of cosmopolitan costumbrismo.[4]

Costumbrismo by major Spanish realists edit

Many of the great Spanish realist writers of the 19th century worked at times in the costumbrista mode, especially at the start of their careers. Fernán Caballero (pen name of Cecilia Francisca Josefa Böhl de Faber) (1796–1877), for example, in the prose portions of her Cuentos y poesías populares andaluzas ("Popular Andalusian stories and poems", collected in 1859 from prior publication in magazines), writes within the genre, particularly in "Una paz hecha sin preliminares, sin conferencias y sin notas diplomáticas" ("A peace made without preliminaries, without conferences, and without diplomatic notes"), with its very specific setting in Chiclana de la Frontera.[4][17] Pedro Antonio de Alarcón (1833–1891) issued a collection Cosas que fueron, bringing together 16 costumbrista articles.[4]

 
José María de Pereda

Andrés Soria sees José María de Pereda (1833–1906) as the most successful fusion of costumbrista scenes into proper novels, especially his portrayals of La Montaña, the mountainous regions of Cantabria. His Escenas montañesas (1864) is particularly in the costumbrista mode, with its mixture of urban, rural and seafaring scenes, and sections offering sketches of various milieus.[4] Poet and novelist Antonio de Trueba (1819 or 1821–89) wrote squarely within the genre with Madrid por fuera and De flor en flor. Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer (1836–1870) portrayed Madrid, Seville, and Toledo. José María Gabriel y Galán (1870–1905), best known as a poet, also wrote costumbrista pieces about Salamanca. Armando Palacio Valdés (1853–1938) also essayed the genre in newspaper articles, collected in Aguas fuertes ("Strong waters", 1884). The writer and diplomat Ángel Ganivet (1865–98),[4] seen by some as a precursor to the Generation of '98,[18] wrote costumbrista scenes of Granada.[4]

Elements of costumbrismo, or even entire works in the genre, can be found among major Spanish writers of the 20th century, though to a lesser extent. Miguel de Unamuno (1864–1936) worked in the genre for De mi país ("Of my country", 1903) and some stories such as "Solitaña" in of El espejo de la muerte ("The Mirror of Death", 1913), as did Pío Baroja with Vitrina pintoresca ("Picturesque showcase", 1935) and in passages of his novels set in the Basque Country. Azorín (José Augusto Trinidad Martínez Ruíz, 1873–1967) often wrote in this genre; one could comb the works of Ramón Gómez de la Serna (1888–1963) and Camilo José Cela (1916–2002) and find many passages that could come straight from a work of costumbrismo. Although taken as a whole these writers are clearly not costumbristas, they use the costumbrista style to evoke surviving remnants of Spain's past.[4]

20th century literary costumbrismo in Spain edit

The tradition of costumbrismo in Spain by no means ended at the turn of the century, but it simply did not play as important a role in 20th-century Spanish literature as it did in the century before. As noted above, several of the most important 20th-century Spanish writers at least dabbled in, or were influenced by, the genre. When we go beyond the first string of writers, we see more of a continuation of costumbrismo.[4]

In the course of the century, more and more Spanish regions asserted their particularity, allowing this now established technique of writing to be given new scope. In other regions—Madrid, Andalusia—costumbrismo itself had become part of the region's identity. The magazine España, founded 1915, wrote about some new "types": the indolent golfo; the lower class señorito chulo with his airs and exaggerated fashions; the albañil or construction worker, but with far less sympathy than costumbristas in the previous century had portrayed their predecessors. Other "types" were those who were a caricature of times past: el erudito, with his vast but pointless book-learning, or El poeta de juegos florales ("the poet of floral games").[4]

 
Vicente Blasco Ibáñez

Andrés Soria describes 20th century regional costumbrismo as more serious, less picturesque, and more poetic than in the 19th century. Among his many examples of the 20th century continuation of costumbrismo are Santiago Rusiñol (1861–1931), writing in Catalan about Catalonia and Mallorca; numerous chroniclers of the Basque Country: José María Salaverría (1873–1940), Ricardo Baroja (1871–1953), Dionisio de Azkue ("Dunixi"), José María Iribarren (1906–1971), and, as mentioned above, Pío Baroja; Vicente Blasco Ibáñez (1867–1928) writing about Valencia; and Vicente Medina Tomás (1866–1937), writing about Murcia.[4]

A strong current of costumbrismo continued in 20th-century Madrid, including in poetry (Antonio Casero, 1874–1936) and theatre (José López Silva, 1860–1925; Carlos Arniches Barreda, 1866–1943). Other writers who continued the tradition were Eusebio Blasco (1844–1903), Pedro de Répide (1882–1947), Emiliano Ramírez Ángel (1883–1928), Luis Bello (1872–1935), and Federico Carlos Sainz de Robles (1899–1983). Similarly, 20th century Andalusia saw work by José Nogales (1860?–1908), Salvador Rueda (1857–1933), Arturo Reyes (1864–1913), José Mas y Laglera (1885–1940), Ángel Cruz Rueda (1888–1961), and Antonio Alcalá Venceslada (1883–1955).[4]

Costumbrismo in the visual arts in Spain edit

 
An 1849 painting by Joaquín Domínguez Bécquer is typical of Andalusian costumbrismo.

Costumbrismo is an art form developed by Spanish painters. In the 19th century, a wave of nationalistic fervour took hold, providing the stimulus for painters to focus on local customs (or costumbres).[19] As in literary costumbrismo, Madrid and Andalusia (particularly Seville) were Spain's two great centers of costumbrismo in the visual arts. Andalusian costumbrista paintings were mainly romantic and folkloric, largely devoid of social criticism. Much of their market was to foreigners for whom Andalusia epitomized their vision of a Spain distinct from the rest of Europe. The costumbrista artists of Madrid were more acerbic, sometimes even vulgar, in portraying the life of lower class Madrid. More of their market was domestic, including to the often snobbish (and often Europeanizing and liberal) elite of the capital.[2][20] Among other things, the School of Madrid often used large masses of solid color and painted with a broad brush, while the School of Seville painted more delicately. The Madrid paintings have a certain urgency, while the Seville paintings are typically serene, even misty. The Madrid painters focus more on unique individuals, the Sevillianos on individuals as representatives of a type.[2]

 
Costumbrismo can also be found in photography, as in this image of an Andalusian Gypsy wearing a sombrero de catite.

Romantic Andalusian costumbrismo (costumbrismo andaluz) follows in the footsteps of two painters of the School of Cádiz, Juan Rodríguez y Jiménez, "el Panadero" ("the Baker", 1765–1830) and Joaquín Manuel Fernández Cruzado (1781–1856), both associated with Romanticism. The trend was continued by the School of Seville, in a city much more on the path of a foreign clientele. The founding figure was José Domínguez Bécquer (1805–41), father of the poet Gustavo Adolfo Bécquer (see above) and painter Valeriano Bécquer (1833–70), who moved to Madrid. Domínguez Bécquer's influence came as an art teacher, as well as an artist. His student and cousin Joaquín Domínguez Bécquer (1817–79) was known for his acute observation of light and atmosphere. Another of José Domínguez Bécquer's students, the bold and forceful Manuel Rodríguez de Guzmán (1818–67), may have been the genre's strongest painter.[20]

Other important early figures were Antonio Cabral Bejarano (1788–1861), best known for paintings of individuals theatrically posed against rural backgrounds, and an atmosphere reminiscent of Murillo, and José Roldán (1808–71), also very influenced by Murillo, known especially as a painter of children and urchins. One of Cabral Bejarano's sons, Manuel Cabral Bejarano (1827–91) began as a costumbrista, but eventually became more of a realist. Another son, Francisco Cabral Bejarano (1824–90), also painted in the genre.[20]

Other painters of the School of Seville were Andrés Cortés (1810–79), Rafael García Hispaleto (1833–54), Francisco Ramos, and Joaquín Díez; history painter José María Rodríguez de Losada (1826–96); and portraitist José María Romero (1815–80).[20]

Typical subject matter included majos (lower class dandies) and their female equivalents, horsemen, bandits and smugglers, street urchins and beggars, Gypsies, traditional architecture, fiestas, and religious processions such as Holy Week in Seville. [2]

The School of Madrid was united less by a common visual style than by an attitude, and by the influence of Goya rather than Murillo.[2][20] Notable in this school were Alenza and Lameyer, both contributors to Los españoles pintados por sí mismos. Alenza, in particular, showed a strong influence from the Flemish painters as well as from Goya. A fine portraitist who tended to take his subjects from among the common people, in some ways he epitomizes the difference between the School of Madrid and that of Seville. For him the "official" Romanticism was a topic to satirize, as in his series of paintings Suicidios románticos ("Romantic suicides").[20]

 
"Tercio de varas" ("Picadors"), Eugenio Lucas Velázquez c. 1850

Probably foremost in the School of Madrid was Eugenio Lucas Velázquez (1817–70). An artistic successor to Goya (though a more erratic painter than the master), Lucas Velázquez's work ranged from bullfighting scenes to Orientalism to scenes of witchcraft. His son Eugenio Lucas Villamil (1858–1918) and his students Paulino de la Linde (1837-?) and José Martínez Victoria followed in his tracks; he was also a strong influence on Antonio Pérez Rubio (1822–88) and Ángel Lizcano Monedero (1846–1929).[20]

José Elbo (1804–44) was at least strongly akin to the School of Madrid. Although born in Úbeda in the Andalusian province of Jaén, Elbo studied painting in Madrid under José Aparicio (1773–1838), and was influenced by Goya; he was also influenced by the Central European equivalents of costumbrismo. His painting is rife with social criticism, and often angrily populist.[20]

Also in Madrid, but not really part of the School of Madrid, was Valeriano Bécquer (transplanted son of José Domínguez Bécquer). Although also influenced by Goya (and by Diego Velázquez), his work in Madrid did partake of some of the socially critical aspects of the other painters of that city, but not of the satiric aspects: his portraits of common people emphasize their dignity, seldom their foibles.[20]

The dark vision of 20th-century Madrid painter José Gutiérrez Solana (1886–1945) was influenced by costumbrismo and also directly by the Black Paintings of Goya that had so influenced the costumbristas.[4]

Visual costumbrismo in the Americas edit

 
José Agustín Arrieta, Tertulia de pulquería, 1851

In nineteenth-century Mexico, colonial-era casta paintings, a type of secular genre painting depicting racial categories and hierarchy disappeared at independence when casta categories were abolished, but costumbrismo paintings resonated with the stereotypes of the earlier genre.[21] A number of foreign visitors to Mexico produced images in the costumbrista tradition, including Claudio Linati[22] and Edouard Pingret. The most significant Mexican costumbrista painter is José Agustín Arrieta, whose paintings of a market scene ("La Sorpresa"), a kitchen scene ("La Cocina Poblana"), and a tavern scene (Tertulia de pulquería) are well known.[23][24][25] One less famous than Arrieta is Manuel Serrano (ca. 1830-ca. 1870s), about whom little is known. His painting Vendador de buñuelos, depicting a fritter seller in an urban night scene is in the collections of the Mexican government.[26] Another less well known Mexican artist is es:Felipe Santiago Gutiérrez (1824-1904), who was also a writer, teacher, art critic, intellectual, and cultural diplomat."[27]

Literary costumbrismo in the Americas edit

Argentina edit

 
Juan Bautista Alberdi

Some of Argentina's most distinguished writers worked in the costumbrista genre in at least some of their writing, though few worked narrowly within the genre. Esteban Echeverría (1805–51) was a politically passionate Romantic writer whose work has strong costumbrista aspects; his El Matadero ("The Slaughterhouse") is still widely read. Juan Bautista Alberdi (1810–84) and Domingo Faustino Sarmiento (1811–1888) both wrote at times in the genre, as did José Antonio Wilde (1813–83), in Buenos Aires desde setenta años atrás ("Buenos Aires from seventy years ago"); Vicente G. Quesada (1830–1913), in Recuerdos de un viejo ("Memories of an old man"); Lucio V. López (1848–94), in the novela La gran aldea ("The big village"); Martín Coronado (1850–1919), playwright; Martiniano Leguizamón (1858–1935), in the novel Montaraz; José S. Alvarez (1858–1903, "Fray Mocho"), in the story "Viaje al país de los matreros" ("A trip to bandit country"); Emma de la Barra (1861–1947), who wrote under the pseudonym César Duayen, in Stella; Joaquín V. González (1863–1923), in Mis montañas ("My Mountains"); Julio Sánchez Gardel (1879–1937), in numerous comedies; and Manuel Gálvez (1882–1962), in such novels as La maestra normal ("The normal school teacher") and La sombra del convento ("The sleep of the convent").[28]

Bolivia edit

Bolivian costumbristas include Julio Lucas Jaimes (1845–1914), Lindaura Anzoátegui de Campero (1846–98), Jaime Mendoza (1874–1938), Alcides Arguedas (1879–1946), and Armando Chirveches (1881–1926).[28]

Central America edit

Guatemalan novelist and historian José Milla (1822–82) wrote several costumbrista works and created the character of Juan Chapín, the emblematic Guatemalan. Other Central American costumbristas are José María Peralta Lagos (1875–1944, El Salvador), Ramón Rosa (1848–93, Honduras), Carlos Alberto Uclés (1854–1942, Honduras), and a distinguished line of Costa Rican writers: Manuel de Jesús Jiménez (1854–1916), Manuel González Zeledón (1864–1936), the verse writer Aquileo Echeverría (1866–1909), and, in the 20th century, Joaquín García Monge (1881–1958).[28]

Chile edit

 
José Joaquín Vallejo ("Jotabeche") The Chilean Larra

Costumbrismo enters Chilean literature in some of the writing of José Zapiola (1804–85), Vicente Pérez Rosales (1807–86), Román Fritis (1829–74), Pedro Ruiz Aldea (ca. 1833–70) and especially José Joaquín Vallejo (1811–58), who under the name "Jotabeche" was the supreme Chilean costumbrista.[28]

Strong aspects of costumbrismo can be seen in the novels and other works of Alberto Blest Gana (1830–1920). There are many costumbrista passages in the works of Benjamín Vicuña Mackenna (1831–86) and Daniel Barros Grez(1833–1904); Román Vial (1833–1896) entitled one of his books Costumbres chilenas; Zorobabel Rodríguez (1839–1901), Moisés Vargas (1843–98), Arturo Givovich (1855–1905), Daniel Riquelme (1854–1912), Senén Palacios (1858–1927), Egidio Poblete (1868–1940) all wrote in the mode at times. Costumbrismo figures particularly heavily in stage comedies: El patio de los Tribunales ("The courtyard of the tribunals [of justice]", by Valentín Murillo (1841–1896); Don Lucas Gómez, by Mateo Martínez Quevedo (1848–1923); Chincol en sartén ("A sparrow in the pan") and En la puerta del horno ("In the gate of horn"), by Antonio Espiñeira (1855–1907); La canción rota ("The broken song"), by Antonio Acevedo Hernández (1886–1962); Pueblecito ("Little town") by Armando Moock (1894–1942). In prose, costumbrismo mixes eventually into realism, with Manuel J. Ortiz (1870–1945) and Joaquín Díaz García (1877–1921) as important realists with costumbrista aspects.[28]

Colombia edit

 
Jorge Isaacs

Colombia can claim one of the earliest antecedents to the costumbrismo in El Carnero (written 1636–38, but not published until 1859) by Juan Rodríguez Freile (1566–1638 or 1640).[29] Rodríguez's work begins as a chronicle of the conquest of New Granada, but as it approaches his own time it becomes more and more detailed and quotidian, and its second half is a series of narratives that, according to Stephen M. Hart, give "lip service" to conventional morality while taking "a keen delight in recounting the various skullduggeries of witches, rogues, murderers, whores, outlaws, priests and judges."[30]

Colombia can also claim a particularly rich tradition of costumbrismo in the 19th century and into the 20th: José Manuel Groot (1800–78); novelists Eugenio Díaz (1803–65), José Manuel Marroquín (1827–1908), and José María Vergara y Vergara (1831–72), all of whom collaborated on the magazine El Mosaico, la revista bogotana del costumbrismo (1858–71); Luis Segundo Silvestre (1838–87); and Jorge Isaacs (1837–95), whose sole novel María was praised by Alfonso M. Escudero as the greatest Spanish-language romantic novel.[28]

Other Colombian costumbristas are José Caycedo Rojas (1816–1897), Juan de Dios Restrepo (1823–94), Gregorio Gutiérrez González (1826–72), Ricardo Carrasquilla (1827–86), Camilo A. Echeverri (1827–87), Manuel Pombo (1827–98), José David Guarín (1830–90), Ricardo Silva (1836–87), José María Cordovez Moure (1835–1918), Rafael María Camargo (1858–1926; wrote under the pseudonym Fermín de Pimentel y Vargas), and Tomás Carrasquilla (1858–1940).[28]

Cuba edit

Cuba's leading costumbristas were Gaspar Betancourt Cisneros (1803–66, known as "El Lugareño"), Cirilo Villaverde (1812–94), and José María de Cárdenas y Rodríguez (1812–82). The patrician Betancourt published a series of Escenas cotidianas que abren camino al costumbrismo en Cuba ("Everyday scenes that pave the way for costumbrismo in Cuba, 1838–40). His work focused often on what he found vulgar or ridiculous about Cuban life, but was written with a fatherly affection. Villaverde, probably Cuba's greatest costumbrista, wrote romantic novels, most notably Cecilia Valdés (the first part of which was published in 1839, although the definitive version was not published until 1882). This costumbrista anti-slavery novel can be seen as an early realist work, and continues to be read in recent times. Villaverde also wrote the prologue for Cárdenas's 1847 collection of costumbristaarticles.[28]

José Victoriano Betancourt (1813–75) was patron to many intellectuals in 1860s Havana; he later went into exile in Mexico. He is best remembered today as a costumbrista writer, as is another Betancourt, José Ramón Betancourt (1823–90), author of Una feria de caridad en 183… (ellipses in original title), set in Camagüey in the late 1830s.[28][31]

Dominican Republic edit

In the Dominican Republic, Francisco Gregorio Billini (1844–94) stands out for his novel Baní o Engracia y Antoñita (1892).[28] Still, in some ways, his vision was narrow. J. Alcántara Almánzar remarks that "black people are practically absent as important characters, and this absence is very significant in a country whose majority is 'mulatto'." Blacks are more present in the costumbrista works of Cesar Nicolas Penson (1855–1901), but he is far more sympathetic to his white characters, portraying Haitians as fierce beasts.[32]

Ecuador edit

Ecuadorians who wrote at least part of the time in the costumbrista mode include Pedro Fermín Cevallos (1812–93), Juan León Mera (1832–94), José Modesto Espinosa (1833–1915), Carlos R. Tobar (1854–1920), Honorato Vázquez (1855–1933), Víctor M. Rendón (1859–1940), J. Trajano Mera (1862–1919), and Luis A. Martínez (1868–1909).[28] Another Ecuadorian [28] was Alfredo Baquerizo Moreno (1859–1951), a novelist[28] and later president of the country.[33]

Mexico edit

Mexican costumbrismo can claim one of the longest lineages to be found in the Americas. In the same era in which the genre was gaining an identity in Spain, José Joaquín Fernández de Lizardi (1776–1827) Mexico's first novelist (and perhaps Latin America's first novelist) wrote works that had many similar aspects, including Periquillo Sarniento (1816), recently translated into English as The Mangy Parrot.[28][34] Other Mexican costumbristas are Guillermo Prieto (1818–97) and José Tomás de Cuéllar (1830–94). In addition, José López Portillo y Rojas (1850–1923), Rafael Delgado (1853–1914), Ángel del Campo (1868–1908) and Emilio Rabasa (1856–1930) can be seen as costumbristas, but their work can also be considered realist.[28]

Paraguay edit

Paraguayan costumbristas include Teresa Lamas de Rodríguez Alcalá (1887–1976) and Carlos Zubizarreta (1904–72).[28]

Peru edit

 
Ricardo Palma

Peruvian costumbrismo begins with José Joaquín de Larriva y Ruiz (1780–1832), poeta and journalist and his younger, irreverent, Madrid-educated collaborator Felipe Pardo y Aliaga (1806–68). A more festive and comic note was struck by Manuel Ascensio Segura (1805–71). Manuel Atanasio Fuentes (1820–29) wrote verse under the name El Murciélago ("the Bat"), a name which he also gave to a magazine he founded.[28]

Ricardo Palma (1833–1919), best known for the multi-volume Tradiciones peruanas, was a man of letters, a former liberal politician and later the director of the National Library of Peru, who rebuilt the collection of that library after the War of the Pacific. He referred to his works in this mode as tradiciones, rather than costumbrismo.[28][35]

Other Peruvian costumbristas are satirist and verse writer Pedro Paz Soldán y Unanue (1839–1895), Abelardo M. Gamarra (1850–1924), and the nostalgic José Gálvez (1885–1957).[28]

Puerto Rico edit

 
Illustration of Manuel A. Alonso

In Puerto Rico, Manuel A. Alonso (1822–89) published El gibaro: cuadro de costumbres de la isla de Puerto Rico (The Jíbaro [modern spelling]: picture of customs of the island of Puerto Rico", 1849), Puerto Rico's most important contribution to the genre. Manuel Fernández Juncos (1846–1928), born in Asturias, Spain, emigrated at age eleven to the island and wrote Tipos y caracteres y Costumbres y tradiciones ("Types and characters and customs and traditions").[28][36]

Uruguay edit

Prominent Uruguayan costumbristas include Santiago Maciel (1862–1931), Manuel Bernárdez (1867–1942), Javier de Viana (1868–1926), Adolfo Montiel Ballesteros (1888–1971), and Fernán Silva Valdés (1887–1975). Most of these writers also did significant work outside of the genre.[28]

Venezuela edit

 
Venezuelan diplomat and writer Fermín Toro, portrait by Antonio Herrera Toro

Venezuelan costumbristas include Fermín Toro (c.1807–65),[37] Daniel Mendoza (1823–67), Francisco de Sales Pérez (1836–1926), Nicanor Bolet Peraza (1838–1906), Francisco Tosta García (1845–1921), José María Rivas (1850–1920), Rafael Bolívar Alvarez (1860–1900), and Pedro Emilio Coll (1872–1947).[28]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ José Escobar, Costumbrismo entre Romanticismo y Realismo, Biblioteca Virtual Miguel Cervantes. Accessed online 2010-01-22.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Antonio Reina Palazón, El Costumbrismo en la Pintura Sevillana del Siglo XIX 2008-09-16 at the Wayback Machine, Biblioteca Virtual Miguel Cervantes. Accessed online 2010-01-22.
  3. ^ Juan López Morillas, El Krausismo español (1980), p. 129, quoted by Enrique Pupo-Walker, "The brief narrative in Spanish America 1835–1915", 490:535 in Roberto González Echevarría, Enrique Pupo-Walker, The Cambridge History of Latin American Literature: Discovery to modernism, Cambridge University Press, 1996, ISBN 0-521-34069-1. p. 491 accessed on Google Books.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag Andrés Soria, Costumbrismo I. Literatura Española July 16, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Ediciones Rialp S.A. Gran Enciclopedia Rialp, 1991. Accessed online 2010-01-20.
  5. ^ Quoted in Andrés Soria, Costumbrismo I. Literatura Española July 16, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Ediciones Rialp S.A. Gran Enciclopedia Rialp, 1991.
  6. ^ Ángeles Ezama Gil, José Enrique Serrano Asenjo (editors), Juan Valera, Correspondencia, Vol. 2: Años 1862-1875, Nueva biblioteca de erudición y crítica, Editorial Castalia, 2002, ISBN 84-9740-041-0. p. 39. Available online on Google Books.
  7. ^ Ficha de publicación periódica: Semanario pintoresco español, Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes. Accessed online 2010-01-20.
  8. ^ Ricardo Gullón, La vida breve de Ricardo Gil, Biblioteca Virtual Miguel Cervantes. Accessed online 2010-01-20.
  9. ^ Enrique Gil y Carrasco, Biografías y Vidas. Accessed online 2010-01-20.
  10. ^ An 1851 edition of Los españoles pintados por sí mismos is available online at Google Books.
  11. ^ Josep Izquierdo, Goya en tiempos de guerrilla artística, Libro de Notas, 2008-07-25. Accessed online 2010-01-20.
  12. ^ A very nice online version of volume 3 of Las mujeres… can be found on the site of Rice University as part of the Rice Digital Scholarship Archive.
  13. ^ a b María de los Ángeles Ayala, Una docena de cuentos, primera recopilación de cuentos de Narciso Campillo y Correa, Scriptura (University of Lleida), ISSN 1130-961X, Vol. 16, Number 16, 2001, 133:148. Accessed online 2010-01-20. p. 148, n. 39 (p. 16 of PDF).
  14. ^ Antiguo edificio del Banco de España, Bilbao magazine, 2005-04, p. 8. Accessed online 2010-01-20.
  15. ^ Book is online at Google Books (in Spanish): Doce españoles…
  16. ^ Eugenio de Ochoa, Biografías y Vidas. Accessed online 2010-01-20.
  17. ^ The story is available online at Google Books.
  18. ^ A.G. Solalinde, review of Melchor Fernández Almagro's Vida y Obra de Ángel Ganivet, 1927. Accessed online 2010-01-21.
  19. ^ Boone, E., Vistas de Espana, Yale University Press, 2007, p. 42
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i La pintura costumbrista 2009-10-02 at the Wayback Machine, ArteHistoria (Junta de Castilla y León). Accessed online 2010-01-21.
  21. ^ Mey-Yen Moriuchi, "From Casta to Costumbrismo: Representations of Racialized Social Spheres" in Envisioning Others: Race: Color, and the Visual in Iberia and Latin America, Pamela A. Patton, ed. Leiden: Brill 2016, pp. 213-240
  22. ^ Claudio Linati, Costumes, Civil, Militaires et Religieux du Mexique. Dessinés d;aorès Nature par C. Linati. Bruxelles: Litographie Royal de Jobard 1828.
  23. ^ Jenny O. Ramirez, "Nurture and Conformity: Arrieta's Images of Women, Food, and Beverage" in Women in Early Modern Latin America, ed. Kellen Kee McIntyre and Richard E. Phillips. Leiden: Brill 2007, pp. 207-220.
  24. ^ Efraín Castro Morales, Homenaje Nacional: José AugustÍn Arrieta (1803-1874): Su Tiempo, Vida, y Obra. Mexico City: Museo Nacional de Arte 1994.
  25. ^ Elisa García Barragán. José Augustín Arrieta: Lumbres de lo Cotidiano. Mexico City: Fondo de Editorial de la Plástica Mexicana 1998.
  26. ^ Moriuchi, Mexican Costumbrismo, p. 92-93
  27. ^ Moriuchi, Mexican Costumbrismo, p. 96.
  28. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Alfonso M. Escudero, Costumbrismo Il. Literatura Hispanoamericana 2008-09-16 at the Wayback Machine, Ediciones Rialp S.A. Gran Enciclopedia Rialp, 1991. Accessed online 2010-01-21.
  29. ^ Escudero says 1638, Stephen M. Hart says 1640.
  30. ^ Stephen M. Hart, A companion to Latin American literature, Volume 243 of Colección Támesis. Serie A, Monografías, Tamesis Books, 2007, ISBN 1-85566-147-0. p. 50–51. Accessed online on Google Books.
  31. ^ José Ramón Betancourt, Una feria de caridad en 183…, Third Edition, Barcelona, 1885. Online at Google Books. Accessed 2010-01-21; some pages are only partly legible.
  32. ^ J. Alcántara Almánzar Black images in Dominican literature in New West Indian Guide/Nieuwe West-Indische Gids 61 (1987), no: 3/4, Leiden, 161:173. Accessed online at kitlv-journals.nl 2010-01-21.
  33. ^ Alfredo Baquerizo Moreno 2010-01-06 at the Wayback Machine, diccionariobiograficoecuador.com. Accessed online 2010-01-22.
  34. ^ Jim Tuck, Mexico's Voltaire: José Joaquín Fernández de Lizardi (1776–1827), Mexconnect.com, 2008-10-09. Accessed online 2010-01-21.
  35. ^ Christopher Conway, "Chronology of Ricardo Palma", p. xv.–xvii. of Helen Lane's translation of Tradiciones peruanas, Peruvian Traditions, Library of Latin America, Oxford University Press US, 2004, ISBN 0-19-515909-8. Available online on Google Books.
  36. ^ Manuel Fernández Juncos 2009-04-14 at the Wayback Machine, educastur.princast.es (Consejería de Educación y Ciencia del Gobierno del Principado de Asturias). Accessed online 2010-01-21.
  37. ^ Escudero appears to have the wrong date of death (1868) and a questionable date of birth (1808) for this well-known figure. Fermín Toro, Biografías y Vidas, accessed online 2010-01-22, says 1806–1865; Pedro Díaz Seijas, Literatura Venezolana - Fermín Toro 2010-03-24 at the Wayback Machine says 1807-1865, accessed online 2010-01-22, and makes a case for why 1808 is improbable.

Further reading edit

  • Moriuchi, Mey-Yen. Mexican Costumbrismo: Race, Society, and Identity in Nineteenth-Century Art. University Park, PA: Penn State Press 2018.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Costumbrismo at Wikimedia Commons

costumbrismo, catalan, costumisme, sometimes, anglicized, costumbrism, with, adjectival, form, costumbrist, literary, pictorial, interpretation, local, everyday, life, mannerisms, customs, primarily, hispanic, scene, particularly, 19th, century, related, both,. Costumbrismo in Catalan costumisme sometimes anglicized as costumbrism with the adjectival form costumbrist is the literary or pictorial interpretation of local everyday life mannerisms and customs primarily in the Hispanic scene and particularly in the 19th century Costumbrismo is related both to artistic realism and to Romanticism sharing the Romantic interest in expression as against simple representation and the romantic and realist focus on precise representation of particular times and places rather than of humanity in the abstract 1 2 It is often satiric and even moralizing but unlike mainstream realism does not usually offer or even imply any particular analysis of the society it depicts When not satiric its approach to quaint folkloric detail often has a romanticizing aspect Jose Jimenez Aranda 1837 1903 The Bullring 1870 Costumbrismo can be found in any of the visual or literary arts by extension the term can also be applied to certain approaches to collecting folkloric objects as well Originally found in short essays and later in novels costumbrismo is often found in the zarzuelas of the 19th century especially in the genero chico Costumbrista museums deal with folklore and local art and costumbrista festivals celebrate local customs and artisans and their work Although initially associated with Spain in the late 18th and 19th century costumbrismo expanded to the Americas and set roots in the Spanish speaking portions of the Americas incorporating indigenous elements Juan Lopez Morillas summed up the appeal of costumbrismo for writing about Latin American society as follows the costumbristas preoccupation with minute detail local color the picturesque and their concern with matters of style is frequently no more than a subterfuge Astonished by the contradictions observed around them incapable of clearly understanding the tumult of the modern world these writers sought refuge in the particular the trivial or the ephemeral 3 Contents 1 Literary costumbrismo in Spain 1 1 Origins 1 2 The Spanish Drawn By Themselves 1 3 Yesterday Today and Tomorrow 1 4 Costumbrismo by major Spanish realists 1 5 20th century literary costumbrismo in Spain 2 Costumbrismo in the visual arts in Spain 3 Visual costumbrismo in the Americas 4 Literary costumbrismo in the Americas 4 1 Argentina 4 2 Bolivia 4 3 Central America 4 4 Chile 4 5 Colombia 4 6 Cuba 4 7 Dominican Republic 4 8 Ecuador 4 9 Mexico 4 10 Paraguay 4 11 Peru 4 12 Puerto Rico 4 13 Uruguay 4 14 Venezuela 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksLiterary costumbrismo in Spain editOrigins edit nbsp Some of the work of Goya can be seen as prefiguring costumbrismo especially as practiced in Madrid Here the Fight with Cudgels one of Goya s Black Paintings Antecedents to costumbrismo can be found as early as the 17th century for example in the work of playwright Juan de Zabaleta and the current becomes clearer in the 18th century Diego de Torres Villarroel Jose Clavijo y Fajardo Jose Cadalso Ramon de la Cruz Juan Ignacio Gonzalez del Castillo All of these writers have in at least some of their work an attention to specific local detail an exaltation of the typical that would feed into both costumbrismo and Romanticism In the 19th century costumbrismo bursts out as a clear genre in its own right addressing a broad audience stories and illustrations often made their first or most important appearance in cheap periodicals for the general public 4 It is not easy to draw lines around the genre Evaristo Correa Calderon spoke of its extraordinary elasticity and variety 5 Some of it is almost reportorial and documentary some simply folkloric what it has in common is the effort to capture a particular place whether rural or urban at a particular time 4 nbsp Much as Goya influenced costumbrismo in Madrid Murillo influenced costumbrismo in Seville Sebastian de Minano y Bedoya 1779 1845 is considered by some a costumbrista although arguably his writing is too political to properly fit the genre According to Andres Soria the first incontestable costumbristas are the anonymous and pseudonymous contributors to La Minerva 1817 El Correo Literario y Mercantil 1823 33 and El Censor 1820 23 Later come the major figures of literary costumbrismo Serafin Estebanez Calderon 1799 1867 Ramon de Mesonero Romanos 1803 82 and Mariano Jose de Larra 1809 37 who sometimes wrote under the pseudonym Figaro Estebanez Calderon who originally wrote for the abovementioned Correo Literario y Mercantil looked for a genuine and picturesque Spain in the recent past of particular regions Mesonero Romanos was a careful observer of the Madrid of his time especially of the middle classes Larra according to Jose Ramon Lomba Pedraja arguably transcended his genre using the form of costumbrismo for political and psychological ideas An afrancesado a liberal child of the Enlightenment he was not particularly enamored of the Spanish society that he nonetheless observed minutely 4 Costumbrismo was by no means without foreign influences The work of Joseph Addison and Richard Steele nearly a century earlier in The Spectator had influenced French writers who in turn influenced the costumbristas Furthermore Addison and Steele s own work was translated into Spanish in the early 19th century and Mesonero Romanos at least had read it in French 4 Still an even stronger influence came by way of Victor Joseph Etienne de Jouy whose work appeared in translation in La Minerva and El Censor Louis Sebastien Mercier especially for Le Tableau de Paris 1781 88 Charles Joseph Colnet Du Ravel and Georges Touchard Lafosse 4 In addition there were the travelogues such as Richard Ford s A Handbook for Travellers in Spain written by various foreigners who had visited Spain and in painting the foreign artists especially David Roberts who had settled for a time especially in Seville and Granada and drew or painted local subjects 2 While Estebanez Calderon Mesonero Romanos and insofar as he fits the genre Larra were the major costumbrista writers many other Spanish writers of the 19th century devoted all or part of their careers to costumbrismo Antonio Maria Segovia 1808 74 who mainly wrote pseudonymously as El Estudiante 4 and who founded the satiric literary magazine El Cocora 6 his collaborator Santos Lopez Pelegrin 1801 46 Abenamar many early contributors to Madrid s Semanario Pintoresco Espanol 1836 57 7 Spain s first illustrated magazine and such lesser lights as Antonio Neira de Mosquera 1818 53 El Doctor Malatesta Las ferias de Madrid 1845 Clemente Diaz with whom costumbrismo took a turn toward the rural Vicente de la Fuente 1817 89 portraying the lives of bookish students in between writing serious histories Jose Gimenez Serrano portraying a romantic Andalusia Enrique Gil y Carrasco 4 a Carlist 8 from Villafranca del Bierzo friend of Alexander von Humboldt and contributor to the Semanario Pintoresco Espanol 9 and many other regionalists around Spain 4 The Spanish Drawn By Themselves edit nbsp An unsigned illustration from Los espanoles pintados por si mismos a book shop in Madrid Much as literary costumbrismo had been influenced by English models often by way of France the same occurred with the equivalent in the visual arts but with far more recent models In a period when physiognomy was in vogue Heads of the People or Portraits of the English was serialized in London starting in 1838 and was published in its entirety in 1840 41 It combined essays by such distinguished writers the volume s own choice of words as William Makepeace Thackeray and Leigh Hunt with pictures of individuals emblematic of different English types This was followed in France by a work first serialized as Les Francais Moeurs Contemporaines The French Contemporary Manners beginning in 1839 and published in a volume in 1842 as Les Francais peints par eux memes Encyclopedie Morale du dixneuvieme siecle The French drawn by themselves Moral Encyclopedia of the 19th Century The Spanish soon followed with Los espanoles pintados por si mismos The Spanish Drawn By Themselves serialized from 1842 and published in a volume in 1843 4 10 nbsp El Coche Simon unsigned illustration from Los espanoles A collective and hence necessarily uneven anthology of types Los espanoles was a mixture of verse and prose and of writers and artists from various generations Illustrators included Leonardo Alenza 1807 45 Fernando Miranda y Casellas Francisco Lameyer 1825 1877 Vicente Urrabieta y Ortiz and Calixto Ortega The writers included Mesonero and Estebanez as well as various less costumbrista writers and many not usually associated with the genre such as Gabriel Garcia Tassara 1817 75 or the conservative politician Francisco Navarro Villoslada 1818 95 Andres Soria remarks that except for the Andalusian types everything was from the point of view of Madrid Unlike later costumbrismo the focus remained firmly on the present day In some ways the omissions are as interesting as the inclusions no direct representation of the aristocracy of prominent businessmen of the high clergy or of the army and except for the popular classes the writing is a bit circumspect and cautious Still the material is strong on ethnological folkloric and linguistic detail 4 In an epilogue to Los espanoles Contrastes Tipos perdidos 1825 Tipos hallados 1845 Contrasts Types lost 1825 types found 1845 Mesonero on the one hand showed that the genre in its original terms was played out and on the other laid the ground for future costumbrismo new types would always arise and many places remained to be written about in this fashion The book had many descendants and a major reissue in 1871 A particularly strong current came out of Barcelona for example Jose M de Freixas s Enciclopedia de tipos vulgares y costumbres de Barcelona Encyclopedia of vulgar types and customs of Barcelona 1844 illustrated by Servat 4 11 and El libro Verde de Barcelona The Green Book of Barcelona 1848 by Jose y Juan Jose de Majarres and Juan Cortada y Sala The very title of Los valencianos pintados por si mismos Valencia 1859 gave a nod of the hat to the earlier work 4 nbsp A woman from Montevideo Uruguay depicted by Francisco Pradilla y Ortiz in Las mujeres espanolas portuguesas y americanas A revival of collective works of costumbrismo in the time of the First Spanish Republic saw the reissue of Los espanoles 1872 as well as the publication of Los espanoles de hogano The Spanish these days 1872 focused on Madrid and the vast undertaking Las mujeres espanolas portuguesas y americanas Spanish Portuguese and American Women published in Madrid Havana and Buenos Aires in 1872 1873 and 1876 4 12 Also from this time was the satiric Madrid por dentro y por fuera Madrid from inside and outside 1873 by Manuel del Palacio 1831 1906 4 13 Carlos Frontaura carried on costumbrismo in Madrid with Las tiendas Shops 1886 and Tipos madrilenos Madrid types 1888 Ramon de Navarrete 1822 1897 writing variously as or Asmodeo after Asmodeus king of the demons broke with the history of the genre by writing of the upper classes in Madrid during the Restoration as in his Suenos y realidades Dreams and realities 1878 Enrique Sepulveda wrote about 4 both Madrid 13 and Barcelona Narcis Oller 1846 1930 about Barcelona 4 and Sabino de Goicoechea 1826 1901 known as Argos about the Basque Country 4 14 Galicia was represented by the collective work El album de Galicia Tipos costumbres y leyendas The album of Galicia Types customs and legends 1897 4 Yesterday Today and Tomorrow edit nbsp Title page of Doce espanoles de brocha gorda drawn by Fernando Miranda y Casellas Poet journalist and pamphleteer Antonio Flores Algovia 1821 65 one of the contributors to Los espanoles followed up in 1846 with Doce espanoles de brocha gorda que no pudiendose pintar a si mismos me han encargado a mi Antonio Flores sus retratos 4 15 Twelve Spaniards with a broad brush who not being able to portray themselves have put me Antonio Flores in charge of their portraits subtitled a novel of popular customs novela de costumbres populares Published in 1846 and reissued several times the book merged the hitherto more essayistic costumbrista form with aspects of the novel although not a particularly tightly plotted novel Somewhat more novelistic was his Fe Esperanza y Caridad Faith Hope and Charity published serially in La Nacion in 1850 1851 and also much reprinted Flores had been Eugene Sue s translator into Spanish and Sue s influence is strong in this work Flores turned to again to custumbrismo of a sort in 1853 with Ayer hoy y manana o la fe el vapor y la electricidad cuadros sociales de 1800 1850 y 1899 Yesterday today and tomorrow or faith steam and electricity social pictures of 1800 1850 and 1899 going Mesonero s types lost and types found one better by projecting a vision of the future influenced by the work of Emile Souvestre His newspaper El Laberinto continued publishing his costumbrista work even posthumously such as Tipos y costumbres espanolas 1877 4 Eugenio de Ochoa 1815 72 carried costumbrismo in a different direction 4 Born in the Basque country 16 and moving often between Spain and France his 1860 book Museo de las familias Paris Londres y Madrid Museum of families Paris London Madrid created a sort of cosmopolitan costumbrismo 4 Costumbrismo by major Spanish realists edit Many of the great Spanish realist writers of the 19th century worked at times in the costumbrista mode especially at the start of their careers Fernan Caballero pen name of Cecilia Francisca Josefa Bohl de Faber 1796 1877 for example in the prose portions of her Cuentos y poesias populares andaluzas Popular Andalusian stories and poems collected in 1859 from prior publication in magazines writes within the genre particularly in Una paz hecha sin preliminares sin conferencias y sin notas diplomaticas A peace made without preliminaries without conferences and without diplomatic notes with its very specific setting in Chiclana de la Frontera 4 17 Pedro Antonio de Alarcon 1833 1891 issued a collection Cosas que fueron bringing together 16 costumbrista articles 4 nbsp Jose Maria de Pereda Andres Soria sees Jose Maria de Pereda 1833 1906 as the most successful fusion of costumbrista scenes into proper novels especially his portrayals of La Montana the mountainous regions of Cantabria His Escenas montanesas 1864 is particularly in the costumbrista mode with its mixture of urban rural and seafaring scenes and sections offering sketches of various milieus 4 Poet and novelist Antonio de Trueba 1819 or 1821 89 wrote squarely within the genre with Madrid por fuera and De flor en flor Gustavo Adolfo Becquer 1836 1870 portrayed Madrid Seville and Toledo Jose Maria Gabriel y Galan 1870 1905 best known as a poet also wrote costumbrista pieces about Salamanca Armando Palacio Valdes 1853 1938 also essayed the genre in newspaper articles collected in Aguas fuertes Strong waters 1884 The writer and diplomat Angel Ganivet 1865 98 4 seen by some as a precursor to the Generation of 98 18 wrote costumbrista scenes of Granada 4 Elements of costumbrismo or even entire works in the genre can be found among major Spanish writers of the 20th century though to a lesser extent Miguel de Unamuno 1864 1936 worked in the genre for De mi pais Of my country 1903 and some stories such as Solitana in of El espejo de la muerte The Mirror of Death 1913 as did Pio Baroja with Vitrina pintoresca Picturesque showcase 1935 and in passages of his novels set in the Basque Country Azorin Jose Augusto Trinidad Martinez Ruiz 1873 1967 often wrote in this genre one could comb the works of Ramon Gomez de la Serna 1888 1963 and Camilo Jose Cela 1916 2002 and find many passages that could come straight from a work of costumbrismo Although taken as a whole these writers are clearly not costumbristas they use the costumbrista style to evoke surviving remnants of Spain s past 4 20th century literary costumbrismo in Spain edit The tradition of costumbrismo in Spain by no means ended at the turn of the century but it simply did not play as important a role in 20th century Spanish literature as it did in the century before As noted above several of the most important 20th century Spanish writers at least dabbled in or were influenced by the genre When we go beyond the first string of writers we see more of a continuation of costumbrismo 4 In the course of the century more and more Spanish regions asserted their particularity allowing this now established technique of writing to be given new scope In other regions Madrid Andalusia costumbrismo itself had become part of the region s identity The magazine Espana founded 1915 wrote about some new types the indolent golfo the lower class senorito chulo with his airs and exaggerated fashions the albanil or construction worker but with far less sympathy than costumbristas in the previous century had portrayed their predecessors Other types were those who were a caricature of times past el erudito with his vast but pointless book learning or El poeta de juegos florales the poet of floral games 4 nbsp Vicente Blasco Ibanez Andres Soria describes 20th century regional costumbrismo as more serious less picturesque and more poetic than in the 19th century Among his many examples of the 20th century continuation of costumbrismo are Santiago Rusinol 1861 1931 writing in Catalan about Catalonia and Mallorca numerous chroniclers of the Basque Country Jose Maria Salaverria 1873 1940 Ricardo Baroja 1871 1953 Dionisio de Azkue Dunixi Jose Maria Iribarren 1906 1971 and as mentioned above Pio Baroja Vicente Blasco Ibanez 1867 1928 writing about Valencia and Vicente Medina Tomas 1866 1937 writing about Murcia 4 A strong current of costumbrismo continued in 20th century Madrid including in poetry Antonio Casero 1874 1936 and theatre Jose Lopez Silva 1860 1925 Carlos Arniches Barreda 1866 1943 Other writers who continued the tradition were Eusebio Blasco 1844 1903 Pedro de Repide 1882 1947 Emiliano Ramirez Angel 1883 1928 Luis Bello 1872 1935 and Federico Carlos Sainz de Robles 1899 1983 Similarly 20th century Andalusia saw work by Jose Nogales 1860 1908 Salvador Rueda 1857 1933 Arturo Reyes 1864 1913 Jose Mas y Laglera 1885 1940 Angel Cruz Rueda 1888 1961 and Antonio Alcala Venceslada 1883 1955 4 Costumbrismo in the visual arts in Spain edit nbsp An 1849 painting by Joaquin Dominguez Becquer is typical of Andalusian costumbrismo Costumbrismo is an art form developed by Spanish painters In the 19th century a wave of nationalistic fervour took hold providing the stimulus for painters to focus on local customs or costumbres 19 As in literary costumbrismo Madrid and Andalusia particularly Seville were Spain s two great centers of costumbrismo in the visual arts Andalusian costumbrista paintings were mainly romantic and folkloric largely devoid of social criticism Much of their market was to foreigners for whom Andalusia epitomized their vision of a Spain distinct from the rest of Europe The costumbrista artists of Madrid were more acerbic sometimes even vulgar in portraying the life of lower class Madrid More of their market was domestic including to the often snobbish and often Europeanizing and liberal elite of the capital 2 20 Among other things the School of Madrid often used large masses of solid color and painted with a broad brush while the School of Seville painted more delicately The Madrid paintings have a certain urgency while the Seville paintings are typically serene even misty The Madrid painters focus more on unique individuals the Sevillianos on individuals as representatives of a type 2 nbsp Costumbrismo can also be found in photography as in this image of an Andalusian Gypsy wearing a sombrero de catite Romantic Andalusian costumbrismo costumbrismo andaluz follows in the footsteps of two painters of the School of Cadiz Juan Rodriguez y Jimenez el Panadero the Baker 1765 1830 and Joaquin Manuel Fernandez Cruzado 1781 1856 both associated with Romanticism The trend was continued by the School of Seville in a city much more on the path of a foreign clientele The founding figure was Jose Dominguez Becquer 1805 41 father of the poet Gustavo Adolfo Becquer see above and painter Valeriano Becquer 1833 70 who moved to Madrid Dominguez Becquer s influence came as an art teacher as well as an artist His student and cousin Joaquin Dominguez Becquer 1817 79 was known for his acute observation of light and atmosphere Another of Jose Dominguez Becquer s students the bold and forceful Manuel Rodriguez de Guzman 1818 67 may have been the genre s strongest painter 20 Other important early figures were Antonio Cabral Bejarano 1788 1861 best known for paintings of individuals theatrically posed against rural backgrounds and an atmosphere reminiscent of Murillo and Jose Roldan 1808 71 also very influenced by Murillo known especially as a painter of children and urchins One of Cabral Bejarano s sons Manuel Cabral Bejarano 1827 91 began as a costumbrista but eventually became more of a realist Another son Francisco Cabral Bejarano 1824 90 also painted in the genre 20 Other painters of the School of Seville were Andres Cortes 1810 79 Rafael Garcia Hispaleto 1833 54 Francisco Ramos and Joaquin Diez history painter Jose Maria Rodriguez de Losada 1826 96 and portraitist Jose Maria Romero 1815 80 20 Typical subject matter included majos lower class dandies and their female equivalents horsemen bandits and smugglers street urchins and beggars Gypsies traditional architecture fiestas and religious processions such as Holy Week in Seville 2 The School of Madrid was united less by a common visual style than by an attitude and by the influence of Goya rather than Murillo 2 20 Notable in this school were Alenza and Lameyer both contributors to Los espanoles pintados por si mismos Alenza in particular showed a strong influence from the Flemish painters as well as from Goya A fine portraitist who tended to take his subjects from among the common people in some ways he epitomizes the difference between the School of Madrid and that of Seville For him the official Romanticism was a topic to satirize as in his series of paintings Suicidios romanticos Romantic suicides 20 nbsp Tercio de varas Picadors Eugenio Lucas Velazquez c 1850 Probably foremost in the School of Madrid was Eugenio Lucas Velazquez 1817 70 An artistic successor to Goya though a more erratic painter than the master Lucas Velazquez s work ranged from bullfighting scenes to Orientalism to scenes of witchcraft His son Eugenio Lucas Villamil 1858 1918 and his students Paulino de la Linde 1837 and Jose Martinez Victoria followed in his tracks he was also a strong influence on Antonio Perez Rubio 1822 88 and Angel Lizcano Monedero 1846 1929 20 Jose Elbo 1804 44 was at least strongly akin to the School of Madrid Although born in Ubeda in the Andalusian province of Jaen Elbo studied painting in Madrid under Jose Aparicio 1773 1838 and was influenced by Goya he was also influenced by the Central European equivalents of costumbrismo His painting is rife with social criticism and often angrily populist 20 Also in Madrid but not really part of the School of Madrid was Valeriano Becquer transplanted son of Jose Dominguez Becquer Although also influenced by Goya and by Diego Velazquez his work in Madrid did partake of some of the socially critical aspects of the other painters of that city but not of the satiric aspects his portraits of common people emphasize their dignity seldom their foibles 20 The dark vision of 20th century Madrid painter Jose Gutierrez Solana 1886 1945 was influenced by costumbrismo and also directly by the Black Paintings of Goya that had so influenced the costumbristas 4 Visual costumbrismo in the Americas edit nbsp Jose Agustin Arrieta Tertulia de pulqueria 1851 In nineteenth century Mexico colonial era casta paintings a type of secular genre painting depicting racial categories and hierarchy disappeared at independence when casta categories were abolished but costumbrismo paintings resonated with the stereotypes of the earlier genre 21 A number of foreign visitors to Mexico produced images in the costumbrista tradition including Claudio Linati 22 and Edouard Pingret The most significant Mexican costumbrista painter is Jose Agustin Arrieta whose paintings of a market scene La Sorpresa a kitchen scene La Cocina Poblana and a tavern scene Tertulia de pulqueria are well known 23 24 25 One less famous than Arrieta is Manuel Serrano ca 1830 ca 1870s about whom little is known His painting Vendador de bunuelos depicting a fritter seller in an urban night scene is in the collections of the Mexican government 26 Another less well known Mexican artist is es Felipe Santiago Gutierrez 1824 1904 who was also a writer teacher art critic intellectual and cultural diplomat 27 nbsp Still Life with Cat and Birds Agustin Arrieta Literary costumbrismo in the Americas editArgentina edit nbsp Juan Bautista Alberdi Some of Argentina s most distinguished writers worked in the costumbrista genre in at least some of their writing though few worked narrowly within the genre Esteban Echeverria 1805 51 was a politically passionate Romantic writer whose work has strong costumbrista aspects his El Matadero The Slaughterhouse is still widely read Juan Bautista Alberdi 1810 84 and Domingo Faustino Sarmiento 1811 1888 both wrote at times in the genre as did Jose Antonio Wilde 1813 83 in Buenos Aires desde setenta anos atras Buenos Aires from seventy years ago Vicente G Quesada 1830 1913 in Recuerdos de un viejo Memories of an old man Lucio V Lopez 1848 94 in the novela La gran aldea The big village Martin Coronado 1850 1919 playwright Martiniano Leguizamon 1858 1935 in the novel Montaraz Jose S Alvarez 1858 1903 Fray Mocho in the story Viaje al pais de los matreros A trip to bandit country Emma de la Barra 1861 1947 who wrote under the pseudonym Cesar Duayen in Stella Joaquin V Gonzalez 1863 1923 in Mis montanas My Mountains Julio Sanchez Gardel 1879 1937 in numerous comedies and Manuel Galvez 1882 1962 in such novels as La maestra normal The normal school teacher and La sombra del convento The sleep of the convent 28 Bolivia edit Bolivian costumbristas include Julio Lucas Jaimes 1845 1914 Lindaura Anzoategui de Campero 1846 98 Jaime Mendoza 1874 1938 Alcides Arguedas 1879 1946 and Armando Chirveches 1881 1926 28 Central America edit Guatemalan novelist and historian Jose Milla 1822 82 wrote several costumbrista works and created the character of Juan Chapin the emblematic Guatemalan Other Central American costumbristas are Jose Maria Peralta Lagos 1875 1944 El Salvador Ramon Rosa 1848 93 Honduras Carlos Alberto Ucles 1854 1942 Honduras and a distinguished line of Costa Rican writers Manuel de Jesus Jimenez 1854 1916 Manuel Gonzalez Zeledon 1864 1936 the verse writer Aquileo Echeverria 1866 1909 and in the 20th century Joaquin Garcia Monge 1881 1958 28 Chile edit nbsp Jose Joaquin Vallejo Jotabeche The Chilean Larra Costumbrismo enters Chilean literature in some of the writing of Jose Zapiola 1804 85 Vicente Perez Rosales 1807 86 Roman Fritis 1829 74 Pedro Ruiz Aldea ca 1833 70 and especially Jose Joaquin Vallejo 1811 58 who under the name Jotabeche was the supreme Chilean costumbrista 28 Strong aspects of costumbrismo can be seen in the novels and other works of Alberto Blest Gana 1830 1920 There are many costumbrista passages in the works of Benjamin Vicuna Mackenna 1831 86 and Daniel Barros Grez 1833 1904 Roman Vial 1833 1896 entitled one of his books Costumbres chilenas Zorobabel Rodriguez 1839 1901 Moises Vargas 1843 98 Arturo Givovich 1855 1905 Daniel Riquelme 1854 1912 Senen Palacios 1858 1927 Egidio Poblete 1868 1940 all wrote in the mode at times Costumbrismo figures particularly heavily in stage comedies El patio de los Tribunales The courtyard of the tribunals of justice by Valentin Murillo 1841 1896 Don Lucas Gomez by Mateo Martinez Quevedo 1848 1923 Chincol en sarten A sparrow in the pan and En la puerta del horno In the gate of horn by Antonio Espineira 1855 1907 La cancion rota The broken song by Antonio Acevedo Hernandez 1886 1962 Pueblecito Little town by Armando Moock 1894 1942 In prose costumbrismo mixes eventually into realism with Manuel J Ortiz 1870 1945 and Joaquin Diaz Garcia 1877 1921 as important realists with costumbrista aspects 28 Colombia edit nbsp Jorge Isaacs Colombia can claim one of the earliest antecedents to the costumbrismo in El Carnero written 1636 38 but not published until 1859 by Juan Rodriguez Freile 1566 1638 or 1640 29 Rodriguez s work begins as a chronicle of the conquest of New Granada but as it approaches his own time it becomes more and more detailed and quotidian and its second half is a series of narratives that according to Stephen M Hart give lip service to conventional morality while taking a keen delight in recounting the various skullduggeries of witches rogues murderers whores outlaws priests and judges 30 Colombia can also claim a particularly rich tradition of costumbrismo in the 19th century and into the 20th Jose Manuel Groot 1800 78 novelists Eugenio Diaz 1803 65 Jose Manuel Marroquin 1827 1908 and Jose Maria Vergara y Vergara 1831 72 all of whom collaborated on the magazine El Mosaico la revista bogotana del costumbrismo 1858 71 Luis Segundo Silvestre 1838 87 and Jorge Isaacs 1837 95 whose sole novel Maria was praised by Alfonso M Escudero as the greatest Spanish language romantic novel 28 Other Colombian costumbristas are Jose Caycedo Rojas 1816 1897 Juan de Dios Restrepo 1823 94 Gregorio Gutierrez Gonzalez 1826 72 Ricardo Carrasquilla 1827 86 Camilo A Echeverri 1827 87 Manuel Pombo 1827 98 Jose David Guarin 1830 90 Ricardo Silva 1836 87 Jose Maria Cordovez Moure 1835 1918 Rafael Maria Camargo 1858 1926 wrote under the pseudonym Fermin de Pimentel y Vargas and Tomas Carrasquilla 1858 1940 28 Cuba edit Cuba s leading costumbristas were Gaspar Betancourt Cisneros 1803 66 known as El Lugareno Cirilo Villaverde 1812 94 and Jose Maria de Cardenas y Rodriguez 1812 82 The patrician Betancourt published a series of Escenas cotidianas que abren camino al costumbrismo en Cuba Everyday scenes that pave the way for costumbrismo in Cuba 1838 40 His work focused often on what he found vulgar or ridiculous about Cuban life but was written with a fatherly affection Villaverde probably Cuba s greatest costumbrista wrote romantic novels most notably Cecilia Valdes the first part of which was published in 1839 although the definitive version was not published until 1882 This costumbrista anti slavery novel can be seen as an early realist work and continues to be read in recent times Villaverde also wrote the prologue for Cardenas s 1847 collection of costumbristaarticles 28 Jose Victoriano Betancourt 1813 75 was patron to many intellectuals in 1860s Havana he later went into exile in Mexico He is best remembered today as a costumbrista writer as is another Betancourt Jose Ramon Betancourt 1823 90 author of Una feria de caridad en 183 ellipses in original title set in Camaguey in the late 1830s 28 31 Dominican Republic edit In the Dominican Republic Francisco Gregorio Billini 1844 94 stands out for his novel Bani o Engracia y Antonita 1892 28 Still in some ways his vision was narrow J Alcantara Almanzar remarks that black people are practically absent as important characters and this absence is very significant in a country whose majority is mulatto Blacks are more present in the costumbrista works of Cesar Nicolas Penson 1855 1901 but he is far more sympathetic to his white characters portraying Haitians as fierce beasts 32 Ecuador edit Ecuadorians who wrote at least part of the time in the costumbrista mode include Pedro Fermin Cevallos 1812 93 Juan Leon Mera 1832 94 Jose Modesto Espinosa 1833 1915 Carlos R Tobar 1854 1920 Honorato Vazquez 1855 1933 Victor M Rendon 1859 1940 J Trajano Mera 1862 1919 and Luis A Martinez 1868 1909 28 Another Ecuadorian 28 was Alfredo Baquerizo Moreno 1859 1951 a novelist 28 and later president of the country 33 Mexico edit Mexican costumbrismo can claim one of the longest lineages to be found in the Americas In the same era in which the genre was gaining an identity in Spain Jose Joaquin Fernandez de Lizardi 1776 1827 Mexico s first novelist and perhaps Latin America s first novelist wrote works that had many similar aspects including Periquillo Sarniento 1816 recently translated into English as The Mangy Parrot 28 34 Other Mexican costumbristas are Guillermo Prieto 1818 97 and Jose Tomas de Cuellar 1830 94 In addition Jose Lopez Portillo y Rojas 1850 1923 Rafael Delgado 1853 1914 Angel del Campo 1868 1908 and Emilio Rabasa 1856 1930 can be seen as costumbristas but their work can also be considered realist 28 Paraguay edit Paraguayan costumbristas include Teresa Lamas de Rodriguez Alcala 1887 1976 and Carlos Zubizarreta 1904 72 28 Peru edit nbsp Ricardo Palma Peruvian costumbrismo begins with Jose Joaquin de Larriva y Ruiz 1780 1832 poeta and journalist and his younger irreverent Madrid educated collaborator Felipe Pardo y Aliaga 1806 68 A more festive and comic note was struck by Manuel Ascensio Segura 1805 71 Manuel Atanasio Fuentes 1820 29 wrote verse under the name El Murcielago the Bat a name which he also gave to a magazine he founded 28 Ricardo Palma 1833 1919 best known for the multi volume Tradiciones peruanas was a man of letters a former liberal politician and later the director of the National Library of Peru who rebuilt the collection of that library after the War of the Pacific He referred to his works in this mode as tradiciones rather than costumbrismo 28 35 Other Peruvian costumbristas are satirist and verse writer Pedro Paz Soldan y Unanue 1839 1895 Abelardo M Gamarra 1850 1924 and the nostalgic Jose Galvez 1885 1957 28 Puerto Rico edit nbsp Illustration of Manuel A Alonso In Puerto Rico Manuel A Alonso 1822 89 published El gibaro cuadro de costumbres de la isla de Puerto Rico The Jibaro modern spelling picture of customs of the island of Puerto Rico 1849 Puerto Rico s most important contribution to the genre Manuel Fernandez Juncos 1846 1928 born in Asturias Spain emigrated at age eleven to the island and wrote Tipos y caracteres y Costumbres y tradiciones Types and characters and customs and traditions 28 36 Uruguay edit Prominent Uruguayan costumbristas include Santiago Maciel 1862 1931 Manuel Bernardez 1867 1942 Javier de Viana 1868 1926 Adolfo Montiel Ballesteros 1888 1971 and Fernan Silva Valdes 1887 1975 Most of these writers also did significant work outside of the genre 28 Venezuela edit nbsp Venezuelan diplomat and writer Fermin Toro portrait by Antonio Herrera Toro Venezuelan costumbristas include Fermin Toro c 1807 65 37 Daniel Mendoza 1823 67 Francisco de Sales Perez 1836 1926 Nicanor Bolet Peraza 1838 1906 Francisco Tosta Garcia 1845 1921 Jose Maria Rivas 1850 1920 Rafael Bolivar Alvarez 1860 1900 and Pedro Emilio Coll 1872 1947 28 See also editGenre paintingReferences edit Jose Escobar Costumbrismo entre Romanticismo y Realismo Biblioteca Virtual Miguel Cervantes Accessed online 2010 01 22 a b c d e f Antonio Reina Palazon El Costumbrismo en la Pintura Sevillana del Siglo XIX Archived 2008 09 16 at the Wayback Machine Biblioteca Virtual Miguel Cervantes Accessed online 2010 01 22 Juan Lopez Morillas El Krausismo espanol 1980 p 129 quoted by Enrique Pupo Walker The brief narrative in Spanish America 1835 1915 490 535 in Roberto Gonzalez Echevarria Enrique Pupo Walker The Cambridge History of Latin American Literature Discovery to modernism Cambridge University Press 1996 ISBN 0 521 34069 1 p 491 accessed on Google Books a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag Andres Soria Costumbrismo I Literatura Espanola Archived July 16 2011 at the Wayback Machine Ediciones Rialp S A Gran Enciclopedia Rialp 1991 Accessed online 2010 01 20 Quoted in Andres Soria Costumbrismo I Literatura Espanola Archived July 16 2011 at the Wayback Machine Ediciones Rialp S A Gran Enciclopedia Rialp 1991 Angeles Ezama Gil Jose Enrique Serrano Asenjo editors Juan Valera Correspondencia Vol 2 Anos 1862 1875 Nueva biblioteca de erudicion y critica Editorial Castalia 2002 ISBN 84 9740 041 0 p 39 Available online on Google Books Ficha de publicacion periodica Semanario pintoresco espanol Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes Accessed online 2010 01 20 Ricardo Gullon La vida breve de Ricardo Gil Biblioteca Virtual Miguel Cervantes Accessed online 2010 01 20 Enrique Gil y Carrasco Biografias y Vidas Accessed online 2010 01 20 An 1851 edition of Los espanoles pintados por si mismos is available online at Google Books Josep Izquierdo Goya en tiempos de guerrilla artistica Libro de Notas 2008 07 25 Accessed online 2010 01 20 A very nice online version of volume 3 of Las mujeres can be found on the site of Rice University as part of the Rice Digital Scholarship Archive a b Maria de los Angeles Ayala Una docena de cuentos primera recopilacion de cuentos de Narciso Campillo y Correa Scriptura University of Lleida ISSN 1130 961X Vol 16 Number 16 2001 133 148 Accessed online 2010 01 20 p 148 n 39 p 16 of PDF Antiguo edificio del Banco de Espana Bilbao magazine 2005 04 p 8 Accessed online 2010 01 20 Book is online at Google Books in Spanish Doce espanoles Eugenio de Ochoa Biografias y Vidas Accessed online 2010 01 20 The story is available online at Google Books A G Solalinde review of Melchor Fernandez Almagro s Vida y Obra de Angel Ganivet 1927 Accessed online 2010 01 21 Boone E Vistas de Espana Yale University Press 2007 p 42 a b c d e f g h i La pintura costumbrista Archived 2009 10 02 at the Wayback Machine ArteHistoria Junta de Castilla y Leon Accessed online 2010 01 21 Mey Yen Moriuchi From Casta to Costumbrismo Representations of Racialized Social Spheres in Envisioning Others Race Color and the Visual in Iberia and Latin America Pamela A Patton ed Leiden Brill 2016 pp 213 240 Claudio Linati Costumes Civil Militaires et Religieux du Mexique Dessines d aores Nature par C Linati Bruxelles Litographie Royal de Jobard 1828 Jenny O Ramirez Nurture and Conformity Arrieta s Images of Women Food and Beverage in Women in Early Modern Latin America ed Kellen Kee McIntyre and Richard E Phillips Leiden Brill 2007 pp 207 220 Efrain Castro Morales Homenaje Nacional Jose AugustIn Arrieta 1803 1874 Su Tiempo Vida y Obra Mexico City Museo Nacional de Arte 1994 Elisa Garcia Barragan Jose Augustin Arrieta Lumbres de lo Cotidiano Mexico City Fondo de Editorial de la Plastica Mexicana 1998 Moriuchi Mexican Costumbrismo p 92 93 Moriuchi Mexican Costumbrismo p 96 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Alfonso M Escudero Costumbrismo Il Literatura Hispanoamericana Archived 2008 09 16 at the Wayback Machine Ediciones Rialp S A Gran Enciclopedia Rialp 1991 Accessed online 2010 01 21 Escudero says 1638 Stephen M Hart says 1640 Stephen M Hart A companion to Latin American literature Volume 243 of Coleccion Tamesis Serie A Monografias Tamesis Books 2007 ISBN 1 85566 147 0 p 50 51 Accessed online on Google Books Jose Ramon Betancourt Una feria de caridad en 183 Third Edition Barcelona 1885 Online at Google Books Accessed 2010 01 21 some pages are only partly legible J Alcantara Almanzar Black images in Dominican literature in New West Indian Guide Nieuwe West Indische Gids 61 1987 no 3 4 Leiden 161 173 Accessed online at kitlv journals nl 2010 01 21 Alfredo Baquerizo Moreno Archived 2010 01 06 at the Wayback Machine diccionariobiograficoecuador com Accessed online 2010 01 22 Jim Tuck Mexico s Voltaire Jose Joaquin Fernandez de Lizardi 1776 1827 Mexconnect com 2008 10 09 Accessed online 2010 01 21 Christopher Conway Chronology of Ricardo Palma p xv xvii of Helen Lane s translation of Tradiciones peruanas Peruvian Traditions Library of Latin America Oxford University Press US 2004 ISBN 0 19 515909 8 Available online on Google Books Manuel Fernandez Juncos Archived 2009 04 14 at the Wayback Machine educastur princast es Consejeria de Educacion y Ciencia del Gobierno del Principado de Asturias Accessed online 2010 01 21 Escudero appears to have the wrong date of death 1868 and a questionable date of birth 1808 for this well known figure Fermin Toro Biografias y Vidas accessed online 2010 01 22 says 1806 1865 Pedro Diaz Seijas Literatura Venezolana Fermin Toro Archived 2010 03 24 at the Wayback Machine says 1807 1865 accessed online 2010 01 22 and makes a case for why 1808 is improbable Further reading editMoriuchi Mey Yen Mexican Costumbrismo Race Society and Identity in Nineteenth Century Art University Park PA Penn State Press 2018 External links edit nbsp Media related to Costumbrismo at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Costumbrismo amp oldid 1204066155, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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