Age, Biography and Wiki

Jorge de la Vega was born on 27 March, 1930 in Buenos Aires, Argentina, is a Painter. Discover Jorge de la Vega's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 41 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation N/A
Age 41 years old
Zodiac Sign Aries
Born 27 March, 1930
Birthday 27 March
Birthplace Buenos Aires, Argentina
Date of death (1971-08-26) Buenos Aires, Argentina
Died Place Buenos Aires, Argentina
Nationality Argentina

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 27 March. He is a member of famous Painter with the age 41 years old group.

Jorge de la Vega Height, Weight & Measurements

At 41 years old, Jorge de la Vega height not available right now. We will update Jorge de la Vega's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
Height Not Available
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Who Is Jorge de la Vega's Wife?

His wife is Pauleta de la Vega

Family
Parents Not Available
Wife Pauleta de la Vega
Sibling Not Available
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Jorge de la Vega Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Jorge de la Vega worth at the age of 41 years old? Jorge de la Vega’s income source is mostly from being a successful Painter. He is from Argentina. We have estimated Jorge de la Vega's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2023 Under Review
Net Worth in 2022 Pending
Salary in 2022 Under Review
House Not Available
Cars Not Available
Source of Income Painter

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Timeline

1969

(Pop phase) Rompecabezas, 1969/70, acrílico s/ tela (acrylic on canvas), 100 x 100 cm, cada panel (each panel). Teresa Zavalía, Bs. As. (3 panels), Col. Jorge y Marion Helft, Bs. As. (2 panels), Marta y Ramón de la vega, Bs. As. (12 panels).

1968

Lyrics from "Proximidad", presented during the painter's first public performance as a songwriter-singer in De la Vega expone canciones (De la Vega exhibits songs) at Galería Bonino, 1968.

Lyrics from "El gusanito en persona," included in his Olympia record Jorge de la Vega canta sus canciones, whose cover dressed the walls of Galería Bonino in its presentation (Buenos Aires, October 16–31, 1968).

1966

1966-1971. "Los cambios me movilizan. En Nueva York cambié la temática: adiós a las figuras mitológicas y búsqueda del hombre. Norteamérica es un mundo tan poderoso y artificial que por contraste el hombre adquiere relieve. (Changes move me. In New York I changed the subject: goodbye to mythological figures and man's search. North America is a powerful and artificial world which by contrast man acquires relief.)" - Jorge de la Vega.

1964

(Bestiario phase) El día ilustrísimo, 1964, técnica mixta s/ tela (mixed media on canvas), 249,55 x 199,5 cm. Marta y Ramón de la Vega, Bs. As.

1963

1963-1966. "Quiero que mis obras choquen con el espectador con la misma intensidad con que chocan todas sus partes entre sí, por pequeñas que sean. Una ficha de nácar sobre una mancha. Un número junto a una piedra. Una bestia de oropel. Una quimera de humo. (I want for my works to collide with the viewer with the same intensity with which all parts collide with one another, however small. A sheet nacre on a stain. A number beside a stone. A beast of tinsel. A chimera of smoke.)" - Jorge de la Vega.

This style was characterized by the use of nontraditional techniques such as collage and assemblage to create "beastlike" figures which de la Vega called "Esquizobestias (schizobeasts)" or "Conflíctos anamórficos (anamorphic conflicts)". Anamorphic, in this case, means "something made unrecognizable by distortion, unless viewed from a particular angle", and many of these bestiarios were exactly that. De la Vega wanted the viewing of these distorted paintings to be like what one sees in a trick mirror. These paintings used glued, folded, and stretched fabrics and canvases, combined with paint and small objects, sometimes used to create a frottage effect. This technique allowed de la Vega to incorporate reality into his artworks, while still majorly exploring his own fantasies. He said about this style (in the catalogue of the 1963 Di Tella awards): "I want my painting to be natural, without limitations or formulas, improvised in the same way as life, growing in all places and doing whatever it wants, even if I don't want it to." His goal was never to narrate history, using these real life objects as a connection to reality, but rather to add them to his imagination.

1962

In 1962, the artists traveled to Europe together, settling in Paris. Here they planned how they would create new forms of art and acted as creative influences to each other in their close proximity, de la Vega and Noé living together, and Diera and Macció sharing a studio. Unlike other artists of the figuration movement in Latin American art at the time (like José Luis Cuevas in Mexico), Otra Figuración wanted to explore psychological rather than objective conditions when exploring the nature of humankind. They did not see themselves as simply observers of the spectacle of the world, but active participants, believing that "the only way to adventure into is by adventuring into man himself".

1961

Although de la Vega studied architecture in Buenos Aires for six years, he then became self-taught as a painter. From 1961 to 1965 he was a member of the art movement called Nueva Figuración. During his involvement in this movement, he became a member of the Otra Figuración group. In the final years of his career and life he wrote and sang popular protest songs which expressed his humorous view of the world. In addition to museums in Argentina, his works hang in the Phoenix Art Museum, the Museum of Modern Art in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and the Art Museum of the Americas at the OAS in Washington, DC.

The artist's first group exhibition, titled "Otra Figuración", was held at the Peuser Gallery from August 23 to September 6, 1961. At this exhibition, they published a public statement which said: "We are not a movement, nor are we a group, or a school. We are simply a few painters who feel the need to incorporate the freedom of the figure into our own freedom of expression. And, because we strongly believe in that freedom, we do not wish to restrict it with any dogmatic limitations, thus enslaving ourselves to ourselves. That is why we are eschewing a prologue. There is, however, a reason for being, an artistic driving force that has stimulated us to hold this exhibition. Through there is a common root to that artistic will, it is expressed individually, so each of us will examine ourselves elsewhere, and let the exhibition speak for itself."

(Otra Figuración phase) El rescate, 1961, óleo s/ tela (oil on canvas), 195 x 129,5 cm. Marta y Ramón de la Vega, Bs. As.

1960

In the 1960s, de la Vega was a member of the Otra Figuración (other figuration), also called the Nueva Figuración (new figuration), group of Argentine artists. The group was founded in 1961 as a reaction against the dominant tradition of Argentine geometric abstraction during that period and consisted of four men: Jorge de la Vega, Luis Felipe Noé, Rómulo Macció, and Ernesto Diera. The artists shared many goals, the primary one being the creation of a new art which would bring back the use of human form without simply mimicking the old styles, or slipping into the decorative styles of many other Informalist abstract painters. Their use of the figure allowed them each to express individual existential anxieties in their own way. Many of their artworks not only showed ideas from their personal psyches, but also their political views and general critiques of society; "the group's emblematic whale thus stands for spontaneity, creativity, and risk; in other words, all the qualities that capitalism took away from art."

1960-1962. "No fui exactamente yo quien introdujo figuras humanas en mi pintura; creo que fueron ellas mismas las que me utilizaron para inventarse; no fue una imposición involuntaria sino un encuentro natural y ahora no podría prescindir de ellas sin sentir cercenada mi voluntad expresiva. (It was not exactly me who introduced human figures in my painting, I think it was they themselves who used me to invent themselves, it was not an involuntary imposition but a natural meeting and now I could not do without them without feeling my expressive will severed.)" - Jorge de la Vega.

Upon moving to the United States for several years in the mid-1960s, de la Vega was greatly influenced by the Pop Art movement in New York City. In this phase, he strayed dramatically from his usual figurative style and began to attach faces from television, newspapers, magazines, advertisements, and other forms of popular media to "fluidly deformed bodies which entangled and intermeshed". This phase truly showed de la Vega's sense of humor, as a comical critique of consumer society.

In de la Vega's later years he became a popular singer/lyricist after giving up the visual arts. Two great examples of his work at this time of life are "Proximidad (Proximity)" and "El gusanito en persona (the little worm in person)". The editor's note preceding these works (as published in Inverted Utopias) clarifies: "This document and the preceding one are of interest not for their importance as poems, but because they illustrate one of the creative outlets chosen by Argentinean artists who, at the end of the 1960s, quit painting to circumvent the institutionalization of art. By then, the medium of painting had fallen short of their expectations, and their arguments had hit bottom."

(Geometría phase) Sin título, 1960, óleo s/ tela (oil on canvas), 100 x 100 cm. Museo de Arte Contemporáneo, Bs. As.

1953

1953-1960. "Poco a poco, estructuré la imagen de manera cada vez más geométrica hasta llegar a despojar mis obras de todo contacto con la realidad visual física, buscando encontrar nuevos modos de relaciones en el dominio de los colores, de las texturas y las formas. (Gradually, I structured the image in an increasingly geometric way to strip down my work of all contact with physical visual reality, seeking to find new modes of relations in the domain of colors, textures and forms.)" - Jorge de la Vega.

1952

(Formación phase) Retrado de su padre, 1952, óleo s/ cartón (oil on cardboard), 70 x 50 cm. César de la Vega, Bs. As.

1948

De la Vega began his education studying architecture at the Universidad de Buenos Aires in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He studied there from 1948-1952 before deciding to pursue art instead, as a self-taught painter. He explored many styles (including Geometric Abstraction and Realism before joining the Otra Figuración group in the early 1960s. De la Vega received a Fulbright Scholarship to teach at Cornell University in 1965 and worked there as a visiting professor and artist.

1946

1946-1952. "Pinto sólo cuando tengo ganas. Utilizo modelo, que me gusta dejar en libertad, para sorprenderlo en su gesto menos forzado. Creo que, en pintura, el tema es sólo un pretexto para lo que uno quiere decir. (I paint only when I want to. I use model, which I like to set free, in order to catch him in his gesture without it being forced. I believe, in painting, the subject is only a pretext for what you want to say.)" - Jorge de la Vega.

1930

Jorge de la Vega (27 March 1930 – 26 August 1971) was an Argentine painter, graphic artist, draftsman, singer, and songwriter.

Jorge de la Vega was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina on March 27, 1930. From about 1948 to 1952 he studied architecture at the Universidad de Buenos Aires before quitting to pursue his true passion: art. He began creating his first art in the mid-1940s, and during the 1950s he created both representational and abstract geometric paintings. In 1961 he and three other Argentine artists created the Otra Figuración group which he worked with from 1961-1965. He traveled to Europe with this group where they were inspired to create a new form of art all their own. He later traveled to the United States on his own, and was greatly influenced by the Pop Art movement in New York City. During his time in the U.S., he also worked at Cornell University as a visiting professor/artist. Upon returning to Argentina he gave up the visual arts, and spent the last few years of his life as a popular singer/lyricist. He died in Buenos Aires on August 26, 1971.