Lanzarote Artist, Cesar Manrique

Art and Architecture in Spain’s Canary Islands

© Barbara Rogers

Monumento de Campesinos, Lanzarote, Stillman Rogers Photography

Because of the multi-talented surrealist Cesar Manrique, Lanzarote, in the Canary Islands, is a major art destination for sculpture and exciting modern architecture.

Cesar Manrique’s roots in Lanzarote’s volcanic landscape not only shaped his artistic vision, but brought him home to save the island from the high-rise-encrusted fate of so many other beach-lined “islands in the sun.” Instead, its architecture is a pleasing blend of traditional white stucco homes, well-designed bungalows that climb the hillsides like sculptured stairs, and a scattering of attractive multi-story hotels.

After becoming a major figure in Spanish art in Madrid, Manrique moved to New York City in 1963, exhibiting at the Catherine Viviano Gallery. While there he became friends with such major American artists as Jackson Pollock and Andy Warhol, who added their influences to those of Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso and other major European artists he had studied.

Returning to Lanzarote in 1968, he set his passion and extraordinary talents to redirecting the future of the island’s tourism, just at its beginnings. Determined to avoid the horrors of bad tourist development he’d seen elsewhere, Manrique set Lanzarote on an environmentally and culturally inspired course. Then, working with the island’s dramatic mountains and ragged lava flows, he used his genius in art and architecture to create exciting wind-activated mobile sculptures, plus seven unique attractions and a stunning hotel complex:


The copyright of the article Lanzarote Artist, Cesar Manrique in Spain Travel is owned by Barbara Rogers. Permission to republish Lanzarote Artist, Cesar Manrique must be granted by the author in writing.


Monumento de Campesinos, Lanzarote, Stillman Rogers Photography
A Manrique Wind Toy, Monument de Campesinos, Stillman Rogers Photography
A view of ocean and islands from Mirador del Rio, Stillman Rogers Photography
Jardin de Cactus, Lanzarote, Stillman Rogers Photography
Taro de Tahiche, artful  home of Cesar Manrique, Stillman Rogers Photography

Comments
Jan 24, 2007 7:00 PM
Fran Folsom :
Wow, sounds like Cesar is leaving his mark on Lanzarote. Which of the Canary Islands is this? Is Manrique also a trained architect along with a contemporary artist?
Feb 14, 2007 10:42 AM
Barbara Rogers :
Cesar Manrique is from Lanzarote, which is where most of his later work is. He did train as a construction engineer (to please his father, who thought he should have a more substantial career than as a painter), and did several other architectural designs off the island. His major fame outside of the Canary Islands came as a painter, however.
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