Josep Maria Tamburini i Dalmau (Barcelona, 1856 - Barcelona, 1932) was a painter and art critic.
Biography
He studied at the Llotja School with Antoni Caba in Barcelona, in Paris with Léon Bonnat and Rome and Naples, where he came in contact with Domenico Morelli or Gioacchino Toma.
Again in Barcelona, he published several articles, critiques and drawings in La Vanguardia and L'Avenç, while exhibiting paintings in the Sala Parés.
He was initially devoted to historical painting, with works such as El Comde de Urgel, taken prisoner by the men of King Ferdinand of Antequera (1891), but he moved away from academic realism and oriented himself towards symbolism and pre-Raphaelism, endowing his works with an air Literary, in works like Harmonies of the forest of 1896.
He exhibited his works on several occasions at the National Fine Arts Exhibitions held in Madrid and was a member of the Catalan Museums Board and professor at the Llotja School, as well as one of the co-founders of the Artistic and Literary Society of Catalonia, in 1900.
He also collaborated in several magazines like Album of Salín, Iris, Ilustració Catalana, the Artistic Illustration and Selected Leaves.
Awards and Honours
1888 - Silver Medal at the Universal Exhibition of Barcelona (1888)
1898 - Extraordinary Prize of the Queen Regent in the exhibition of Barcelona of 1898 by its Blue Tale.2
1911 - SM of the Kings of Spain
References
Currently, belongs to the Museum of Fine Arts of Seville: http://www1.ccul.junta-andalucia.es/cultura/museos/MBASE/index.jsp?redirect=S2_1_3_1.jsp¬icias=2060
= 0065105 Biography in encyclopedia.cat
Bibliography
DDAA (1992). The Raimon Casellas school. Publicacions of the Mnac / Museo del Prado. ISBN 84-87317-21-9.
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