Carmen Saco

A journey through his artistic production and personal life.

Sin título (Siglo XX) by Carmen SacoPontifical Catholic University of Peru

Carmen Saco was an artist and intellectual of the 20th century who linked her work with the social problems that Peru was going through, collaborating in one of the main avant-garde magazines in Latin America: Amauta.

La mendiga (Siglo XX) by Carmen SacoPontifical Catholic University of Peru

In the first half of the 1920s, he entered the National School of Fine Arts (Peru). She was a disciple of Daniel Hernández and Manuel Piqueras Cotolí, and she developed mainly as a sculptor.

In 1926, she traveled to Europe to complement her artistic training; there, she became a disciple of Auguste Rodin and José de la Solana. When she returned, she was a collaborator and member of the Amauta magazine, maintaining an active participation as a writer and cartoonist.

Don Manuel Prado. Presidente del Perú, Carmen Saco, 1941, From the collection of: Pontifical Catholic University of Peru
,
Franklin D. Roosvelt, Carmen Saco, 1941, From the collection of: Pontifical Catholic University of Peru
Show lessRead more
Stefan Zweig, Carmen Saco, 1942, From the collection of: Pontifical Catholic University of Peru
,
Stalin, Carmen Saco, 1942, From the collection of: Pontifical Catholic University of Peru
Show lessRead more

Cárcel Santo Tomás Cárcel Santo Tomás (1932) by Carmen SacoPontifical Catholic University of Peru

In addition to standing out for her art criticism and travel notes, Carmen Saco always maintained her concern for the less favored sectors, portraying situations that showed social problems.

Cárcel Santo Tomás TextoPontifical Catholic University of Peru

Carmen Saco set a precedent in her generation by being the first sculptor to graduate from the Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes of Peru. In addition, her works illustrate the commitment and activism that characterized her life so much, when dealing with issues such as the situation of women, the condition of the worker and social inequality.

Credits: Story

Content:   Dirección de Asuntos Culturales
Texs: Noelia Wong Saavedra
Photographs: Fabiola Montoya Hinojosa l Úrsula Cogorno Buendía
References:  
Villegas, F. (2021). La Escuela de Bellas Artes del Perú (1919- 1943), heterogeneidad de lenguajes modernos y de la vanguardia en la búsqueda de un arte nacional. Tradición, segunda época, 21, 193-203.

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
Explore more
Related theme
Wonders of Peru
Wonders of Peru
View theme

Interested in Visual arts?

Get updates with your personalized Culture Weekly

You are all set!

Your first Culture Weekly will arrive this week.

Home
Discover
Play
Nearby
Favorites