Baltasar de Echave

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Baltasar de Echave y Orio (born at Zumaya, Guipuzcoa, Spain, in the latter part of the sixteenth century; died in Mexico about the middle of the seventeenth) was a Spanish painter. As there was a painter of the same name, thought to be his son, he is known as Echave the Elder.

[edit] Life

He was one of the earliest Spanish artists to reach Mexico, arriving at about the same time, near the end of the sixteenth century, as Sebastian Arteaga and Alonzo Vasquez. He was then a young man, and there is a tradition that his wife, also a painter, was his instructor.

[edit] Works

Echave, whose subjects are chiefly religious, had especial skill in composition, and his best works are compared to Guercino.

The National Academy of San Carlos, Mexico City, has some of his major works: "The Adoration of the Magi", "Christ in the Garden", "The Martyrdom of San Aproniano", "The Holy Family", "The Visitation", "The Holy Sepulchre", "Saint Ann and the Virgin", "The Apparition of Christ and the Virgin to San Francisco", "The Martyrdom of San Ponciano" and "Saint Cecilia". In the church of San José el Real, generally known as the "Profesa", are several others, including "St. Isabel of Portugal", while he executed for the church of Santiago Tlaltelolco fifteen altar-panels. In the cathedral is his "Candelaria" and a "San Sebastian", believed to be by his wife. Among the smaller paintings of Echave is one of San Antonio Abad with St. Paul, the first hermit.

The artist also had a reputation as an author, among his works being one on the Biscayan language.

This article incorporates text from the entry Baltasar De Echave in the public-domain Catholic Encyclopedia of 1913.