A GREAT Andalucian artist died 95 years ago this month.
Julio Romero de Torres was a pure cordobes, and his art has come to symbolise the very spirit of his home town. He was born in Cordoba in 1874, and he died there on 10 May 1930.
A bare sketch of his life is simple to relate.
He showed artistic promise as a child. By the age of 12, he was working as an illustrator for a local paper which couldn’t afford photographs.
By his late 20s he had become a Professor of Art, and in his free time he painted portraits and toured Europe.
He entered a painting entitled Nurseries of Love for the Spanish National Exhibition of 1906, but it was disqualified because its theme – prostitution – was ruled ‘immoral’.
Two years later, he won the gold medal with a work called Gypsy Muse.
And here you have the key to the art of Julio Romero de Torres. He was ahead of his time, choosing to deal frankly with erotic themes, and seeing the value of local models, especially gitanas (gypsy women).
La Saeta by Romero de Torres
He saw it as his life’s work to celebrate the beauty of Cordoba’s beautiful girls.
The house where he lived and worked is now an art gallery, open to the public. It is a former convent, located in Cordoba’s lovely Plaza del Potro.
The museum is closed on Mondays.
Between 16 September and 15 June, it opens at 8:15 in the morning and closes at 8:15 in the evening, Tuesday to Friday. On Saturdays it opens between 9:30 and 5:30, and on Sundays and public holidays, 8:15 to 2:15.
Between 16 June and 15 September, it’s open 8:15 to 2:15, Tuesday to Sunday.
Like the poet Lorca in Granada, who was flourishing at the same time, Romero de Torres understood the value of gypsy culture to Andalucia.
So much so that “he even said that if he had been given the choice between Leonardo da Vinci and the singer Juan Breva, he would undoubtedly have chosen to be Juan Breva. That, said by a painter, is very moving,” says Fuensanta Garcia, former director of the Museum of Fine Arts of Cordoba between 1981 and 2012.
Furthermore, Julio frequently went to a tavern near Fuenseca called Taberna del Bolillo, where he sang and played guitar with Juanillo el Chocolatero, as evidenced by contemporary photos.
He was also interested in personal relationships because “he had many friends and, surprisingly for the time, many female friends, but in the strictest sense of friendship, not the other things that have been said about him.”
La chiquita piconera by Romero de Torres
And then, he was fascinated by the city of Cordoba, which is why he brings it to his painting in a very unique way.
Cordoban society at the time admired him and “regarded him as an illustrious Cordoban who carried the name of Cordoba wherever he went.”
Senora Garcia recounts a very significant example dated 20 November 1910, when a still young Julio returned to Cordoba from a trip, and two Cordoban musicians who had composed a pasodoble called The Gypsy Muse, like his painting, “went with a band to the train station to greet him and there they premiered the pasodoble.”
Self-portrait of the artist in his studio
And the greatest reflection of this admiration was his multitudinous funeral service – held in the Museum of Fine Arts – and burial, after his death on 10 May 1930.
The response of the people of Cordoba was ‘overwhelming. ‘The number of wreaths received barely made it possible to see the coffin.
In this regard, Garcia recalls that, on the occasion of the painter’s death, the Casa del Pueblo of Cordoba published a manifesto calling on all Cordoba workers to attend the funeral. The text even details that, if they didn’t have time to go home to change their clothes, they should come in their overalls “because they are going to honour an eminent painter and distinguished artist, as they call him.” This demonstrates that he was “admired throughout Cordoba, regardless of social class or ideology.”
If you should find yourself in Cordoba, pay a visit to the home (now museum) of Julio Romero de Torres, an important artist who was also a pure cordobes.
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ANDALUCIA is bracing for a spell of intense heat and thunderstorms today and tomorrow, with the Spanish weather agency AEMET issuing an orange alert across parts of the region.
The warning, the second-highest level in Spain’s weather alert system, signals the danger from soaring temperatures and stormy conditions, effective from Tuesday through Wednesday, June 18.
Maps released by AEMET_Andalucía late yesterday show several areas highlighted in orange, indicating the most severe warnings.
These include parts of the interior provinces such as Jaen, Cordoba, and Seville, where the heat is expected to peak around 40C, alongside northern regions like Granada and potentially parts of Malaga’s higher ground.
#ElTiempoHoy ?? Tras una mañana de sol esta tarde las tormentas volverán al centro, este y sudeste peninsular, especialmente en interior de Valencia y Alicante ??.
?? Avisos por calor en buena parte del centro y sur, podrían alcanzar los 40 º en valles del suroeste.
Yellow alerts, suggesting a lower but still notable risk, extend to coastal zones and other inland areas, covering much of the region’s diverse landscape from the Sierra Nevada to the Guadalquivir Valley.
Cloud may develop in inland regions in the afternoon, bringing with it with scattered showers and thunderstorms.
Away from Andalucia, the highest temperatures of 35-37C will be in Aragon, La Mancha, inland Valencia, and Murcia, as well as in mountainous areas, with hail and wind. Very hot.
The orange alert comes as an unusual shift for mid-June, a time when Andalucia typically enjoys warm, sunny weather typical of its Mediterranean climate.
However, with temperatures forecast to climb and thunderstorms brewing, residents and visitors are advised to stay informed.
For those planning outdoor activities or travel, the combination of extreme heat and potential storms could disrupt plans, particularly in the affected inland areas where the alert is most pronounced.
AEMET’s warnings are updated regularly, and with the alert active as of this morning, locals and expatriates alike are keeping a close eye on the skies.
Following close behind are Torremolinos , Manilva , Casares , Benahavís , Estepona , Istán and Benalmádena, which all produce more than 700 kgs of waste per capita annually.
This information is sourced from Andalucia’s Institute of Statistics and Cartography from 2022. Overall, the amount of urban waste produced in Andalusia has a whole decreased by 14.8 kgs compared to 2021.
Malaga province had been decreasing in terms of waste it produced each year, but actually increased again between 2021 and 2022.