Spanish painter Tapies dies at 88

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

AVANT-GARDE Spanish painter and sculptor Antoni Tapies, one of the biggest names in European contemporary art, died in Barcelona on Monday aged 88, his art foundation said.

Tapies was hailed as "the last great artist of the 20th century" by El Mundo newspaper for a career in which he gained worldwide renown with abstract canvases and compositions in material ranging from paint to discarded clothes.

Among his more controversial works was "The Sock", a three metre-high model of a sock with a hole in its heel. The sock was a favourite motif of the artist, who said that art should be made from simple things.

Tributes immediately poured in on Monday, with the director of the major Reina Sofia art museum in Madrid, Manuel Borja-Villel, hailing Tapies as "capable of creating a new language" in visual art.

"This is a sad night... but the important thing is that we still have his works, which are extraordinary, as well as his work as a collector, his foundation and his writings," Borja-Villel said on radio station RNE.

Tapies was associated early on in his career with other major names in 20th-century art, including fellow Catalans Joan Miro and Salvador Dali.

He also met Picasso in France, according to the biography provided by the Antoni Tapies Foundation which he founded in his native Barcelona.AFP