Delfina Bernal

Delfina Bernal
Born 1941 (age 7677)
Barranquilla, Colombia
Residence San Francisco Bay Area, California
Nationality Colombian
Education Alejandro Obregón at Escuela de Bellas Artes, Barranquilla; Ben Bianchi at Parsons School of Design
Known for Painting
Notable work Carta de Amor a Jeff Perone

Delfina Bernal (1941, Barranquilla, Colombia) is a Colombian painter and multimedia artist.

Life

Delfina Bernal studied painting and sculpture at the Escuela de las Bellas Artes in Barranquilla, Colombia.[1] She studied with the institute’s director Alejandro Obregón and teachers Marie Claire de Andreis, Freda Sargent de Obregón, and María Luisa Andino de Lopez. She studied engraving with Ben Bianchi at the Parsons School of Design in the 1970s.

She was a founding member in 1973 of “Grupo 44”, along with Álvaro Herazo, Eduardo Hernandez, Victor Sanchez, Fernando Cepeda, Jairo Quintero and Christiane Lesueur [2]. Their work culminated in the exhibition La fotografía como documento en el arte conceptual de Barranquilla, curated by Alvaro Barrios, where Bernal exhibited her work Declaración de amor a Jeff Perrone[3]

She has lived for two periods of her work and life in the United States. The first from 1968 to 1973 in New York City, and from 1981 to the present in San Francisco, California.

She continues to work in several mediums including painting, etchings, collage, digital prints and photography.

Exhibitions and awards

References

  1. Bernal, Delfina. "Esta soy yo". International Center for the Arts of the Americas. Diario El Tiempo (Bogotá, Colombia). Retrieved 5 September 2017.
  2. Delfinabernal.com https://www.delfinabernal.com/1974-1980-1/. Retrieved 26 April 2018. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  3. 1 2 Monroy Guerrero, Carlos Eduardo. "La fotografía como documento en el arte conceptual de Barranquilla". Documents of 20th-century Latin American and Latino Art:. International Center for the Arts of the Americas. Retrieved 5 September 2017.
  4. Torres Leon, Fernan (July 1964). "ESTADISTICAS CULTURALES DE COLOMBIA": 1344. Retrieved 5 September 2017.
  5. "Colombia Esso Salon". Esso Salons. Retrieved 5 September 2017.
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