FIDELIO PONCE DE LEON :
Fidelio Ponce de León was the pseudonym of
Alfredo Fuentes Pons, a Cuban painter. A native of Camagüey, he studied at the
San Alejandro Academy in Havana from 1913 until 1918. Along with Antonio
Gattorno, Victor Manuel, Amelia Peláez, and Wifredo Lam, he is considered part
of the "Vanguardia" movement in Cuban art; however, unlike many of
his contemporaries he never studied in Europe, and so had comparatively little
contact with European modernism.
Fidelio Ponce de León's style was one of the most singular styles and iconography of his generation. His paintings such as La Familia ("The Family") and Niños ("Children", 1938), reflect Cuban society of the 1930s, and offer a contrasting view to the idealized vision seen in the art of some of the other artists. They are tragic images about poverty, sickness, and alienation.
Ponce's desperate economic situation and unruly life matched the general socio-
economic situation of Cuba in the 1930s, and thus his paintings’ expressions of doom transcend the personal and may be said to symbolize the national mood of that time.

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