Paisaje de Toledo [Toledo Landscape]
- 1973
- Oil and fillers on canvas
- 61 x 80,5 cm
- Cat. P_49
- Acquired in 1973
Many of the pictures painted by José Beulas throughout his life reflect the silent, barren landscape of the southern part of the province of Huesca, an area that the Catalan artist first encountered when he did his military service there. The bare fields were a striking contrast to the lush vegetation of the La Selva region of Girona where Beulas was born, and must have left a great impression on him. In later life, he moved back to Huesca, where he died in 2017 at an advanced age. Indeed, he played a leading role in setting up and running the Huesca CDAN (Centre of Art and Nature). The Banco de España Collection has nine of his landscapes, most painted in Aragon. Stubble (1984) is a good example of Beulas' oeuvre. Depicting a winter landscape, with a leaden sky and a lofty horizon, it offers a small detail of the immense countryside of Huesca. In painting this field of burnt stubble, the artist consciously limits his palette to a small range of greys, earths and whites. As Beulas himself once remarked, 'a landscape is not an exact reproduction of nature, but rather the impressions that have penetrated deeply into one's soul on contemplating that nature'.
Other works by José Beulas