SYLVIA

CASTELLANOS

BIOGRAPHY

 

 

Northeast-based portraitist Sylvia Castellanos, who emigrated to the United States from her native Cuba as a child, has executed hundreds of portraits and figurative works whose subjects range from Washington dignitaries to Central American campesinos..

After earning a graduate degree from Princeton University, she moved to  Washington, D.C. in the early seventies. For the remainder of the decade she combined holding a  prestigious position in the Senate with  doing commissioned portraits  for clients prominent on Capitol Hill, including several Senators and important Senate officials.

Her move in 1980  to Guatemala City, Guatemala started a project related to the indigenous population that would absorb her for a long number of years. Fascinated by their appearance and garments, Ms. Castellanos embarked on a collection of 62 portraits of the modern-day Mayas, intended as a picture essay of the nation’s character at the level of the common man. This collection was honored by an exhibit at the residence of the U.S. Ambassador in Guatemala, and it was also shown at the Organization of American States in Washington, D.C. Invitations to exhibit in this historic building are extended only to leading artists from countries in the Americas.

Ms. Castellanos is now active in the geographic area from Washington, D.C. in the south to New York in the north, with her home in Philadelphia as a halfway point. At present, much of her time is  spent on figurative paintings, where her background is evident in her choice of subject matter, which is frequently Hispanic and almost always international.

She displays her figurative paintings at various institutions and juried exhibits throughout the year. In  New York City she has participated in shows sponsored by such prestigious organizations as the Salmagundi Club and the American Artists Professional League. The latter presented its 2008 Julia Castro Award to one of her paintings. In Philadelphia she is involved in the activities and exhibits of the renowned Philadelphia Sketch Club, the first organization of artists to be founded in the United States.

Active in portrait work as well, a painting she executed of the late Pope John Paul  was on loan for five years to the Pope John Paul II Cultural Center in Washington, D.C.  As of 2011, the Washington D.C. Historical Society sells reproductions of her portrait of Abraham Lincoln and others in its gift shop. Several of her works will be exhibited at the Douglass-Myers Museum in Baltimore as of September, 2011.

Her main project for 2011 is the creation of a collection of large oil paintings of  historical African-American heroes.

Her web sites, http://www.sylviacastellanos.com and http://www.mayanportraits.com , serve as an electronic art gallery displaying a large part of her work. While the subjects and the moods of the pictures cover a broad stylistic range, the emphasis is always on exploring the subject’s mood with sensitivity and on capturing the person’s spirit.