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Ceesepe

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Carlos Sánchez Pérez
Ceesepe painted by Javier de Juan in December 1984
Born(1958-05-31)May 31, 1958
Madrid, Spain
Died(2018-09-07)September 7, 2018
Madrid, Spain
Other namesCeesepe
Occupation(s)Painter and cartoonist
HonoursGold Medal of Merit in the Fine Arts
Websitewww.ceesepe.net

Carlos Sánchez Pérez, known professionally as Ceesepe,[note 1] (Madrid, 31 May, 1958 – 7 September 2018)[1] was a Spanish painter and illustrator.[2] A prolific artist, especially in drawings and collages, his style is often classified as pop art.[3] He is considered a major figure[4] in La Movida Madrileña.[5] His pseudonym is based on the Spanish pronunciation of his initials: C: ce, S: ese, P: pe = "Ceesepe".[6]

In 2011, he received Spain's Gold Medal of Merit in the Fine Arts.[7]

Biography

File:Portada del Nº1 de Madriz. Enero de 1984. Obra de Ceesepe.png
Title page of Madriz magazine designed by Ceesepe

At sixteen years old, halfway through the 1970's, Ceesepe was introduced to the world of underground comix, coming into contact with Barcelonian artists and illustrators such as Max, Nazario Luque [es], and Javier Mariscal. He worked with them in Barcelona up until 1979.[8] He was one of the most popular painters in the artistic boom of La Movida Madrileña. His work at that stage consisted of screen prints, film posters, album covers, and illustrations.[9]

He published his first cartoon series, Slober, in the magazines Star, Bésame Mucho, El Víbora, Madriz, and La Luna de Madrid.[10] He created the poster for Pedro Almodóvar's first feature-length film, Pepi, Luci, Bom (1980), and would go on to create eight films himself.[11]

Ceesepe formed a distinctive style from the sum of multiple influences, principally British pop art such as Peter Blake and Peter Phillips, as well as previous artists such as Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Amedeo Modigliani, and Marc Chagall.[12] His first individual exhibition took place in 1979, in the gallery Buades de Madrid. In 1982, Menéndez Pelayo International University exhibited a sample of his work. Two years later, he became one of the best-selling artists of Arco [es] '84.[13] However, one of his cartoon strips, loaded with political allusions to Blas Piñar, Franco, Marx, and Mao, was the basis of an attack by People's Alliance on the magazine where it had been published, Madriz, as well as on the City Council of Madrid, which had subsidized it.[14]

After abandoning comics halfway through the 1980's, he devoted himself mostly to painting, holding exhibitions in places such as Amsterdam, Paris, Angoulême, Geneva, Bali, New York City, and Madrid (Centro Cultural de la Villa, 1985; Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando, 1991). In 1984, he participated in a collective exhibition in Barcelona's Fundació Joan Miró.

He also created more film posters, such as the one for Almódovar's Law of Desire (1987), and in his final period designed title pages for the Spanish edition of Rolling Stone. The New Yorker hired him on November 22, 1993 for one of their covers.[15]

His work has been collected in books such as Dibujos (1982), Barcelona By Night (1982), París-Madrid (1985), El difícil arte de mentir (1986), Libro blanco (1990), and Ars morundi (1990).[16]

He passed away in Madrid on September 7, 2018 at the age of sixty.

Notes

  1. ^ Pronounced in Castillan Spanish as "theh-seh-peh"

References

  1. ^ Glez, Montero. "¡Viva Ceesepe!". eldiario.es (in Spanish).
  2. ^ Ceesepe (1958-2018) - RTVE.es (in Spanish), 2018-09-14, archived from the original on 2019-05-07
  3. ^ "Ceesepe". www.art-madrid.com.
  4. ^ Ianko López (2018-09-07). "Ceesepe: ¿La movida? No quiero tener nada que ver ni con Alaska, ni con Mario, ni con McNamara". www.revistavanityfair.es (in Spanish).
  5. ^ Vila, Jordi Costa (2018-05-24). Cómo acabar con la contracultura: Historia subterránea de España (1970-2016) (in Spanish). Penguin Random House Grupo Editorial España. ISBN 9788430618446.
  6. ^ Javier de Juan (2018-09-07). "Ceesepe, patrimonio de todos". abc (in Spanish).
  7. ^ Fernando Castro Flórez (2018-09-07). "Muere Ceesepe: el último viaje de un náufrago de la movida madrileña". abc (in Spanish).
  8. ^ González Férriz, Ramón (2012). La revolución divertida : cincuenta años de política pop (Primera edición ed.). Barcelona. ISBN 978-84-9992-239-3. OCLC 933387217.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  9. ^ Pose, Germán (14 May 2017). La mala fama. Almuzara. ISBN 9788416750306.
  10. ^ Nichols, William J. (2013). Toward a Cultural Archive of la Movida : Back to the Future. Fairleigh Dickinson. ISBN 978-1-306-17130-4. OCLC 864746429.
  11. ^ Fernández-Santos, Elsa (2018-07-27). "La contracultura y nosotros, que la quisimos tanto". El País (in Spanish). ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 2022-06-16.
  12. ^ "Adiós a Ceesepe, "el Toulouse Lautrec" de la Movida que acabó repudiándola". El Español (in Spanish). 2018-09-08. Retrieved 2022-06-06.
  13. ^ Ceesepe entrevista en La Edad de Oro del Pop Español, retrieved 2022-06-06
  14. ^ "Ceesepe". lambiek.net. Retrieved 2022-06-14.
  15. ^ "Las mejores obras de Ceesepe, el artista que pintó la movida". El Español (in Spanish). 2018-09-07. Retrieved 2022-06-16.
  16. ^ "Muere Carlos Sánchez, Ceesepe". La Vanguardia (in Spanish). 2018-09-07. Retrieved 2022-06-16.