1912 - 1999. Known for: Impressionist crowdscene, landscape, shack dwellers and interior painting.
Salvador Bronchú was trained in the workshop of his father, the painter and set designer Francisco Rodríguez Cabanes and later received lessons from the maestro Juan Belda, a painter from Godella who...
Read full biography Salvador Bronchú was trained in the workshop of his father, the painter and set designer Francisco Rodríguez Cabanes and later received lessons from the maestro Juan Belda, a painter from Godella who was retired in Rome. An admirer of Ignacio Pinazo and José Navarro, he was one of the most...
Read full biography Salvador Bronchú was trained in the workshop of his father, the painter and set designer Francisco Rodríguez Cabanes and later received lessons from the maestro Juan Belda, a painter from Godella who was retired in Rome. An admirer of Ignacio Pinazo and José Navarro, he was one of the most important teachers of the so-called “Godella School”. In the beginning he was known as the painter of grays, but he abandoned this way of painting and changed to a more colorful and dense painting, skillfully...
Read full biography Salvador Bronchú was trained in the workshop of his father, the painter and set designer Francisco Rodríguez Cabanes and later received lessons from the maestro Juan Belda, a painter from Godella who was retired in Rome. An admirer of Ignacio Pinazo and José Navarro, he was one of the most important teachers of the so-called “Godella School”. In the beginning he was known as the painter of grays, but he abandoned this way of painting and changed to a more colorful and dense painting, skillfully worked with the spatula, standing out in the composition of his paintings. In his long artistic career, he received numerous awards, including a Second National Medal of Fine Arts in 1957. His work is represented in numerous museums and art...
Read full biography Salvador Bronchú was trained in the workshop of his father, the painter and set designer Francisco Rodríguez Cabanes and later received lessons from the maestro Juan Belda, a painter from Godella who was retired in Rome. An admirer of Ignacio Pinazo and José Navarro, he was one of the most important teachers of the so-called “Godella School”. In the beginning he was known as the painter of grays, but he abandoned this way of painting and changed to a more colorful and dense painting, skillfully worked with the spatula, standing out in the composition of his paintings. In his long artistic career, he received numerous awards, including a Second National Medal of Fine Arts in 1957. His work is represented in numerous museums and art galleries. In 1978 he was awarded the Gold Medal of the Villa de Godella, where he died on November 27, 1999.