Manuel Izquierdo installation at Laura Russo Gallery March 2015

Installation View | March 2015

Manuel Izquierdo  Sculpture from the Estate  March 2015

Installation View | March 2015

Manuel Izquierdo installation at Laura Russo Gallery March 2015

Installation View | March 2015

Manuel Izquierdo installation at Laura Russo Gallery March 2015

Installation View | March 2015

Manuel Izquierdo installation at Laura Russo Gallery March 2015

Installation View | March 2015

Press Release

Drawing on recognizable human and natural forms, Manuel Izquierdo brought a distinctly modern and abstract vision to his artmaking. His visual language flowed gracefully from two to three dimensional forms. Iconic females, flower and plant forms, warrior men are among the themes that can be found in this selection of mid-20th century sculpture.  As a sculptor, Izquierdo worked with a variety of materials including welded and cast metal, ceramics, and carved wood, emphasizing the organic and sensual qualities of his subjects and his materials.  In addition to his work as a sculptor, Izquierdo was well known for his woodcuts. 

Originally from Spain, but a long-time Portland icon, Manuel Izquierdo died in July of 2009. He was born in Madrid in the 1920s, and came to the United States as a teenager, settling in Portland, Oregon. While in high school in Portland, he was encouraged to pursue woodcuts by well-known calligrapher Lloyd Reynolds. In 1951, he graduated from the Museum Art School (now Pacific Northwest College of Art), and soon after became a professor there. He was honored with a ten year retrospective at the Portland Art Museum in 1967. His public sculptures can be seen in a variety of Portland public places, such as the Dreamer in Pettygrove Square. His work is in collections including the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Philadelphia Museum in Pennsylvania; in Oregon at the Hallie Ford Museum of Art, the Jordan D. Schnitzer Museum of Art at the University of Oregon in Eugene, and the Portland Art Museum, and in Washington at the Seattle and Tacoma Art Museums, the Henry Gallery at the University of Washington, and the Museum of Northwest Art in La Conner.