Rodolfo Ayoroa


Rodolfo "Rudy" Ayoroa was a Bolivian painter and a sculptor.

Background

Ayoroa was born in La Paz, Bolivia on September 16, 1927. His parents were Esther Soria-Galvarro of LaPaz, Bolivia, and the late Gen. Robert Ayoroa. He was educated at the University of Buenos Aires in Buenos Aires, Argentina. In 1964, he moved to Washington, DC and was a visiting professor at American University. In the mid 1980s he moved to Danville, Kentucky with his wife, Jane, who was born there.

Art

Ayoroa was at the forefront of the kinetic art movement in the mid-1950s. His paintings are filled with geometric elements and contrasts of warm and blue colors. His sculptures are made with Plexiglass bent into geometric shapes to look like perpetual motion. Ayoroa's art hangs in the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden; the Library of Congress; National Museum of American Art; Smithsonian Institution; Museum of Modern Art of Latin America at the Organization of American States, Museum of Modern Art in Bogota, Colombia and National Museum of Fine Arts in La Paz, Bolivia. During his time in Danville, he developed an interest in painting Civil War battle scenes and did many pictures of the Battle of Perryville. He was commissioned by Lebanon to sculpt Confederate Major General John Hunt Morgan in 1999. However, the statue of the Confederate general, who raided and destroyed parts of the town, was never publicly displayed there. In 2015 the township put the statue out to bid. In 1999 Ayoroa created the life-size sculpture of U.S. Army Major General George Henry Thomas, which was unveiled in Civil War Park, Lebanon, Kentucky, where it stands today.

Solo exhibitions

Art critic Marta Traba, who founded the Museum of Modern Art in Bogot said that Ayoroa was "one of the truly great artists of his generation coming from Latin America."

Death

He died in Danville, Kentucky in on October 31, 2003. He is survived by Roberto, Leonardo and Rodolfo Ayoroa Jr., all of Potomac, Md., and Joshua Ayoroa of Danville; two daughters, Sandra Alvarado of Silver Springs, Md., and Gabriela Ayoroa of Germantown, Md.; two brothers, Jose Ayoroa of Potomac and Gaston Ayoroa of Germantown; a sister, Nazira Simon of Potomac; and four grandchildren.