Recognized throughout the world and admired by people like Picasso and Gabriela Mistral, Marina Núñez del Prado is considered to be one of the greatest of Latin American sculptors.
Her work is distinguished by stylized curves (in onyx, black granite, alabaster, etc.) that symbolize woman (the female silhouette, the image of the woman, the indigenous woman, etc.), a theme that occupies a central place in her work.
Biography
1910: Born in La Paz, Bolivia
1927: Enters the School of Fine Arts in La Paz, Bolivia
1930: Graduates from the School of Fine Arts
1930: Gold Medal, Best Exhibit of the Year, La Paz
1936: Gold Medal, Buenos Aires, Argentina
1931-1938: Specializes in artistic anatomy
1938: Gold Medal, Berlin
1946: First Price in Sculpture, Annual Salon of the National Association of Women Artists, New York
1940: Wins a scholarship to the United States
1948: Returns to Bolivia
1951: First Prize in Sculpture, Biennial Latin American Art Exhibition, Madrid
1954: Cóndor de Los Andes Award, La Paz
1960: Grand Prize in Sculpture, La Paz
1961: Order of San Carlos Medal, Colombia
1967:Recognition from the Bolivian Ministry of Culture
1969: Mexican Biennial Inter-American Art Exposition, Mexico City
1972: Moves to Lima, Peru
1972: Honorary Degree from UMSA (Universidad Mayor de San Andrés), La Paz
1975: Pedro Domingo Murillo Medal, La Paz
1977: Biennial Tokyo Exposition Medal, Tokyo
1983: Pedro Domingo Murillo Medal, La Paz
1984: Official inauguration of the Núñez Del Prado Museum, La Paz
1985: Manuel Vicente Ballivián Gold Medal, La Paz
1986: El Sol del Perú Grand Prize and Civic Medal from the City of Lima
1988: Medal of Merit granted by the Junta del Acuerdo de Cartagena, Lima
1990: Extraordinary Culture Prize, La Paz
1992: Voces de Ultramar Prize (Voices from Across the Sea), Las Palmas, Grand Canary and Madrid
1996: Dies in Lima, Peru