Manuel Chili "Caspicara"


Manuel Chili – known as Caspicara – was an Ecuadorian sculptor who exemplified the Quito School movement of the 18th century Andes. His major religious works, characterized by polychromed wood sculptures in an elegant Spanish Baroque style, are preserved in the Quito Cathedral and the Church of [San Francisco de Quito], Ecuador, and in Popayán, Colombia. His work was rediscovered in 1791 and championed by Eugenio Espejo, then the country's leading intellectual.

Biography

Caspicara was born into an Indigenous family in Quito in about 1723. Among his predecessors was Lucas Barrionuevo and among his mentors was Bernardo de Legarda, whom he is sometimes seen as succeeding. As a sculptor, he worked in both wood and marble, always within the prevailing Baroque style and with a religious motif. He grouped figures in a manner that evokes painting as much as sculpture. His technique of representation, especially of human anatomy, was impeccable.

Works

Numerous works are attributed to Caspicara, among the most notable are listed here. Dating of individual works is very difficult.
  • Las Virtudes Teologales
  • La Sábana Santa
  • Saint Francis
  • The Twelve Apostles
  • San Pedro de Alcántara
  • Assumption of the Virgin
  • El Cristo del Calvario de El Belén
  • Del Cristo Yacente
  • Virgen de la Luz
  • El Señor Atado a la Columna con San Pedro a los Pies
  • Virgin de los Dolores
  • La Impresión de las Llagas de San Francisco
  • Virgen del Carmen
  • San José
  • La Coronación de la Virgen María
  • The group Del Tránsito de la Virgen ;
  • San José
  • Several Franciscan saints and several figures representing Christ on the Cross and the ''Christ Child''