Juan Félix Sánchez
Juan Félix Sánchez (16 May 1900 – 18 April 1997) was Andean folk artist born in San Rafael de Mucuchíes, Mérida, Venezuela.[1] Sánchez' talents included weaving and sculpture, and he was also the architect and builder of the Chapel of San Rafael de Mucuchíes dedicated to the Our Lady of Coromoto at El Tisure, as well as several other small chapels.[2]
While President of the Communal Meeting of San Rafael in 1929 - 1933, he organised the installation of a turbine to provide electricity to the town.
In the 1980s, he was the subject of a short film designed to "acknowledge and uncover the land, the beauty and the people of Venezuela" which received several awards.[2][3]
Pictures
- Chapel of San Rafael de Mucuchíes
- Capilla del Tisure, construída por Juan Félix y Epifania Gil, vista desde el frente
- Capilla del Tisure, vista desde atrás.
- Wood Sculpture, of Christ, by Juan Félix.
gollark: Sensors and propulsion are pretty useful, as we're meant to be surveying stuff and whatnot. Mining and power are important for infrastructure, I guess. Computing isn't too much of a problem as the magic computer box™ is only 10 minerals.
gollark: We don't really need weapons much, so that just leaves... everything else.
gollark: Anyway, can we get the research forks to focus on specific areas?
gollark: It's fine, we're probably overthinking this a lot...
gollark: I expect quantum stuff would probably just be special-purpose hardware running specific tasks while coordinated by classical computers.
References
- "Juan Félix Sánchez Biografía". Archived from the original on 2007-01-29. Retrieved 2007-09-24.
- Young, M Jane (1985). "Juan Félix Sánchez, Review". The Journal of American Folklore. 98 (388): 245–247. JSTOR 540460.
- "CALOGERO SALVO - Juan Félix Sánchez". Archived from the original on 2011-07-08. Retrieved 2007-09-24.
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