| César Manrique |
| Island Information |
All homes on Lanzarote are one or two storey buildings, with hotels being allowed a couple more floors. The way the island matured is in part down to César Manrique, who formulated the plan that all buildings should be white, with green windows (or varnished wood), and blue windows if you are facing the sea.César Manrique Cabrera came from a typical middle class family, but had a less than typical life.
Born in 1919, it wasn't until 1934 that Manrique truly fell in love with Lanzarote, when his father bought land in Caleta de Famara and built a house next to the ocean. The house left a considerable and visible impression on César Manrique that lasted his lifetime.
Following on from the Spanish Civil War, Manrique tried his hand at studying Technical Architecture at La Laguna University. He abandoned it after two years. He graduated from Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando, following a scholarship, as Art Professor and painter. 1964 saw Manrique travel to New York on the advice of his cousin. He stayed as guest of Waldo Diaz-Blart, a Cuban Painter. He obtained through his cousin's network of friends a generous grant which allowed him to rent his own studio to produce and exhibit quite a few paintings. Whilst in New York he wrote to his friend, Pepe Dámaso "... more than ever I feel true nostalgia for the real meaning of things. For the pureness of the people. For the bareness of my landscape, and for my friends. ... My last conclusion is that MAN in N.Y. is like a rat. Man was not created for this artificiality. There is an imperative need to go back to the soil. Feel it, smell it. That's what I feel." Manrique was starting to miss Lanzarote.
The current-day Lanzarote owes a lot to César Manrique, who used his skills as painter, sculptor, architect, ecologuest, monument preserver, construction advisor, planner of urban developments and landscape gardener, to shape the way Lanzarote has emerged today. César Manrique died in a tragic car accident in 1992, at the age of 73. An irony, as he loathed the massive amount of vehicles on Lanzarote. The César Manrique foundation continues his work, helping to ensure that Lanzarote remains an island which respects natural beauty. Source: La Fundación César Manrique . |