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Eduardo Carrillo

American
(1937–1997)

Master of the Keyboard
1965-1966

Oil on multiple joined paneles, cut outs with inserts
86.625 x 63 x 2 in.
Gift of Juliette Carrillo
2021.1

Eduardo Carrillo attended Catholic schools in Los Angeles and after high school went to Los Angeles City College. In 1956, he transferred to University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), where he studied with painters Stanton Macdonald-Wright and William Brice. In 1960, he traveled to Europe and studied for a year at the Circulo de Bellas Artes in Madrid, Spain, paying particular attention to the work in the Museo del Prado by Hieronymus Bosch, Diego Velasquez, and El Greco. After returning to Los Angeles in 1961, Carrillo resumed his studies earning both his Bachelor of Fine Arts in 1962 and Master of Fine Arts at UCLA in 1964. In 1966, he moved to his ancestral home in La Paz, Baja California Sur, Mexico and founded a center for the revival and study of regional crafts.

Master of the Keyboard, 1965–66 is from the period when Carrillo was teaching art through Extension at University of California, San Diego, while in the process of moving to Mexico. The surrealist landscape in Master of the Keyboard looks like it could be of La Paz, and the doorway embedded in the rock formation at the top center opens to a neighborhood that could be a remembered view into from his grandfather’s house there. Moving to Baja meant a big change culturally for Carrillo, and the circular saws in Master of the Keyboard could be a metaphor for how he was feeling about the split being created between the world he came from in Los Angeles and the world he was moving to in Baja.


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  • Devil - Sources:
    - Britannica Micro.
    - Orlov, Andrei A. Dark mirrors : Azazel and Satanael in early Jewish demonology, c2011:
  • face
  • green
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  • red
  • water - A liquid made up of molecules of hydrogen and oxygen (HO2). When pure, it is colorless, tasteless, and odorless. It exists in gaseous, liquid, and solid forms; it is liquid at room temperature. It is the liquid of which seas, lakes, and rivers are composed, and which falls as rain. Water is one of the most plentiful and essential of compounds. It is vital to life, participating in virtually every process that occurs in plants and animals. One of its most important properties is its ability to dissolve many other substances. The versatility of water as a solvent is essential to living organisms. The term "water" is typically used to refer to the liquid form of this compound; for the solid or gaseous forms, use "ice" or "water vapor."
  • windows
  • wood

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