€375
Regular price €300Untitled, 1972
Mixed media on paper
Dimensions: 28x41cm
With frame
Shipping costs are available in our Shipping Policy. After payment confirmation, the artwork is prepared for dispatch. Verification, packaging and logistics validation may take up to 5 working days.
Free returns within 14 days. To return an artwork, simply go to the Returns Policy page and fill in the form, indicating the preferred collection date. After our confirmation, the courier will collect from the indicated address.
Buyer Protection removes any risk of fraud from our platform. P55.ART will resolve the situation if the purchased item does not match its description. We only send the purchase amount to the seller after the customer receives the artwork and is satisfied with their purchase.
€375
Regular price €300Untitled, 1972
Mixed media on paper
Dimensions: 28x41cm
With frame
Shipping costs are available in our Shipping Policy. After payment confirmation, the artwork is prepared for dispatch. Verification, packaging and logistics validation may take up to 5 working days.
Free returns within 14 days. To return an artwork, simply go to the Returns Policy page and fill in the form, indicating the preferred collection date. After our confirmation, the courier will collect from the indicated address.
Buyer Protection removes any risk of fraud from our platform. P55.ART will resolve the situation if the purchased item does not match its description. We only send the purchase amount to the seller after the customer receives the artwork and is satisfied with their purchase.
Oskar Pinto Lobo Seguir artista +
Fernando Oscar Pinto Lobo (Oskar), born in 1913, descended from a family from Goa and with an English grandfather, graduated in Architecture from the Lisbon School of Fine Arts, where he also studied painting. Father of the fashion designer. Ana Salazar, His house on Rua da Praia da Vitória, next to the Monumental, was a meeting point for friends and artists such as João Villaret, António Ferro, Fernanda de Castro and Almada Negreiros, with whom her father was a great friend. Ana constantly recognizes herself in him, a man of impeccable appearance and always very well dressed, nicknamed the "perfect prince" at the Camões High School.
Oscar Pinto Lobo He played an important role in graphic design and tourism promotion in Portugal, especially during the 1950s and 60s. He was the graphic director of the National Information Secretariat (SNI) and a technical consultant for the Costa do Sol Tourism Board, developing his activity as a designer and illustrator in official publications and tourism yearbooks, often in collaboration with Manoel Lapa. He created pictorial and warm solar discs that illustrated the 250 sunny days a year, helping to build the image of mass tourism in Portugal.
In the 1940s, he was also an interior decorator, notably at the Olaio store, which specialized in American-style oak furniture. Between 1932 and 1943, he contributed to humorous newspapers and children's magazines, including "Ilustração" and "ABC-Zinho," where he created characters such as Tom Migas and the horse Cara Linda, as well as adaptations of Laurel and Hardy. Oskar was among the designers and artists who contributed to a modern image of the country and TAP (the Portuguese airline).
He was also a founding member of the Literary and Artistic Society PARLATÓRIO, created on October 18, 1989, with the aim of promoting culture and art, with the first meeting taking place at the Parlatório Restaurant. Fernando Óscar Pinto Lobo He died in Lisbon in 1995.