Claudio Bravo

Chilean painter Claudio Bravo (1936–2011) was renowned for his hyperrealistic style and meticulous attention to detail. Born in Valparaíso, Chile, Bravo displayed an exceptional talent for drawing and painting from a young age. His early works were heavily influenced by classical art, and he was largely self-taught, honing his skills through the study of Renaissance masters.

Bravo’s career took a significant turn in 1961 when he moved to Madrid, Spain. There, he gained recognition for his exquisite portraits, capturing the likenesses of prominent figures in European society. His mastery of realism and his ability to imbue his subjects with a sense of presence and personality quickly established him as a sought-after portraitist. During this period, Bravo’s works began to attract the attention of art collectors and critics alike.

One of Bravo's most celebrated techniques was his ability to depict draped fabrics and paper with astonishing realism. His paintings often featured meticulously rendered textiles, paper, and everyday objects, elevating mundane subjects to the realm of fine art. ‘I am very much interested in the unusual, the unexpected, the strange,’ Bravo once observed. ‘I like to make pictures based on the things that we generally see around us in daily life, but then take them in unexpected directions.’ This distinctive approach is evident in many of his renowned works, where the texture, light, and shadow are portrayed with such precision that they appear almost photographic.

In the mid-1960s, and later reprised in the 2000s, Bravo began a series exploring the transfiguration of the commonplace in his remarkable studies of wrapped packages and paper. Bravo lived in New York in the early 1960s, and when his sisters visited they brought back shopping bags of myriad shapes and sizes filled with their purchases. Among his notable works is Red Paper, sold at Christie’s in New York for US$1,385,000 in 2015, a stunning example of his skill in the study of natural light and shadow, softly amplifying the artifices of painterly illusion.

A great admirer of Antoni Tàpies and Mark Rothko, Bravobrokered an intermediate position, drawing on the vocabulary of colour-field abstraction to give visual clarity to the startlingly veristic paintings of packaging and papers tied in string that he created.


Claudio Bravo (1936-2011)

Beige and Green Package

CLAUDIO BRAVO (1936-2011)

Bacchus , 1997

Claudio Bravo (Chilean b. 1936)

White, Blue and Yellow Papers

Claudio Bravo (Chilean b. 1936)

A Couple (Una Pareja)

Claudio Bravo (Chilean b. 1936)

Paquete verde (Green Package)

Claudio Bravo (1936-2011)

Purple and Beige Paper

Claudio Bravo (1936-2011)

Purple and Grey-Blue Package

Claudio Bravo (1936-2011)

Celestial Blue Paper

Claudio Bravo (1936-2011)

Bolsas de papel

Claudio Bravo (Chilean b. 1936)

White and Yellow Package

CLAUDIO BRAVO (1936-2011)

Untitled (Beige and Purple Paper)

Claudio Bravo (Chilean 1936-2011)

Noureddine also known as Portrait of a Young Man

Claudio Bravo (1936-2011)

Papel aluminio plata sobre tela amarilla

Claudio Bravo (Chilean 1936-2011)

Still Life with Bread and Potatoes

Claudio Bravo (1936-2011)

Pumpkin and Gourds

Claudio Bravo (1936-2011)

Caja de nácar

Claudio Bravo (1936-2011)

Homenaje a Baugin

Claudio Bravo (1936-2011)

Untitled (Papel aluminio)

Claudio Bravo (1936-2011)

Wrinkled Paper

Claudio Bravo (Chilean 1936-2011)

Still Life with Stones

Claudio Bravo (Chilean 1936-2011)

Untitled (Cypress Trees)

Claudio Bravo (Chilean b. 1936)

From the Studio also known as Paisaje desde la ventana

CLAUDIO BRAVO (1936-2011)

Japanese objects