About
Jorge A. Yances was born in Cartagena de Indias, Colombia, and he has been living in the United States since the age of thirteen when his family moved from his native country. His interest in art has been a constant in his life when at seven years old he started experiencing with different techniques in painting. While in school his teachers saw his potential and encouraged him to pursue his dream of becoming an artist. Upon finishing high school, Yances began working with Lyson Gallery in Nashville, Tennessee as an assistant to Streingfield and Paul Lancaster, a well-known sculptor and a fine artist, respectively. Under the tutelage, Yances learned techniques for carving in the wood and etching in Plexiglas. Since then, Yances continued studying on his own developing a unique style and passion for colors, forms and shadows.
In 1974 he won the Medal of Bronze, a prestigious award given by the Grumbacher Company. At that time, his career started to escalate as he was named artist in residence at the Cruciana & Rosler Gallery in Orlando, Florida where he participated in a number of noteworthy projects.
Yances’ work is a fusion of reality and fantasy. It transports the viewer beyond the tangible world into the hidden essence of life that walks hand in hand with reality. Each piece of Yances’ art is a window into an enchanted universe. As the viewer travels along a visual pathway that bridges one reality to another, they become convinced that there is only a thin line between the factual and visionary. Yances artwork allows anyone to transcend those boundaries.
Jorge Yances has exhibited his work in galleries throughout the United States and Colombia. In his recent work, “Cartagena Memories” he recreates the beauty of his native land with a journey through the past. In this collection, the artist goes beyond the narrow streets of this colonial city, weaving the native people and their basic elements of life with the unique style that characterizes his work. This vision of man and circumstances intertwined in each piece of his art puts him among one of the clear exponents of the movement known as “Magic Realism”.