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Mount Cristo Rey : ウィキペディア英語版
Urbici Soler i Manonelles

Urbici Soler (Urbici Soler i Manonelles)〔(Urbici Soler i Manonelles, escultor: aquest gran desconegut ) accessdate=2010-01-14〕 (1890–1953) was an American sculptor and art educator. He is remembered chiefly for ''Christ the King'' (Cristo Rey), a monumental statue of Jesus on the cross atop Mount Cristo Rey in the El Paso suburb of Sunland Park, New Mexico which he completed in 1939 and which is a site of Roman Catholic pilgrimage.
==Life==

Urbici Soler was born on June 21, 1890 in Ferran, Lleida, in Catalonia, Spain. He was a student of Pere Carbonell i Huguet. Soler also studied at night at the Escola de la Llotja in Barcelona. In 1913, Soler became a student of Adolph von Hildebrand in Munich. He completed his first monumental sculpture, ''Princess María de la Paz'', in 1918, and also studied with Emile Antoine Bourdelle in Paris before returning to Spain, when he was called to South America. Soler's most important collection, ''The World'', is a study of the native peoples of Mexico, Central America, and South America. The Spanish Civil War prevented his return to Spain. In 1937 he was called to work on ''Christ the King''.
Soler was twice-married, including a brief marriage in 1940 to Bettie Binkley of Santa Fe, New Mexico. Neither marriage was successful. He then moved to New Orleans, California, New York, and South America in 1943, returning to El Paso in 1945 to attempt further work on ''Christ the King'', and joined the faculty of the Texas School of Mines, now called the University of Texas at El Paso. He became a US citizen in 1949. Soler built a house at the foot of Mount Cristo Rey in Anapra, New Mexico (now part of Sunland Park) and lived there until his death on January 15, 1953. The Texas Historical Commission placed a marker at his gravesite in Evergreen Cemetery in El Paso in 1984.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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