/ Stars that died in 2023

Thursday, July 24, 2014

Nicolás Moreno, Mexican landscape painter died he was 88

Nicolás Moreno  was a Mexican landscape painter, considered to be one of the best of this genre of the 20th century, as well as heir to the Mexican tradition of José María Velasco and Dr. Atl died he was 88. Although he was born in Mexico City in 1923, he had early contact with nature, traveling with his grandfather and living briefly in Celaya, Guanajuato. He studied art at the country’s Escuela Nacional de Artes Plásticas but was temporarily discouraged when he was told that landscape painting was a “minor genre.” His work almost completely focuses on the varied landscapes of Mexico, mostly to document it, including environmental degradation. His landscape work includes that which appeared in over 100 individual exhibitions in Mexico and abroad as well as a number of important murals including those at the Museo Nacional de Antropología.

(28 December 1923 in Mexico City – 4 February 2012)

Life


Part of an exhibit of Moreno´s life's work at the Salon de la Plástica Mexicana
Nicolás Moreno was born in the Santa Julia neighborhood of Mexico City on December 28, 1923.[1][2] Despite living in large capital city, he had contact with nature at a very early age traveling with his paternal grandfather who worked as a mule driver. This allowed him to see much of the countryside that surrounded Mexico City at the time.[3][4] He has further experience with the countryside when his family moved to Celaya, Guanajuato when he was ten. However, he spent only a year there before returning to Mexico City because of political instability.[3]
His family was poor so he had to work but he took night classes in drawing at La Esmeralda.[1][3] His talent won him a cash award which allowed him to enter the Escuela Nacional de Artes Plásticas (ENAP) studying here from 1941 to 1945.[5] He spent the next five years studying and traveling to various parts of Mexico to paint.[3] He first professor in ENAP was Benjamin Cora, who like many at the time, considered landscape painting a minor genre which temporarily discouraged the painter.[2] One of his later professors, Luis Sahuagún Cortés taught him how to paint oils with a spatula. He also had contact with other contemporary artists such as José Chávez Morado and Raúl Anguiano.[2]
He died February 4, 2012.[1]

Career

He was a painter, sketch artist, engraver and muralist and considered to be one of the best landscape artists of the 20th century.[1]
His works have included depictions of the immense ravines of the Sierra Tarahumara, the Mezquital Valley, and the remains of Lake Xochimilco. He had over one hundred individual exhibitions of his work,[6] with individual and collective expositions of his work in the United States, Peru, Spain, France, Germany, England, Russia, China and Japan.[1] Many of these exhibitions were supported by the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes and resulted in his pieces as part of a number of important art collections in Europe.[7] He was one of the founding members of the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana, along with Raúl Aguiano, Dr. Atl, Angelina Beloff, Federico Cantú, Dolores Cueto and Germán Cueto.[7]
His mural work includes “Los indigenas en la historia” at the Ezequiel A. Chávez School, “Homenaje al Maestro Rural” at the Centro Cultural del México Contemporáneo,[4] and a pair of murals called “El valle de México” was done by Moreno and his son Alejandro Moreno in 1995 for UNAM’s Museo Universitario Contemporaneo del Arte .[8][9] He created murals of the scenery of Juchitepec and the Mezquital Valley between 1963 and 1964. The latter mural is noted for its depiction of the alternating rainy and dry seasons of the area.[4] Some of his most important work is the murals done at the Museo Nacional de Antropología, with include a depiction of the area around Teotihuacan during the pre-Hispanic era, the area around Suchitepec and the Mezquital Valley.[1] The Teotihuacan mural was originally proposed to Dr. Atl, who turned it down, but recommended Moreno for the assignment.[4]
His career as an art teacher and professor began in 1946, at the Escuela Rural Mexe in Hidalgo.[2][7] He later went on to teach at a variety of middle schools and the Escuela Normal de las Señoritas.[2][5] He began teaching landscape painting at the Escuela Nacional de Artes Plásticas in 1951, organizing traveling exhibition later called “Exposiciones viajeras” for the institution the following year.[1][7][9] He began teaching at the La Esmeralda school in 1963, and gave classes in various locations of the country up until the 2000s.[5][7][10] He taught artists such as illustrator Carlos Pellicer López.[6]
His first major award was third place at the Primer Concurso de Profesores de la ENAP Jerónimo Antonio Gil in 1969.[2] Since then, he received various awards from INBA for his engraving, oil and drypoint work.[9] His work was honored by the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana in 1957, 1966 and 2001, culminating in the Gran Premio Annual de Adquisición. In 2010, an exhibition tracing his career was held by the same institution.[7] A book of his work called “Los árboles en la plastic de Nicolás Moreno” was published in 2008.[4] He was honored for his life’s work at the Museo Nacional de Arte.[1] In 2012, the Salón de la Plástica Mexicana held a posthumous homage exhibition called “La naturaleza del paisaje” with 76 works representing the artist’s career. The 2012 exhibit included works such as “El Pedregal y los pirules,” “Cerro de órganos” and “Tres amates” as they show his patience with detail work.[7]
Later in his life, charitable works included a donation of painting for the opening of the Museo Universitario de Ciencias y Artes in 1991.[2] He also created a scholarship for the Escuela de Artes Plásticas “Ruben Herrera” in Coahuila .[9][11]

Artistry

He created works in etching, aquatint and drypoint as well as oils,[6] dedicating most of his artwork to capturing the varying landscapes of the Mexican country side.[1] In 2010, the director of INBA, Teresa Vicencio, awarded Moreno a diploma officially recognizing him as the “heir” of other noted Mexican landscape artists José María Velasco and Dr. Atl as well as the “ambassador of our lands.”[6][12] His work, especially those depicting forests, has elements similar to German Romanticist David Friedrich.[7] He remained faithful to landscape painting his entire life.[2]
Moreno began his career as a landscape artist at a time when the land and the people’s relation to it were promoted as elements of Mexico’s identity. It was not enough to simply paint what is there, but rather relate it to Mexico long history, especially its pre Hispanic history. However, Moreno rejected this for the most part especially in his later career preferring more realistic depictions as a witness to natural phenomena, feeling that trying to do more than that was the fall into clichés. However, this made Moreno an innovator as he broke with former conventions in landscape painting such as balance, proportion and harmony, preferring instead to paint his first impression of a site. He rejected the folklorization of landscape painting such as those done by Costumbrismo in the 19th century and with the manipulation of color in unnatural ways.[13]
Although he has painted landscapes of areas in Europe and South America, the focus of his work has been Mexico.[14] The painter stated that he paints the scenery as he finds it, even areas which have been devastated ecologically.[14] He stated in 2010, “I don’t only look from afar, but also details such as destruction, poverty, misery and beauty. I don’t make pretty pictures, I make painting that are interesting or transcendent, at least to me.”[1][6]
While he did not consider himself to be an ecological activist, he did express concern about the deterioration of Mexico’s natural landscapes and his art testifies to it.[6] He stated once that “With my work I want to make young people understand that their Earth and its expressions are important because it is a way for them to sense themselves, to be proud of who they are and give proper testimony.”[9] Some of his first landscapes were of the Pedregal in San Ángel, with its hardened lava flows. However, only remnants of this ecosystem remain because of urban sprawl. The Lacandon Jungle has been reduced to a quarter of what it once was since his first visit in 1944.[14]
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Nigel Doughty, British businessman, owner (since 1999) and chairman (2001–2011) of Nottingham Forest F.C. died she was 110

 Florence Beatrice Green [1] was an English woman who was the last surviving veteran of the First World War from any country. She was a member of the Women's Royal Air Force.

(19 February 1901 – 4 February 2012)

Biography

Florence Green was born at Edmonton, London to Frederick and Sarah (nėe Neal) Patterson. She joined the Women's Royal Air Force in September 1918 at the age of 17,[2][3] where she served as an officers' mess steward.[4] She worked in the officers' mess at RAF Marham and was also based at Narborough airfield.[4][5]
She moved to King's Lynn in 1920, after her marriage to Walter Green. Her husband, a railway worker, died in 1975, aged 82, after 55 years of marriage.[6] She lived in King's Lynn with her 90-year-old daughter, May (born 1921), until November 2011 when she moved into a care home. In January 2010, she was publicly identified as, at that time, the oldest living female veteran of the First World War.[4]
On 19 February 2011 she celebrated her 110th birthday, becoming a supercentenarian—one of just 10 living in the United Kingdom, all women. With the death of Claude Choules on 5 May 2011, Green became the last known living veteran of the First World War.[7] On 20 July 2011, the Gerontology Research Group verified her age, and listed her as an official supercentenarian.[8]
It was reported that when asked what it felt like being 110, she replied, "Not much different to being 109". In 2011, an image of Florence Beatrice Green became part of a subject for the "WWI Centenary Mural" created by Christian Cardell Corbet and Benjamin Trickett Mercer. At the time of her death, Green had a son and two daughters, as well as four grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.[5][9] Before her death on 4 February 2012, aged 110 years and 350 days, she was West Norfolk's oldest resident, the second-oldest person in Norfolk, and the sixth-oldest in the United Kingdom.[4]
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Nigel Doughty, British businessman, owner (since 1999) and chairman (2001–2011) of Nottingham Forest F.C. died he was 54

Nigel Edward Doughty  was co-chairman and co-founder of Doughty Hanson & Co, a European private equity firm based in London and with offices throughout Europe.

(10 June 1957 – 4 February 2012)

Doughty was born in Newark, Nottinghamshire. Doughty Hanson & Co traces its history back to 1985 when Doughty and Richard Hanson began working together on European investments. Doughty completed his Cranfield BA in 1984 and became a Distinguished Alumnus of the Cranfield School of Management in 2004.[2] He made a personal donation in 2006 to establish the Doughty Centre for Corporate Responsibility at Cranfield School of Management.[3] He was also President of The Cranfield Trust.[4] Doughty was a Trustee of the Doughty Family Foundation[5] and the Doughty Hanson Charitable Foundation.[6]
Doughty was an Assistant Treasurer of the Labour Party[7] and Chairman of the current Small Business Taskforce policy review.[8] He was a member of the World Economic Forum in Davos.[9]
Doughty bought control of Nottingham Forest F.C. for £11 million in 1999.[10] After the departure of Steve McClaren as Forest manager in October 2011, Doughty announced his decision to step down as Forest chairman by the end of the 2011–12 season.[11] Doughty's son Michael is a professional footballer.
On 4 February 2012, Doughty was found dead in the gymnasium of his home in Skillington, Lincolnshire.[10][12][13] His death was due to Sudden Adult Death Syndrome (SADS).He is survived by his widow Lucy Doughty and his four children: Helena, Michael, Sean and Lucas Doughty.[14]
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Mike deGruy, American documentary filmmaker (Trials of Life, The Blue Planet), died in a helicopter crash he was 60

Mike deGruy was an American documentary filmmaker specialising in underwater cinematography. His Life in the Freezer, Trials of Life, The Blue Planet and Pacific Abyss. He was also known for his storytelling, most notably, a passionate TED talk about his love of the ocean on the Mission Blue Voyage.[2] His company, Film Crew Inc.,[3] specialized in underwater cinematography, filming for BBC, PBS, National Geographic, and The Discovery Channel. His notable accomplishments include diving beneath thermal vents in both the Atlantic Ocean and Pacific Ocean. He was a member of many deep sea expeditions and was a part of the team that first filmed the vampire squid and the nautilus.[4]
credits include

(December 29, 1951 – February 4, 2012)

Death

In 2012, he was killed in a helicopter crash[5] at Jaspers Brush near the town of Berry in New South Wales, Australia. The crash also claimed the life of Australian filmmaker Andrew Wight.[6][7] Marine biologist Edith Widder dedicated her 2013 TED talk detailing the first filming of the giant squid to his memory.[8]
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Wednesday, July 23, 2014

Robert Daniel, American politician, U.S. Representative from Virginia (1973–1983) died he was 75,

Robert Williams Daniel, Jr. was a Virginia farmer, businessman, teacher, and politician who served five terms in the U.S. House of Representatives as a Republican. He was first elected in 1972 and served until 1983.

(March 17, 1936 – February 4, 2012)

Biography

Early life

Daniel was born in Richmond, Virginia. He was the son of Robert Williams Daniel, a bank executive who survived the sinking of the RMS Titanic in 1912, and later served in the Senate of Virginia and his third wife Charlotte Bemiss.
He was a descendant of Peter V. Daniel, an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court, and, Edmund Randolph, who was the seventh Governor of Virginia, the first Attorney General of the United States and Secretary of State.
He graduated from the Fay School in Southborough, Massachusetts and Woodberry Forest School, in Woodberry Forest, Virginia.[1] He earned a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, Virginia, where he was a member of Phi Kappa Psi.[2] He then received a Masters in Business Administration from Columbia University.

Career

He served in the United States Army and Central Intelligence Agency from 1964 to 1968.
While in Congress, Daniel was a member of the House Armed Services Committee and various subcommittees. Following an unsuccessful bid for a sixth term, he served as deputy assistant to Secretary of Defense, Caspar Weinberger, from 1984 to 1986; and director of intelligence for the Department of Energy from 1990 to 1993. He was a recipient of the National Intelligence Distinguished Service Medal.

Personal life

He was the owner and operator of Brandon Plantation, in Prince George, Virginia, a U.S. National Historic Landmark and one of the oldest continuous agricultural operations in the United States.
Daniel died of a heart attack at his Jupiter Island, Florida vacation home on February 4, 2012 and was buried with military honors at Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond.[3][4]

Electoral history

  • 1972; Daniel was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives with 55.67% of the vote, defeating Democrat Robert E. Gibson and Independents Robert R. Hardy, William E. Ward, and John G. Vonetes.
  • 1974; Daniel was re-elected with 47.21% of the vote, defeating Democrat Lester E. Schlitz and Independent Curtis W. Harris.
  • 1976; Daniel was re-elected with 53.03% of the vote, defeating Democrat Joseph William O'Brien, Jr.
  • 1978; Daniel was re-elected unopposed.
  • 1980; Daniel was re-elected with 60.7% of the vote, defeating Democrat Cecil Y. Jenkins.
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Karlo Maquinto,Filipino boxer died from a blood clot he was 21

Karlo P. Maquinto  was a super flyweight Filipino boxer who resided in Baguio City, Benguet, Philippines died from a blood clot he was 21. He died after he collapsed at the end of his 7th professional bout.

( 8 July 1990 - died 3 February 2012)

Early life

Karlo Maquinto was the fifth of six children, their parents are Felicibar Jr. and Marjorie Maquinto. His grandparents are Alberta Larania. He completed his elementary education, but not his high school so as to pursue his boxing career.

Boxing career

  • 19 January 2011: Win against Andro Oliveros by KO in round 2 of a 4-round bout
  • 11 February 2011: Win against Jhune Cambel by KO in round 3 of a 4-round bout
  • 7 April 2011: Win against Jhune Kambel by KO in round 2 of a 4-round bout
  • 28 May 2011: Win against Jomar Yema by KO in round 3 of a 4-round bout
  • 17 August 2011: Win against Edwin Mondala by points, after a 4-round bout
  • 30 October 2011: Win against Gerald Cortes by points after a 6-round bout
  • 26 November 2011: Win against Zoren Pama by KO in round 3 of a 6-round bout
  • 11 December 2011: Win against Argie Toquero by KO in round 5 of 6-round bout
  • 28 January 2012: Draw with Mark Joseph Costa after an 8-round bout

Death

He collapsed after the end of an 8-round bout with Marc Joseph Costa in Caloocan City, Philippines. The match had ended with a majority draw, the sole blemish on an earlier perfect 8-0-0 record with 6 KOs prior.[1]
Maquinto was rushed to FEU Hospital in Quezon City. Karlo was diagnosed with subdural hematoma (blood clot sustained in his brain) upon his admission to the hospital.[2] Tests showed that a blood clot had developed in his brain as a result of blows received in the first round of the fight. As a result, soon Maquinto went into a coma and died 5 days later in the hospital.

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Zalman King American film director (Wild Orchid) and producer (9½ Weeks), died from cancer he was 69

 Zalman King  was an American film director, writer, actor and producer. His films are known for incorporating sexuality, and are often categorized as erotica.

(May 23, 1942 – February 3, 2012)

Acting

In 1964, King played a gang member in "Memo from Purgatory", an episode of the television series The Alfred Hitchcock Hour written by Harlan Ellison and featuring actors James Caan and Walter Koenig. In 1967 he played the title character, the outlaw "Muley", an episode of the TV show Gunsmoke. His character shoots Marshal Matt Dillon as part of a plan to rob the Dodge City Bank, but as he and his gang are waiting for Dillon to recover (so they can try again to kill him), Muley falls in love with one of the girls at the Long Branch Saloon, which thwarts the plan.
King played "The Man" in the 3rd episode of the first season of Adam-12. His character was an apparent drug addict who kidnaps an infant at gunpoint and Officer Malloy disarms him by some reverse psychology.[1] From September 1970 until May 1971, King played attorney Aaron Silverman on the drama The Young Lawyers, broadcast on the ABC television network. King later contributed a unique delivery to Trip with the Teacher (1975), portraying the psychopathic Al, a murderous motorbiker. He appeared in Lee Grant's directorial debut feature film Tell Me a Riddle.
In 1981 he was featured as Baelon, a rescue team leader in Roger Corman's cult SF horror film, Galaxy of Terror.

Directing

King directed several films, including Two Moon Junction (1988), Wild Orchid (1990), and Red Shoe Diaries (1992), which became a long-running television series for Showtime network. It spawned many sequels.He directed and co-wrote the movie In Gods Hands (1998).
He collaborated with director Adrian Lyne on the film 9½ Weeks which starred Kim Basinger and Mickey Rourke. He produced (and usually directed) the television series and film ChromiumBlue.com and Showtime series Body Language. He directed the 1995 film Delta of Venus based on the book by Anaïs Nin.[citation needed] His last film before his death was Pleasure or Pain which starred Asun Ortega.

Personal life

King was married to writer/producer Patricia Louisiana Knop, with whom he collaborated on many projects, such as writing Wild Orchid, Delta of Venus and 9½ Weeks as well as many episodes of Red Shoe Diaries; the couple had two daughters.[citation needed]

Death

Zalman King died on February 3, 2012, aged 69, from cancer.[2]
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Dickey Betts died he was 80

Early Career Forrest Richard Betts was also known as Dickey Betts Betts collaborated with  Duane Allman , introducing melodic twin guitar ha...