The artist David Manzur was born on December 14, 1929, in Neira, Caldas, Colombia. He is one of the most influential figures in Colombian and Latin American art, with an artistic practice that spans more than seven decades.
Manzur moved to Bogotá, where he studied at the School of Fine Arts, and later continued his training in New York at the Art Students League and the Pratt Institute, experiences that broadened and consolidated his artistic vision. Grounded in a solid academic foundation, he has developed a sustained engagement with figurative painting and drawing, exploring technique, form, and the evolution of classical themes in art.
An tireless explorer of form and light, Manzur has built a rigorous and expressive figurative language in which chiaroscuro, mastery of drawing, and the power of color structure his work. Throughout his career, he has developed a distinctive iconography that dialogues with mythological, historical, and religious references, reinterpreted through a modern sensibility.
Recurring motifs such as flies, angels, Saint George, horses, and the female figure appear throughout his oeuvre, symbols charged with ambiguity and narrative force. His work demonstrates an exceptional command of pictorial language, visceral drawing, and chromatic harmony, releasing in each piece an intense and reflective voice.

