Early Life and Education
- Born: Havana, Cuba (May 30, 1915)
- Died: New York City, USA (February 12, 2022) – aged 106
- Early artistic training began at age eight with private lessons from Federico Edelmann y Pinto.
- Attended Marymount School in Paris in 1929, fostering an appreciation for art history and culture.
- Studied architecture briefly at the Universidad de la Habana (1938-1939), influencing her later geometric style.
Artistic Development and Style
- Developed a hard-edge, non-objective abstract style during her time in Paris in the late 1940s and early 1950s.
- Experimented with various materials and techniques, including solvent-based acrylic paints.
- Her work is characterized by geometric shapes, bold colors, and a focus on formal simplicity.
- Influenced by movements such as Abstract Expressionism and Minimalism.
- Explored themes of symmetry, asymmetry, movement, rhythm, and spatial tension in her paintings.
- Later works incorporated three-dimensional sculptural elements ("estructuras").
Career and Recognition
- Exhibited in Havana in 1950 but faced a lack of audience receptiveness.
- Moved to New York City in 1954, where her work initially went largely unrecognized.
- Despite facing challenges as a Latin woman artist, she continued painting consistently for decades.
- Gained significant international recognition late in life, starting in the late 1990s.
- First solo exhibition in New York City after many years was at Lisson Gallery in 2010.
- Major retrospective, *Carmen Herrera: Lines of Sight*, at the Whitney Museum of American Art (2016-2017) brought her widespread acclaim.
Major Works and Exhibitions
- Iberic (1949): A notable early work housed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.
- Blanco y Verde series (1959-1971): A significant body of work exploring figure/ground relationships and architectural principles.
- Days of the Week: Series of seven vivid paintings.
- Exhibitions at Stanhardt Gallery, numerous galleries in Europe, and major museums worldwide.
- Public art installations, including Verde, que te quiero verde at the Blanton Museum of Art (2023).
Historical Significance
- Carmen Herrera is considered a pioneering figure in abstract and minimalist art.
- Her late-career recognition highlights the challenges faced by women artists and artists from underrepresented backgrounds.
- Her work demonstrates a commitment to formal rigor, geometric abstraction, and a unique artistic vision.
- She inspired new generations of artists and continues to be celebrated for her contributions to art history.


