
Guadalupe Figueroa
Mexico, b. 1949
Guadalupe Figueroa is a Mexican artist born in 1949 in Guasave, Sinaloa, recognized for a multidisciplinary practice that includes painting, engraving, and watercolor. Her work reflects a broad artistic formation and a sustained engagement with both traditional techniques and applied artistic practices. Over the course of her career, she has explored multiple forms of expression, developing a visual language shaped by experimentation, technical discipline, and cultural context.
Figueroa studied at the Escuela de Artes Plásticas at the University of Guadalajara, where she established a strong foundation in visual arts. She later continued her training in Spain at the Escuela de Artes y Oficios San Lorenzo del Escorial in Madrid, expanding her artistic perspective through exposure to European traditions and techniques. In addition to her visual arts education, she also trained in dance at the Academia de Danza Palafox and the Academia de Danza Antonio in Guadalajara, an experience that contributed to her sensitivity to movement, rhythm, and expression within her work.
Her formation includes specialized training in printmaking, particularly through a woodcut course at CEDART in Guadalajara. This background in engraving is evident in her attention to line, contrast, and compositional structure. Across her painting and printmaking, there is a consistent focus on material, surface, and the organization of visual elements.
Throughout her career, Figueroa has been actively involved in cultural and intellectual circles. She collaborated with the art magazine of FONAPAS in 1978 and worked with the Augustinian religious order in Madrid between 1981 and 1983. Her engagement extended into academic and interdisciplinary contexts, where she participated in national and international congresses as a speaker on the relationship between visual arts and psychotherapy. This aspect of her work reflects a broader interest in the psychological and emotional dimensions of artistic practice.
She was also a co founder of the first free engraving workshop in Guadalajara, contributing to the development and accessibility of printmaking within the local artistic community. This initiative highlights her role not only as an artist but also as a promoter of artistic education and collaboration.
Figueroa’s work spans various applications, demonstrating versatility and a willingness to explore different mediums and contexts. Her ability to move between disciplines has allowed her to build a diverse and evolving body of work, marked by both technical knowledge and creative adaptability. Guadalupe Figueroa is recognized as an artist whose practice integrates painting, engraving, and interdisciplinary exploration, contributing to both the artistic and cultural landscape through her work and her involvement in education and collaboration.

