Age, Biography and Wiki

Mario Torroella (Mario Jaime Torroella y Martín-Rivero) was born on 30 March, 1935 in Havana, Cuba, is an artist. Discover Mario Torroella's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 88 years old?

Popular As Mario Jaime Torroella y Martín-Rivero
Occupation Artist, architect
Age 89 years old
Zodiac Sign Aries
Born 30 March, 1935
Birthday 30 March
Birthplace Havana, Cuba
Nationality United States

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 30 March. He is a member of famous artist with the age 89 years old group.

Mario Torroella Height, Weight & Measurements

At 89 years old, Mario Torroella height not available right now. We will update Mario Torroella's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
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Who Is Mario Torroella's Wife?

His wife is Isabelle Torroella

Family
Parents Not Available
Wife Isabelle Torroella
Sibling Not Available
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Mario Torroella Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Mario Torroella worth at the age of 89 years old? Mario Torroella’s income source is mostly from being a successful artist. He is from United States. We have estimated Mario Torroella's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2023 Under Review
Net Worth in 2022 Pending
Salary in 2022 Under Review
House Not Available
Cars Not Available
Source of Income artist

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Timeline

2016

He co-founded the firm HMFH Architects and with them has won the American School & University’s William Caudill Citation and four Walter Taylor Awards from the AASA and the AIA. Before retiring in 2016 at the age of 81, he served as a HMFH principal as well as Director of Design.

The couple has two children. Their eldest is stylist and fashion editor Eugénie Torroella, graduate of Boston University as well as the Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT). She is based in New York City and active in Paris, Milan, and Zurich. She has worked in Barneys New York as well as several prominent fashion magazines including Vogue (American, Italian, Japanese and Chinese editions) and Interview. She has also been featured in Vanity Fair, Elle, Glamour, and MUSE Magazine. She is an active figure in charity events and served as a committee member of the Friends of Caritas Cubana charity in 2016 and was subsequently appointed Committee Chair of the Barneys New York Foundation Giving House for 2017. Their son is the writer Pablo Torroella, a graduate of Tulane University and the ArtCenter College of Design in Pasadena, California. He is an author, script writer, and filmmaker based in Boston. He is also a film writer and critic for Boston Hassle.

2013

In 2013 Torroella became a member of the College of Fellows of the American Institute of Architecture.

In 2013 he was interviewed and featured in the documentary Josep Lluis Sert, A Nomadic Dream  released to commemorate the 30th anniversary of Sert's death.

2012

He has also been widely covered by various media outlets throughout his career, including the newspapers The Boston Globe, The Miami Herald, El Nuevo Herald, The Charlotte Observer, and The Lowell Sun. Additionally, Torroella has also been covered by a number of magazines including Architect Magazine, Linden Lane Magazine, Progressive Architecture Magazine, Architectural Record, The Washingtonian Latin American Art, Art Now, and La Nuez, revista de arte y literatura. Torroella has also been featured on Ars Atelier City Magazine, including two lead cover stories: “Mario Torroella” (2012) and "Essential Torroella” (2014).

1992

In 1992 Torroella as his artwork were prominently covered on the “Mosaics in Boston” news feature broadcast on Boston's Channel 56.

1989

Another high-profile Torroella project is the Coastal Cement Corporation facility located within the Boston Marine Industrial Park in Boston, Massachusetts. The facility spans 14,000 square feet of office space and a bagging facility, as well as four large-scale storage silos. The silos make up the most noticeable portion of the complex with each reaching 120 feet, weighing 7,000 metric tons, and collectively holding 41,000 tons of cement. In addition to its scale, the project was noteworthy for showcasing Torroella’s signature use of color to offset Modernism’s tendency toward imposing and industrial aesthetics. Completed in 1989, Torroella led the HMFH Architects team as Design Director and utilized an unconventional application of vivid red accent coloring to add vibrancy and contrast the widespread gray of the concrete. Another departure from most industrial facilities was the extensive use of landscaping, which also added natural greens to the color scheme. These elements drew significant attention to the project, earning it the 1990 New England Regional Council/AIA Honor Award for New Commercial Construction, the Washington Waterfront Center’s national Excellence on the Waterfront Award, as well as the Excellence in Concrete Building Design Award from the Portland Cement Association & the Association of General Contractors. The project was also covered by Architectural Record and reviewed in detail by The Boston Globe which described it as “a beautiful, bold composition” that “Manifests raw power, but also surprising delicacy [...] with much of the drama and sculptural power of the great industrial buildings of America’s past.” The project was also mentioned in the 1994 book Waterfronts: Cities Reclaim Their Edge.

1986

In 1986 Torroella won the CINTAS Fellowship in architecture. In 1989 he designed his private residence, The Torroella House, which would go on to win the Boston Society of Architects’ 1993 Excellence in Design Award.

Torroella’s individual architecture recognitions include the 1986 CINTAS Fellowship in architecture, the Boston Society of Architects’ 1993 Excellence in Design Award for his private residence, The Torroella House, as well as membership in the College of Fellows of the American Institute of Architecture as of 2013. He was profiled by The Boston Globe for his work on The Torroella House and has also been listed as a notable architect and artist by Marquis Who's Who.

1969

In 1969 Torroella co-founded HMFH Architects with Harvard classmates. As a co-founder, principal, and design director, he led the firm to win several architecture awards, including the William Caudill Citation from the American School & University Magazine, as well as four Walter Taylor Awards from the AASA and the AIA.

1967

Torroella has participated in over 30 group exhibitions throughout the United States, France, Spain, and Switzerland since 1967.

1963

Torroella met his wife, Isabelle Torroella, in 1963 in Cambridge during which time both lacked formal US citizenship. Torroella had internally displaced persons (IDPs) protection owing to his unique circumstances with Cuba, though as a French citizen Isabelle was required to return to France and they would remain in contact through correspondences and occasional visits. They married in 1971 while she was a fashion designer for Christian Dior, after which Torroella had attained dual US-French citizenship. By the end of the decade Isabelle served as Head of the Art Department for the School of Fashion Design (SFD) in Boston and featured in the American Art Directory. After retiring from her Paris fashion career, Isabelle Torroella is now an author. In 2004 she released the book Dare Asking Your Dreams for Answers, through Trafford Publishing.

1962

His brother Luis sent his daughter and American wife to the United States while he remained in Cuba to coordinate with Martínez and his wife Cira. Luis Torroella was eventually captured by Castro's forces in Santiago de Cuba, after which he was imprisoned for one year in Havana's La Cabaña before being sent back to Santiago for his execution in October 1962.

Following Torroella's graduation in 1962, he was hired by Sert to work in his architecture firm, Torroella's first private sector architecture role in the United States. He remained with Sert through the early 1960s, during which time he also met his future wife Isabelle Berangere Gambier, a French citizen who went on to study fashion design in Paris. Torroella also continued to paint alongside his architecture career and began exhibiting his work. When he resigned from Sert's firm later in the decade to pursue other opportunities, Torroella gifted Sert one of his early works at Sert's residence in the presence of Calder.

Following his return to the United States and graduation from the Harvard Graduate School of Design, Torroella began exhibiting his art in 1962 following an invitation by the prominent Puerto Rican art critic, professor, and El Mirador Azul co-founder Ernesto Jaime Ruiz de la Mata at the museum of the University of Puerto Rico, Río Piedras. Torroella has since participated in over 40 individual and group exhibitions throughout his career in the United States and Europe. His artwork has been exhibited in Harvard University, North Eastern University, the University of Massachusetts, the Barcelona International Art Forum, El Museo de América in Madrid, and the Menton Biennale.

As an individual artist, Torroella's paintings and tapestries have been exhibited throughout the United States and France in over 15 one-man exhibitions since 1962.

Mario Torroella's second elder brother, Luis, graduated from Dartmouth College and worked in Havana as a prominent economist, eventually heading the Ministry of Finance's table of economists. He later joined the counterrevolution and was captured by Castro's forces in Santiago de Cuba, after which he was imprisoned for one year in Havana's La Cabaña prison before being returned to Santiago for execution in October 1962.

1960

During this period his brother, Luis Torroella, an economist and revolutionary who had worked against Batista and was part of the 26th of July Movement, headed the Ministry of Finance's table of economists at the age of 27. As Fidel Castro's regime became overtly aligned to Communism and under the Soviet sphere of influence, Torroella, his brother Luis, and the Martínezes each became involved in the clandestine counterrevolution against Castro, with each eventually resigning from their posts. Mario Torroella had come under suspicion from the Castro regime amidst widespread government crackdowns on dissent, leading Torroella to re-enroll in Harvard, leaving Cuba permanently on September 13, 1960.

Torroella has become a regarded figure in both art and architecture over the course of his career since the 1960s.

1957

Torroella then attended Dartmouth College where he was influenced by the books of Swiss-French architect Le Corbusier and Swiss architecture critic Sigfried Giedion. He graduated with his Bachelors of Arts in 1957 after which he enrolled in Harvard Graduate School of Design, receiving his master's degree in architecture in 1962.

1955

Mario Torroella's eldest brother, Juan A. Torroella III (also known as John Torroella in the US), graduated from the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland in 1955. Upon returning to Cuba he was employed by Esso (now Exxon) in Havana until the Cuban Revolution, when he transferred and relocated permanently to the United States. He remained with Exxon for the duration of his career until retiring in the early 2000s as an executive of their International Division four decades later, after which he relocated to the Brickell area of Miami. He died in 2010.

1935

Mario Torroella (born March 30, 1935) is a Cuban-American visual artist and architect based in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He is a co-founder of the firm HMFH Architects and a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects. His art is closely associated with the Cuban exile experience and has become well known in the broader international Cuban diaspora.

Mario Torroella, whose full name is Mario Jaime Torroella y Martín-Rivero, was born on March 30, 1935, in Havana's el Vedado neighborhood, then raised in the city of Marianao. His parents, Juan Torroella y Rooney and Graciela Martín-Rivero y Martínez, were both from prominent Cuban families and were educated in the United States. His mother was an artist educated first in the Corcoran School of the Arts and Design in Washington, D.C. and then at Havana's Academy of San Alejandro while his father attended Cornell University and returned to Cuba to become a contractor-architect.

1900

Torroella's career in both art and architecture has been covered in several books and publications, including Catálago General de Artistas Iberoamericanos 1900-1990, Signes, Numero Neuf by Luc Vidal (1988), Lugares donde detener la Mirada, en homenaje a Maria Zambrano (2005), Cuban-American Art in Miami, Exile, identity and the Neo-Baroque (2004), and Art of Cuba in Exile (1987). Additionally, the books Entre Dos Luces (2003), Olorun Rainbow (2001), and Transiciones, Migraciones (1993) feature his artwork on their covers.

1868

In his mother's family, his maternal grandfather is Antonio Martín-Rivero y Aguiar, a leading Cuban minister and diplomat from the early years of the Cuban Republic. Throughout his career he was a Plenipotentiary Minister and one of the first Cuban ambassadors to the United States in Washington, D.C.  as well as ambassador to Mexico, Italy and Holland. He was included in the journal Historia de familias cubanas. Antonio Martin-Rivero's father, Pedro Martin Rivero, was a leader of the Cuban Independence movement and owned a pro-independence newspaper in Havana that was banished by the Spanish government, causing him to emigrate to Philadelphia. There he came in contact with José Martí, then a journalist in New York, and the two coordinated on the movement for the independence of Cuba. Martin-Rivero also participated in the 1868 “Grito de Yara.” More distantly, Mario Torroella's mother is descendant of Diego Velázquez de Cuéllar, the first Governor of Cuba.