URRIOLAGOITIA,
M.
Neg.
No: (GP) 8460
Neg.
Size: 15"x12"
Neg.
Date: 11-06-1920
Sitter:
Mamerto Urriolagoitia Arriague, later Señor Don Mamerto Urriolagoitia
(cr. c.1922) (1894-1974).
Biog:
1st Secretary and sometime Chargé d'Affaires at the Bolivian Legation
in London, post 1914 until 1927; President of Bolivia.
Source:
Embassy of Bolivia, London: "...Ex President of the Republic, Lawyer,
Diplomat and Politician. Born in Sucre 5 12 1894. Parents: Mamerto
Urriolagoitia and Corina Arriague Moreno. Wife: Juana Hernandez
Calvo. During his period as Vice President of the Republic for the
Government of Doctor Enrique Hertzog (1947-1951), due the President's
resignation, he assumed constitutionally the command of the nation
on the 24th October 1949, a role he had been performing already
for months before. His government was distressing and unstable and
the political passions exacerbated and exploited in a Civil War
in August 1949. "Urriolagoitia was not a statesman of exceptional
merits nor an outstanding lawyer. He was a diplomat, a man with
a refined character and life, a mixture of the Basque temperament
with the English spirit in which he was raised." He got to the Presidency
due to a series of cicumstantial facts that have not been clarified
historically yet. A close friendship linked him with the three great
miners, especially to Aramayo. He imposed tough policies, mixed
with other social classes and his opponents situated [sic] his politics
as extreme right. In 1951 he was formed to surrender to a Military
Junta to prevent the MNR, winner of the 1951 elections, assuming
power, and act that history knows as the 'Mamartezo.'"
Cecil Beaton, My
Bolivian Aunt: A Memoir, Weidenfeld and Nicolson, London,
1971
[p 81] The ladies of the Beni had all the time in the world for
playing bridge and my aunt had become quite adept. Now she took
up the game again in Maida Vale, and there was never difficulty
in making up a four. New arrivals – young Secretaries at
the Consulate – found their way to her flat and enjoyed
her friendly company. Of these Mamerto Urriolagoitia, one of the
senior Secretaries, impressed me most by his manners, his [p 82]
deference to my aunt, his sense of polite amusement, and the way
in which he implied that he took his career very seriously. Urrio,
as he was known, had a slow smile and a fascinating mystery about
the eyes – eyes that had a somewhat unseeing, slow regard
– which all the dark and wide-eyed young ladies found irresistible.
Even as a young man he had become almost bald, and strangely enough
this gave him added distinction. I was intrigued to see that one
of his thumbs was missing.
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Sitter:
Mamerto Urriolagoitia, later Señor Don Mamerto Urriolagoitia (cr.
c.1922).
Biog:
1st Secretary and sometime Chargé d'Affaires at the Bolivian Legation
in London, post 1914 until 1927.
Date:
11 June 1920.
Occasion:
Inviated to the Court - Diplomatic Circle, 10 June 1920, with the Bolivian
Minister, Mons. Ballivian's party.
Location:
The Lafayette Studio, 179 New Bond Street, London, W.
Descr:
FL standing.
Costume:
Civil uniform, Full dress.
Furniture
& Props: Painted backdrop.
Photographer:
Lafayette Ltd., 179 New Bond Street, London.
Evidence
of photographer at work: Clamp visible.
No of poses: 3.
urr8460b.html
urr8460.html
Copyright:
V&A
All
images on this site are copyright V&A. For further information on
using or requesting copies of any images please contact the V&A Picture
Library: vaimages@vam.ac.uk
including the URL of the relevant page
Provenance: Pinewood Studios; acquired 1989.
References:
Biog:
Whitaker's Alamanc, 1915-1928.
Occasion:
The Times, 11 June 1920, p 20a.
Costume:
Herbert A.P. Trendell (ed.), Dress and Insignia Worn at His Majesty's
Court, London, 1921.
Reproduced:
-
Additional
Information: -
Acknowledgements:
Dalia Ventura
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