Obregón was born in
Barcelona, Spain. He was the son of a Colombian father and a Catalan mother. The Obregón family owned a textile factory in
Barranquilla, Colombia. He studied fine arts in
Boston for a year in 1939, then returned to Barcelona to serve as Vice-consul of Colombia for four years. He married Ilva Rasch-Isla, the daughter of poet
Miguel Rasch-Isla, during his time in Spain. In 1948, he became Director of the School of Fine Arts in
Santafé de Bogotá, where he was influenced by the
fresco style of artists
Pedro Nel Gómez and
Santiago Martinez Delgado. He left the School of Fine Arts and moved to France with his second wife,
Sonia Osorio; he later married his third wife, English painter
Freda Sargent. After traveling around Europe, he returned to Barranquilla in 1955. He lived and worked in
Cartagena for the last 22 years of his life, from 1970 until his death in 1992.
Career Obregón presented his first solo exhibition in Colombia in 1945. He participated in the fifth and sixth
Salón de Artistas Colombianos in 1944 and 1945, which attracted attention from press and critics. In 1945, Obregón settled in Barranquilla where he won the first prize for
Dorso de mujer at the first and showed his second solo exhibition in February 1946. During the same year, he moved to
Paris and exhibited work throughout France, Germany and Switzerland. Then he moved to Alba, near
Avignon, where he remained until 1955. In 1955,
Souvenir of Venice (1954) was acquired for the
Museum of Modern Art New York, making Obregón one of the few Colombians in the museum's collection. He won the
Salón de Artistas Colombianos Prize in 1962. ==Style and elements==