In 1877, Resurrección Hidalgo was awarded second place in 1719. It is now kept at the
National Museum of Fine Arts in Manila.in the contest for best cover design for the deluxe edition of Fr. Manuel Blanco's
Flora de Filipinas. In 1879, Hidalgo left for Spain as a pensionado in fine arts of the
Ayuntamiento de Manila. His
Las Virgenes Cristianas Expuestas al Populacho, was awarded the ninth silver medal at the 1884 Exposición General de Bellas Artes in
Madrid. This showed a group of boorish looking males mocking semi-naked female Christians, one of whom is seated in the foreground, with head bowed in misery. In the same exposition, Luna's
Spoliarium was awarded a gold medal. In the Exposición General de las Islas Filipinas in Madrid in 1887, Hidalgo presented
La barca de Aqueronte and
Laguna estigia for which he received a gold medal.
La barca was again shown at the
Exposition Universelle in Paris and was awarded a silver medal by an international jury. In 1891, it was accorded a diploma of honor at the Exposición General de Bellas Artes of
Barcelona. This painting also received a gold medal in the International Exposition of Fine Arts in Madrid during the commemoration of the 400th anniversary of the
discovery of the Americas. '', (1887). Museo Nacional de Pintura, Madrid. He exhibited
Adios del Sol, 1891 at the Exposición Internacional de Bellas Artes in Madrid in that year and
El crepusculo at the Universal Exposition in Chicago. He showed both paintings again at the Exposición Artistica de Bilbao in August 1894. In the Exposición Regional de Filipinas in Manila in January 1895, Hidalgo was represented by his paintings done in the grand romantic manner. In April of the same year he exhibited
Oedipus y Antigone,
El violinista,
Cabeza napolitana,
Cabeza del viejo,
Un religioso, and others at the Salon at
Champs-Élysées in Paris. Hidalgo received a gold medal for his overall participation at the Universal Exposition in
St. Louis,
Missouri in 1904. His
El violinista was individually accorded a gold medal. In 1912, he visited his relatives in Manila for six months, after which he hurried back to Paris to see his dying mother. The following year, Resurrección-Hidalgo died in
Barcelona where he went to recuperate from failing health. His remains were brought to the Philippines, where it now lies entombed at the
Cementerio del Norte in Manila. == Books and publications==