Josep Maria Subirachs was born in the Barcelona neighborhood of Poblenou, the son of Josep Subirachs i Casanovas, a worker in a dye factory, and Josepa Sitjar i Ferrer. Coming from a humble family, he did not have the resources to dedicate himself to architecture, his greatest vocation from a young age, although as a sculptor he was very aware of the conjugation of his work within buildings or public spaces. Despite everything, his father encouraged his artistic streak, encouraging him in his drawings to capture different perspectives of reality, such as those made in negative or reverse, exercises that stimulate imagination and creativity. At the age of fourteen he entered as an apprentice in a gilder's workshop, where he had his first contact with artisanal processes. He later worked in various jobs, as an apprentice decorator, retoucher in an image workshop, assistant to an antique dealer, mechanic, lamp base maker, and advertising illustrator. Between 1942 and 1947 he was a pupil of the sculptor Enric Monjo, while attending evening drawing classes at the Escola Superior de Belles Arts de Barcelona. In 1947 he entered the workshop of Enric Casanovas, who, despite his death a few months later, had a powerful influence on the young sculptor, introducing him to the Noucentista style then fashionable in the Catalan capital. In 1948 he held his first solo exhibition at the Casa del Llibre in Barcelona, presenting ten sculptures and six drawings. The following year he participated in the October Salons in Barcelona, where he exhibited for several consecutive years, until 1957. In 1950, together with the sculptors Francesc Torres Monsó and Josep Martí Sabé, and the painters Esther Boix, Ricard Creus and Joaquim Datsira, he founded the
Postectura group, which presented their manifesto and an exhibition at the Galeries Laietanes in Barcelona. This short-lived group declared itself the heir of
Cubism and
Purism and, according to Subirachs,
"symbolizes the tendency towards humanization of current art, having as its master or precursor the elementary constructive style that characterizes one of the artistic currents of our time derived from Cézanne". In 1951 he obtained a scholarship from the
:ca:Cercle Maillol of the
:ca:Institut Francès de Barcelona to study in Paris, where he came into contact with
avant-garde artists and was influenced by the English sculptor
Henry Moore. In 1953 he was part of the organizing committee of the ''Associació d'Artistes Actuals'' (AAA), together with Enric Planasdurà, Antoni Tàpies, Joan-Josep Tharrats, Joan Fluvià and Alexandre Cirici i Pellicer. Invited by the Belgian artist Luc Peire, he settled for a time in
Belgium (1954–1956) where his international fame began. Here he received numerous commissions from the collector Rémy Vanhoidsenhoven. It was then that he began to consider dedicating himself professionally to sculpture. In 1956 he began his collaboration with the advertising agency Zen, founded and directed by Francesca Granados and Alexandre Cirici, where he received numerous commissions from companies and entities throughout Catalonia. Much of Subirachs' work is placed in public spaces, accessible to everyone. This was his personal preference, stating that
"art without a spectator has no reason to exist. Art should be for everyone and, therefore, it is best if it is placed in public spaces." In 1957 he received his first commission for a public work,
Forma 212, located in the Llars Mundet in Barcelona, which he would claim was the first abstract artwork placed on a public street in Barcelona. This work was followed three years later by his work
Evocació marinera, located in the
Barceloneta neighborhood, which caused some controversy due to its abstract forms (whereas
Forma 212 met little outcry as it was placed in the outskirts of the city). Later, between 1959 and 1961, he created the facade of the
:ca:Basílica de la Mare de Déu del Camí, and from then on he received numerous commissions for public places around the world. In 1961 he began teaching at the
ELISAVA in Barcelona. Politically committed, in 1966 he made the commemorative medal of the
:ca:Sindicat Democràtic d'Estudiants de la Universitat de Barcelona, the proceeds of which were used to pay the fines imposed on the participants in the closure of the
Capuchin convent in
Sarrià-Sant Gervasi, known as
:ca:La Caputxinada. In 1980 he was elected academician of the sculpture section of the
Reial Acadèmia Catalana de Belles Arts de Sant Jordi. He has also received, among other distinctions, the
Gold Medal of Merit in the Fine Arts,
Saint George's Cross, and the Gold Medal for Artistic Merit from the Barcelona City Council. Josep Maria Subirachs died in Barcelona on 7 April 2014, at the age of 87. Suffering from
Parkinson's disease, he had stopped working in 2010. ==Artistic works==