Early life and training Josep Masana Fargas was born in
Granollers, in the
Province of Barcelona, on 16 May 1892. Sources on his early years are scarce, but biographical summaries indicate that he showed an early interest in photography and entered the medium at a young age. Masana’s formative years coincided with the consolidation of pictorialism in Catalonia, a movement that sought to assert photography as an art form in dialogue with painting and graphic arts. He became part of a generation that also included Joan Vilatobà, Joaquim Pla Janini and Josep Maria Casals Ariet, who collectively helped shape a specifically Catalan variant of pictorialism
Pictorialist work and style Masana is described in the specialist literature as one of the representatives of Catalan pictorialism, noted for his versatility and for the variety of themes and visual strategies present in his work. His images frequently employed soft focus, atmospheric lighting and carefully staged compositions aligned with romantic and symbolist tendencies. Within this pictorialist context, Masana explored recurring motifs such as the female body, allegorical figures and expressive portraiture, often with a marked interest in mood and psychological suggestion. Studies of Catalan pictorialism highlight his series on biblical and literary subjects, including images of Salome that combine sensuality and dramatic symbolism.
Avant‑garde and applied photography From the late 1920s and 1930s, Masana participated in the renewal of photography in Barcelona, engaging with avant‑garde visual languages and applied photographic practices. He is mentioned among the pioneers of advertising and industrial photography in Catalonia, alongside figures such as Josep Sala, contributing photomontages and commercial images that integrated modernist graphic design. Works like the photograph commonly titled “Radiators”, preserved at the
Museu Nacional d’Art de Catalunya, exemplify his interest in formal abstraction, industrial motifs and close framing. In these images, everyday objects and technical devices are transformed into rhythmic structures, aligning his practice with broader European experiments in New Vision photography. == Exhibitions, reception and legacy ==