Vicente March

[1] Once in Rome, they found a place in the workshops at the Palazzo Patrizi on the Via Margutta, where they shared a studio with other Spanish artists (mostly Valencians), including Salvador Sánchez Barbudo and the brothers José and Mariano Benlliure, with whom he formed a lifelong friendship.

[1] He completed his education at the Accademia Chigi; spending summers in Naples and Venice.

In 1893, he won a Silver Medal at the Esposizione Internazionale di Roma with his painting "The Spinner".

The following year, he was one of the artists who worked on an album dedicated to Queen Maria Christina.

Most of his works in Spain are in the possession of private collectors, as the bulk of his paintings were sold abroad.

Self-portrait (date unknown)
The Washerwomen