Born the Tras os Montes village of São Mamede de Ribatua in the council of Alijó in 1837, Teixeira Lopes's father was a blacksmith and small scaler farmer. He did not have an artistic education but due to his obvious talent his parents sent him as an apprentice in the office of Manuel de Fonseca Pinto in Porto. At the age of 13 he was able as Fonseca Pinto's apprentice to carry out various tasks including the decoration of barges in the wharves of Vila Nova de Gaia.[1] He became apprentice to a second master, Emídio Amatucci.
In 1862, his proposal for a statue of Dom Pedro V for Batalha Square won a competition, with the work to be funded by the Council of Porto.[citation needed]
In 1864 he won a scholarship to travel to Paris where he stayed for two years, studying at the École Impériale de Beaux-Arts.[citation needed]
Works
The shrine of the Alminhas da Ponte ("Poor Souls of the Bridge") on the Porto Riverside with bas relief in bronze by José Joaquim Teixeira Lopes
He was a prominent figure in the Portuguese Romantic movement. Among his works are a wide range of statues and bas reliefs as well as pieces in ceramics and painted tiles.
The bas-relief “Baptism of Christ” (in Porto cathedral)
The bas-relief “Alminhas da Ponte” ("the poor souls of the bridge") in homage to the victims of the Porto Boat Bridge disaster at a shrine on the Porto Riverside.