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SE CAE A PEDAZOS EL MUSEO DE LA ESCULTURA DE MADRID

MUSEO DE LA ESCULTURA DE MADRID
MUSEO DE LA ESCULTURA DE MADRID

Por Aquiles Ortiz Bravo

Entre las avenidas Serrano, la Castellana y la Glorieta de Rubén Darío en Madrid, está ubicado al aire libre el Museo de la Escultura de la capital de España, que fue proyectado en el año 1971 por los profesionales José Antonio Fernández, Julio Martínez Calzón y el artista visual Eusebio Sempere. En este espacio nos muestran sus piezas tridimensionales 17 escultores españoles, que se han ganado en buena lid su carácter universal. Hoy esta institución se nos cae a pedazos ante la mirada invidente de la Municipalidad de Madrid, El Ministerio de Cultura y lo que es peor del pueblo español en general. Ante la negligencia demostrada y por demás visible, vamos hacer un recorrido por el museo en cuestión, para abrirles el corazón cultural a quien no ha demostrado tenerlo.
Entre los expositores tenemos: Alberto Sánchez (1895-1902) su obra “Toros Ibéricos”, es un bronce ejecutado en el año 1960 que requiere urgente mantenimiento y limpieza. Esta escultura de bronce, al igual que otras del mismo material, ha podido resistir con gallardía el uso y desuso del tiempo. Eduardo Chillida (1920-2002) ” Lugar de Encuentro III”, es un hormigón armado resistente a todo y contra todo, elaborado en el año 1972. Este trabajo requiere urgente limpieza y mantenimiento en todas sus partes. Julio González ( 1876-1942) “La Petite Faucille” esculpida en bronce en el año 1937, nos exige urgente a gritos limpieza y mantenimiento. Joan Miró (1893- 1983) ” Mere Ubu ” un bronce hecho en 1975, que nos pide limpieza y mantenimiento a la mayor brevedad posible. Gerardo Rueda (1926-1996) su “Volumen-Relieve ” de 1972, elaborado en granito, está totalmente dañado y por las noches es utilizado como “Hotel”. Marcel Martí (1925-2010) su “Proali ” es un bronce producido en 1984, se requiere limpieza y mantenimiento urgente. Amadeo Gabino (1922-2004) ” Estela de Venus
” una pieza en acero al aire libre. Por su ubicación ha sufrido las inclemencias del sol, la lluvia, de la presencia del ser humano y como si fuera poco la de los excrementos de las aves. La limpieza y mantenimiento es de urgencia. Andreu Alfaro (1929-2012) ” Un mundo para niños
“es un abstracto geométrico en acero inoxidable de 1971, que da ritmo virtual a quien lo contempla. Si algún día a las autoridades culturales de España, se les ocurriese quitarle la suciedad que le cubre, el maestro y nosotros se lo agradeceríamos. Alfaro en la Bienal de Venecia de 1980 engalanó los jardines de esa confrontación con sus esculturas al aire libre.
Rafael Leoz (1921-1976) en 1971 ejecuta su “Estructuración Hiperpoliédrica” en acero requiere limpieza y mantenimiento urgente. Martín Chirino (1925-2019) su “Mediterránea” es una escultura de metal que está dañada en todas sus partes. No se lee su ficha técnica de identificación. Su ubicación dentro de una fuente, le resta el esplendor deseado por su creador.
Manuel Rivera (1927-1995) su “Tríptico” de 1972 elaborado en acero está totalmente abandonado a su suerte, al igual que la pared que lo sostiene. Su restauración es total y urgente. Gustavo Torner ( 1925 ) su pieza “Plaza ” de 1972 elaborada en cobre y granito. Está ubicada en la calle Serrano con Juan Bravo. Presenta daños en un 80%, sin ningún tipo de identificación. Su restauración es de emergencia. Pablo Serrano (1908-1985) “Unidades Yuntas
” de 1972, es un bronce ubicado al lado de la estación del metro Rubén Darío. Le resta mantenimiento general, sobre todo en su base. Las esculturas de: Pablo Palazuelo “Proyecto”, Francisco Sobrino “Estructura Permutacional ” y la de José María Subirachs” Al otro lado del muro”, están protegidas por una caja de madera vertical, por la restauración de un edificio que le hace las veces de vecino al museo. Estas esculturas no tienen su ficha de identificación.
Punto y aparte merece el artista proyectista del museo Eusebio Sempere (1923-1985). Este multiplicó su participación en el Museo de la Escultura. De él es un móvil en acero que está totalmente dañado. “La fuente” que está debajo de la Avenida Serrano y que pertenece al museo en cuestión, también es de Sempere. Este escultor y proyectista del museo esculpió también 18 bancos en hormigón y cemento blanco, que están distribuidos por toda el área geográfica del museo.
A modo de epilogo destacamos que el denominado Museo de la Escultura, nos presenta 7 cámaras para su custodia. Ninguna de ellas pudieron grabar a los que lo deterioraron. Como punto final señalamos que el plano del museo, está plagado de errores. Se recomienda su rectificación a la mayor brevedad posible.Amanecerá y veremos.

Perez Art Museum PAMM
Pérez Art Museum Miami

The Optical Experience Latin Art Core Gallery

Op Art movement
Op Art movement

 The Optical Experience Latin Art Core Gallery

PS Art (Pedro Sarracino)

video by Vive Miami News with Vivian Fulop

1646 SW 8th ST Miami, Fl 33135

Open by Appointment only

In the middle of the 20th century, the first echoes of the worldwide concrete movement burst into Cuba. The proposals of non-objective painting in our country were related to a period of feverish creative activity in our art. In a decidedly figurative Havana, his daring actions contaminated even recognized masters of the historical vanguard. This was undoubtedly the moment of abstraction for Latin America. Some of the Cuban concrete artists were formed in the melting pot of nationalities and freedom of thought that was the post-war Paris Academy, but others operated from Cuba or wove an intense connecting skein with their Argentine and Caracas counterparts. In 1958, the group 10 Concrete Painters was formed, which had a short life (1958-1961) but brought together artists with an extensive career. The resonance of this creative experience transcended the period of collective action and continued to be noticeable in the future artistic strategies of that extraordinary group of creators. From diverse geographies or from the insular context itself, his discourses were forever marked by the power of linguistic synthesis with which his practice in concrete art endowed them. The abstract art movement Op art came to international attention in the mid-1960s, an era of global social and technological change. The movement, which placed emphasis on viewer perception by exploring optical effects in painting, sculpture and light installation, quickly gained in popularity but met with considerable criticism. The Op Art movement pioneered the integration of technology into art, innovated the concept of viewer participation, and introduced an emphasis on immersive experience/ideas that contemporary art embraced and incorporated. Op became a defining moment in the history of modern art, manifesting an aesthetic viewpoint that engages the process as both a tool and a subject. This perceptual emphasis, involved both the eye and the mind, by employing structural variations, contiguous compositions, linear patterns, and color interactions to generate formal ambiguity, special incongruity, and retinal vibrations.

Perez Art Museum PAMM
Pérez Art Museum Miami

Juvenal Ravelo

Juvenal Ravelo, arte cinético
Juvenal Ravelo, arte cinético

Juvenal Ravelo soto

 Diciembre 23, 1934 (85 años), Caripito, Venezuela

Juvenal Ravelo, arte cinético
Juvenal Ravelo, arte cinético

Juvenal Ravelo pertenece a la corriente del arte cinético. Nació en Caripito, estado Monagas, el 23 de diciembre de 1934. Estudió en la Escuela de Artes Plásticas y Aplicadas de Caracas, además de la Escuela de Artes Plásticas Martín Tovar y Tovar de Barquisimeto. Fue profesor en la Escuela de Artes Plásticas Cristóbal Rojas. En 1964 viajó a Francia para aprender sobre el arte abstracto y el constructivismo. Durante su estadía, asistió en La Sorbona a los seminarios sobre la sociología del arte impartidos por Pierre Francastel y Jean Cassou.Luego de su regreso a Venezuela, comenzó a desarrollar propuestas destinadas a la integración comunitaria al hecho artístico, lo que desde su perspectiva propiciaría un cambio en el ser humano al realizar obras de arte en plena calle, con lo que buscaría desarrollar la sensibilidad estética de los ciudadanos comunes y corrientes. Ravelo denomina su concepto como Arte de participación en la calle.Su proyecto de «museo al aire libre» comenzó en su localidad natal, donde desarrolló los Módulos Cromáticos. En la creación de éstos Módulos contó con la participación de los habitantes y los transeúntes pertenecientes a las localidades donde presentó sus proyectos, como parte esencial de su propuesta. Uno de los Módulos Cromáticos más destacados es el que se ve a lo largo de la Avenida Libertador de Caracas.

Source: Mirla Soto

Juvenal Ravelo, arte cinético
Juvenal Ravelo, arte cinético

Inicios y educación

Juvenal Ravelo pertenece a la corriente del arte cinético. Nació en Caripito, estado Monagas, el 23 de diciembre de 1934. Estudió en la Escuela de Artes Plásticas y Aplicadas de Caracas, además de la Escuela de Artes Plásticas Martín Tovar y Tovar de Barquisimeto. Fue profesor en la Escuela de Artes Plásticas Cristóbal Rojas. En 1964 viajó a Francia para aprender sobre el arte abstracto y el constructivismo. Durante su estadía, asistió en La Sorbona a los seminarios sobre la sociología del arte impartidos por Pierre Francastel y Jean Cassou.

Luego de su regreso a Venezuela, comenzó a desarrollar propuestas destinadas a la integración comunitaria al hecho artístico, lo que desde su perspectiva propiciaría un cambio en el ser humano al realizar obras de arte en plena calle, con lo que buscaría desarrollar la sensibilidad estética de los ciudadanos comunes y corrientes. Ravelo denomina su concepto como Arte de participación en la calle.

Su proyecto de «museo al aire libre» comenzó en su localidad natal, donde desarrolló los Módulos Cromáticos. En la creación de éstos Módulos contó con la participación de los habitantes y los transeúntes pertenecientes a las localidades donde presentó sus proyectos, como parte esencial de su propuesta. Uno de los Módulos Cromáticos más destacados es el que se ve a lo largo de la Avenida Libertador de Caracas.

JULIO CORTÁZAR Y JUVENAL RAVELO
EN LA RADIO NACIONAL DE VENEZUELA
CARACAS 1974.

La trascendencia de la obra de arte, cualquiera que ésta sea, viene dada como cuando uno toma un arco, que puede ser el que utilizó Ulises cuando llegó a Ítaca después de su destierro, y al tensarlo bien fuerte, apreciado Juvenal, se debe disparar la flecha al espacio , q ese infinito, que uno no ve pero intuye, y esperar que la misma dé o no dé en el blanco, es decir, no es necesario darle empujoncitos suplementarios, ( como se lo declaré a la revista Life en Español): solo los imbéciles pueden pretender modificar su trayectoria con vistas a la eternidad y a las promociones internacionales.

JULIO CORTÁZAR
carta enviada a París desde el mediodía de Francia. Verano de 1979 ( fragmento).

CON JULIO LE PARC EN EL ” ESPACIO LATINOAMERICANO” EN PARÍS.* Gamarra, Guzmán, Krasno, Le Parc, Maza,Netto, Noé Novoa, Piza, Ravelo y Tomasello, fundamos en el año 1980, un espacio que manejamos como asociación cultural, con otro concepto: El de la solidaridad compartida con artistas que llegaban a París, procedentes de nuestra tierra latinoamericana sin posibilidades de exponer su obra ni de relacionarse con el ambiente intelectual y artísticos de la sociedad francesa. Allí, cada uno nos comprometimos realizar una exposición individual, seguida de muestras colectivas, invitando pintores franceses y de otras nacionalidades. A nuestras inquietudes se sumaron unos cuantos escritores, entre ellos *Julio cortázar, Gabriel García Márquez*, el crítico de arte *Miguel Rojas Mix* y el profesor *Olver Gilberto de León*, director de la cátedra de literatura latinoamericana de la Universidad de la Sorbona París IV. Exposiciones, conferencias, conversatorios y debates de ideas, caracterizaron todas las actividades del “Espacio” con participación de intelectuales franceses, como los historiadores de arte *Frank Popper y Gastón Diehl* . Fue un espacio que rompió con el individualismo y con el infame egoísmo, fue una idea nacida de diferentes criterios de las artes plásticas y de la literatura, proyectando una parte de la cultura latinoamericana en Europa y otros países. Una experiencia sin precedentes en el contexto artístico de nuestro continente, realizada en el universo del arte en París, financiada por nosotros.

Mis investigaciones sobre el arte cinético en el plano teórico, me llevaron a dedicarle unas cuantas líneas a *Julio Le Parc*. En la década de los años 60 del siglo pasado llegué a París, y comencé mis estudios de sociología del arte junto con mis búsquedas sobre la fragmentación de la luz y el color, en esa época me encontré con la pintura cinética de Le Parc. Sus creaciones luminocinéticas pintadas en blanco y negro, mostraban un extraordinario suceso pictórico tridimensional. La vastedad del brillante camino de su obra, lo convierten en unos de los grandes artistas contemporáneos . Su triunfo en la Bienal de Venecia en la cual ganó el gran premio, es uno de sus aportes importantes al arte cinético. Hoy Le Parc continúa con su producción en ese mundo del movimiento, lo demostró su grandiosa exposición en este nuevo milenio, en el Palais de Tokio en París. Y en el año 2019 participamos juntos en la feria internacional de la ciudad de Lima, Perú, Julio con la galería ” _LYV Gallery”_ de Córdoba, Argentina, bajo la dirección de *Guillermo Rojas Villafañe*. Y mis fragmentaciones cinéticas con la ” _Kleur Gallery_ ” de Santiago de Chile, dirigida por el venezolano *Mauricio* *Ceballos R* . Tres acontecimientos consagraron a *Julio Le Parc*: sus ideas en el grupo de investigación visual en París, el gran premio de la Bienal de Venecia y su pensamiento plástico en el ” _Espacio Latinoamericano_ “.

*Juvenal Ravelo*
En el libro ” Fragmentaciones de una idea cinética y otras reflexiones” Año 2020, _en proceso de impresión_.

Trayectoria Artística

Resumen de exposiciones individuales

  • 1958 Taller Libre de Arte Caracas, Venezuela.
  • 1967 V Bienal Internacional de Jóvenes Artistas en París. Invitado por Francia. Exposición de un mural con medidas: 8 m de largo y 4 m de alto.
  • 1969 VI Bienal Museo de Arte Moderno de París. Pabellón de Venezuela
  • 1971 Galería Conkright. Caracas, Venezuela.
  • 1971 III Festival Internacional de la Pintura. Cagnes Sur-Mer. Francia
  • 1974 Galería de Arte Contacto. Estructuras Cinéticas sobre la Fragmentación de la Luz. Caracas, Venezuela.
  • 1975 Galería Gaudí. Maracaibo, Venezuela.
  • 1975 – 2015 Más de doce manifestaciones de Arte de Participación en la Calle en comunidades de Venezuela, incluyendo la Universidad Católica Andrés Bello.
  • 1981 Espace Latino Americain. Investigaciones sobre la luz y el color. Paris.
  • 1985 Salón de Exposiciones. PDVSA Maturín. Edo. Monagas, Venezuela.
  • 1987 Galería Euroamericana. Proyectos y Maquetas. Caracas, Venezuela.
  • 2001 Mural en espacio urbano. Av. Libertador, Municipio Chacao. Módulos Cromáticos. Con medidas d 2.500 m de largo por 6 m de alto. Caracas, Venezuela.
  • 2008 Museo de Arte Contemporáneo del Zulia MACZUL Expo Laboratorio. Maracaibo, Venezuela.
  • 2012 Centro de Arte Daniel Suárez. Luz y Color en el Nuevo Milenio. Caracas, Venezuela.
  • 2012 Arte de Participación en la Calle en la ciudad de Marcigny, Francia.
  • 2012 Arte de Participación en la Universidad Yacambú. Barquisimeto Edo. Lara.
  • 2015 Galería Durban Segnini. Miami, Estados Unidos.
  • 2015 Arte de Participación en la XII Bienal de La Habana, Cuba.

Resumen de Exposiciones Colectivas

  • 1952 – 1964 Salones Nacionales de Arte Venezolano
  • 1955 Arte del Caribe. Nueva York, Estados Unidos.
  • 1961 Sala Mendoza. Exposición Tres Premios del Siglo XXII. Salón Oficial junto con Alirio Palacios y José Antonio Dávila. Caracas, Venezuela.
  • 1965 Museo de Arte Moderno Paris. Artistas Latinoamericanos en París. Francia.
  • 1967 Galería Denisse Davi. Six Recherches. Centro Proposte. Florencia, Italia.
  • 1968 Salón Grandes y Jóvenes de Hoy. Paris, Francia.
  • 1968 Museo de Arte Moderno Salón Realites Nouvelles. Paris, Francia.
  • 1968 Maison de la Culture. Cinetisme Spectacle Environment. Grenoble, Francia.
  • 1969 Primer Festival Internacional de Pintura Cagnes. Sur-Mer. Francia.
  • 1969 Festival Internacional de Arte de Aviñón. Francia.
  • 1969 Galería Denisse Rene. Exposition Position. París, Francia .
  • 1970 L’Art Cinetique. Nanterre, Francia.
  • 1970 Visión 24. Roma, Italia.
  • 1971 Kunstnernes Hus. Artistas Latinoamericanos en Escandinavia. Oslo, Noruega.
  • 1971 Gentoftekunst. Venner, Dinamarca.
  • 1971 Lunds Konsthall. Suecia.
  • 1971 Konsthallen. Göteborg, Suecia.
  • 1974 Festival Internacional de Arte Contemporáneo de Royan, Francia.
  • 1974 Fundación Bertrand Rusell. Exposición por la Paz. Nottingham, Inglaterra.
  • 1970-1982 Salón de Mayo. Salón de Grandes y Jóvenes de Hoy. París Francia.
  • 1976 Museo de Arte Moderno La Tertulia. III Bienal Americana de Artes Gráficas. Cali, Colombia.
  • 1978 The Artist Market Association Gallery. Londres, Reino Unido.
  • 1978 Galería de la Fundación Francisco de Miranda. El afiche en Venezuela. Londres, Inglaterra.
  • 1980 Galería Denisse Rene. Ocho Artistas Venezolanos. Paris, Francia.
  • 1982 Bienal de Venecia. Artistas Latinoamericanos en Europa. Italia.
  • 1985 Museo Jesús Soto. La Imagen no Objetiva. Exposición itinerante. Edo. Bolívar, Venezuela.
  • 2009 Exposición de gráfica cinética junto al pintor argentino Rogelio Polesello. Casa de las Américas. La Habana – Cuba
  • 2009 Oeuvres Optiques et Lumino-Cinétiques. Collection Frank Popper. Marcigny, Francia
  • 2010 Fundación Centro de Arte Maracaibo Lía Bermúdez. VII Feria Internacional de Arte y antigüedades de Maracaibo. Edo. Zulia Venezuela
  • 2010 Centro de Arte Daniel Suárez. 1er Encuentro Internacional Tendencias Encontradas. Con la participación de artistas de Argentina, Uruguay, Chile y Venezuela. Caracas, Venezuela.
  • 2011 Centro de Arte Daniel Suárez. Veinticinco Ediciones Veinticinco Artistas, Revista el Desafío de la Historia. Caracas, Venezuela.
  • 2011 Centro de Arte Daniel Suárez. Segundo encuentro internacional Tendencias Encontradas. Con la participación de Argentina, Uruguay, Colombia y Venezuela. Caracas, Venezuela.
  • 2012 Centro de Arte Daniel Suárez. Día Mundial del Arte. Exposición que conmemora el nacimiento de Leonardo Da Vinci. Invitación internacional por parte de la UNESCO. Paris, Francia.
  • 2013 Centro de Arte Contemporáneo Frank Popper. Exposición Internacional Movimiento y Luz. Francia
  • 2014 Salon Réalités Nouvelles. Paris, Francia.

Representado en los siguientes Museos, Colecciones Privadas

  • Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo. Washington D.C., Estados Unidos
  • Casa de las Américas. La Habana, Cuba.
  • Colección Alfredo Boulton. Caracas, Venezuela.
  • Colección Bruno y Mary Levi. Río de Janeiro, Brasil.
  • Colección Frank Popper. Paris, Francia.
  • Colección Fundación Beracas. Caracas, Venezuela.
  • Colección Gastón Diehl. Paris, Francia.
  • Colección PDVSA Maturín. Estado Monagas, Venezuela.
  • Colección Residencia de Gobernadores. Maturín, Estado Monagas, Venezuela.
  • Embajada de Venezuela. UNESCO. Paris, Francia
  • Fundación Bertrand Russell. Nottingham, Inglaterra
  • Galería de Arte Nacional. Caracas, Venezuela.
  • Ministerio de la Cultura. Francia
  • Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Barcelona. Estado Anzoátegui, Venezuela.
  • Museo de Arte de la Ciudad de Paris. Francia
  • Museo de Arte Moderno Mario Abreu. Maracay, Venezuela.
  • Museo del Consejo Municipal del Distrito Capital. Caracas, Venezuela.
  • Museo del Diseño y la Estampa Carlos Cruz Diez. Caracas, Venezuela.
  • Museo Jesús Soto. Ciudad Bolívar, Venezuela
  • Museo Mateo Manaure, Maturín, Estado Monagas. Venezuela
  • Museo Nacional de Nicaragua. Managua, Nicaragua.
  • Museo Perpignan. Francia
  • Pinacoteca del Banco Central de Venezuela. Caracas, Venezuela.
  • Universidad de Los Andes. Estado Mérida, Venezuela.

Intervenciones en la Arquitectura

  • 1983 Mural en el Aeropuerto Internacional José Tadeo Monagas. Maturín, Venezuela.
  • 1985 Mural en el Colegio de Médicos. Maturín, Venezuela.
  • 1986 Cilindro Tridimensional. Plaza del estudiante Maturín, Venezuela.
  • 1989 Mural en la fachada del periódico El Oriental. Maturín, Venezuela.
  • 1990 Mural en la Universidad de Oriente, Núcleo Monagas. Maturín, Venezuela.
  • 1993 Prisma Tridimensional. Estación Maternidad del Metro de Caracas. Venezuela.
  • 1997 Mural edificio Linaza. Maturín, Venezuela.
  • 2002 Módulos Cromáticos Mural Av. Libertador Municipio Chacao, Caracas, Venezuela.
  • 2003 Escultura Espacial Luminocromática. Maturín, Venezuela.

Distinciones Nacionales

  • 1955 Primer premio. Salón de Jóvenes Pintores Monaguenses. Maturín, Venezuela.
  • 1956 Premio Modesto Izquiel. Segundo Salón Nacional Pintura Joven. AVP, Caracas, Venezuela.
  • 1956 Primer Premio. Salón Eloy Palacios. Maturín, Venezuela.
  • 1961 Premio Arístides Rojas. Salón Nacional. Museo de Bellas Artes. Caracas, Venezuela
  • 1961 Premio José Loreto Arismendi. Salón Nacional. Museo de Bellas Artes. Caracas, Venezuela
  • 1961 Premio para Paisaje del Rotary Club en el Salón Nacional de Arte. Caracas, Venezuela
  • 1976 Llave de oro otorgada por los vecinos del Barrio Los Cerritos. Caripito, Venezuela
  • 1983 Orden Ciudad de Maturín en su Primera Clase. Nombramiento: Hijo Ilustre de Caripito Estado Monagas, Venezuela
  • 1986 Orden José Tadeo Monagas en su Primera Clase. Nombramiento: Hijo Ilustre de Caripito Estado Monagas, Venezuela
  • 1988 Casa de la Cultura Juvenal Ravelo en Caripito. Estado Monagas, Venezuela.
  • 1989 Orden al Mérito en el Trabajo Primera Clase.
  • 1990 Orden José Seledonio Tubores Primera Clase. Punta de Piedras Estado Nueva Esparta Venezuela.
  • 1991 Orden Fuerzas Armadas PM Primera Clase Cumaná. Estado Sucre, Venezuela.
  • 2008 Premio Nacional de Artes Plásticas. Caracas, Venezuela.
  • 2008 Patrimonio Cultural Viviente por el Consejo Legislativo del Estado Monagas.

Internacionales

  • 1955 Mención Honorífica. Exposición de Arte del Caribe. Nueva York, Estados Unidos.
  • 1971 Premio Nacional en el III Festival Internacional de Arte de Cagnes Sur-Mer. Francia.
  • 2012 Condecoración Ciudadano de Honor. Marcigny, Francia.

Documentales

  • “Ravelo”. Dir. Iván Croce. 1968. Ektacrome. 16 mm. 12 min.
  • “Arte de Participación en la Calle”. Dir. Luis Altamirano. 1975, Ektacrome. 16 mm. 7 min
  • “Serie Pintores de Venezuela”. Dir. Carlos D’ Santiago. 1987. 22 min.
  • “El viajero de la luz fragmentada”. Lagoven en la pantalla. Dir. Luis Altamirano. 1989. 30 min.
  • “Pueblos de luces y colores” Bolívar Film. Dir. José Curiel. 35 mm. Y 16 mm. 10 min.
  • “Juvenal Ravelo Vida y Obra”. Dir. Fernando Martínez Schael. 2003.
  • “En busca del Color”. El Chico de la Tapa Film. Dir. Marcel del Castillo. 2005
  • “La Aventura del Cinetismo con la Gente”. Dir. Cesar Cortéz. 2012.
  • “Luz y Color en el Nuevo Milenio”. Dir. Nabor Zambrano, 2012.
Perez Art Museum PAMM
Pérez Art Museum Miami

Zurich Concrete artists

Constructivismo, concrete art
Constructivismo, concrete art
Concrete art, Constructivism, Constructivism

Zurich Concrete artists

Concrete Art/Geometric Abstraction

In 1930, the Dutch artist Theo van Doesburg established art concrèt, according to which the composition of a work is to be developed based on objective geometrical principles. Although Van Doesburg already died a year later in 1931, his approach is still employed by numerous present-day artists. The Zurich school of concrete artists formed in Switzerland included Max Bill, Verena Loewensberg, Richard P. Lohse and Camille Graeser. Vera Molnar and Aurélie Nemours were among the major advocates of Concrete Art in France. The collection of the Wilhelm-Hack-Museum also possesses works by numerous Concrete artists active in Germany, for example Horst Bartnig, Hartmut Boehm, Peter Staechelin and Ludwig Wilding.

Concrete art, Constructivism, Constructivism

The Fantastic Four: Zurich Concrete, Geometric Abstract Art

The traces, shadows and aftershocks of Concrete art – and, in particular, the Zurich Concrete school – have been seen and felt everywhere in contemporary Swiss art production, with its emphasis on hard-edged, geometric abstraction. The term ‘Concrete Art’, coined in 1930 by Theo Van Doesburg in a manifesto written for the first issue of Art Concret, defined and delineated a departure from realism, nature and symbolism. Its reductionist principles of line, colour and plane organized into austere, systemic wholes – themselves copped and refined from the Bauhaus and De Stijl – were meant to ‘represent abstract thoughts in a sensuous and tangible form’, as Max Bill, the movement’s ringleader, once wrote. Concrete art was intended to create new ‘object[s] for intellectual and spiritual use’.

If such sincere proclamations sound a tinny Utopian alarm today, the kind of reduced, geometrically-prone art they proposed remains insistently de rigueur, from the Neo-Geo antics of French Switzerland (led by godfather John Armleder) to the Northern Swiss gangs of younger Basel and Zurich-based artists, who increasingly process Concrete art’s methods through the filters of digitization or consumerism. Consequently, the exhibition ‘The Fantastic Four: Zurich Concrete and Special Friends’ did not come as a particular surprise. At Haus Konstruktiv, the ‘Fantastic Four’ of the Marvel comic from whence this somewhat cloying title came, are reconfigured as the superheroes of Zurich Concrete: Bill, Camille Graeser, Verena Loewensberg and Richard Paul Lohse. The ‘special friends’ comprised a motley, intergenerational group of contemporary artists – among them, Saâdane Afif, Bruno Jakob and Shirana Shahbazi – whose radically disparate production can still be located, at times, in Concrete art’s shadow.

Haus Konstruktiv’s permanent collection is notably broad, and the exhibition mostly rode its able shoulders. Graeser’s lucid oil paintings on canvas, with their grounding in graphic design – like many of the Zurich Concretes, he worked in all areas of design: furniture, architecture, advertising – bookend his career. Gestoppte Rotation (Stopped Rotation, 1943) proved prescient of the geometric, abstract photography movement of today, while the funny, poignant Drei Farben: drei gleiche Volumen, 1/12 grün bewegt (Three Colours: Three Equal Volumes, 1/12 Shifted Green, 1975/76), featured one of his horizontal bands of colour attempting to make a break for it.

Loewensberg’s wonderful paintings from the late 1960s and ’70s, meanwhile, look like radio frequencies or lighting bolts swathed in colour, conjuring computer approximations of Clyfford Still’s (more famous) drippy abstractions from the same period. Bill’s revelatory painting of powdery pastel hues blossoming from a spiral, Betonung einer spirale (Accentuation of a Spiral, 1947), however, took the award for sheer timelessness.

In the wake of such works, the contemporary inclusions were somewhat disappointing and the choices difficult to interpret – surely there are other Swiss-related artists whose work follows Concrete art more explicitly – but some of the pairings were nevertheless inspired. Best known for her photorealist, figurative murals rendered by Iranian sign painters, Shahbazi showed large geometric works that were both lovely and surprising. If Killian Rüthemann’s site-specific installations – playfully dark retorts to geometric abstraction’s legacy – fit perfectly, Afif’s punk-ish performance documentation was less expected. Still, Concrete art’s intentions to unite art and life in all its ably designed forms bore this contribution out. And should the spectator have persisted in the misguided thinking that this Swiss movement remained regional, there was one scene-stealing side project: a series of sketches, drawings and paintings by Fritz Glarner for the famous 1960s-era Rockefeller Dining Room in New York. The artist, who emigrated to the US in 1936, designed the room for Nelson Rockefeller himself, bringing Zurich Concrete – and Glarner’s own brand of Mondrian-inflected wit, with its jam of flat, hard-edged geometric forms tricked out in blue, red and yellow – to the most American and yet international of settings.

QUINN LATIMER

Quinn Latimer is a writer and contributing editor of frieze. Her most recent book is Like a Woman: Essays, Readings, Poems (Sternberg Press, 2017).

Perez Art Museum PAMM
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Ivan Serpa Brazilian painter

Ivan SERPA
Ivan SERPA

Ivan Serpa Brazilian painter

Ivan Ferreira Serpa was a Brazilian painter, draftsman, printmaker, designer, and educator active in the concrete art movement. Much of his work was in geometric abstractionism. 

Born: April 6, 1923, Rio de Janeiro, State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Died: April 6, 1973, Rio de Janeiro, State of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Ivan Serpa was a Brazilian artist, member of Grupo Frente and professor at Museu de Arte Moderna. He was one of the most important contributors to Brazilian Concretism and Neo-Concretism. In addition to geometric constructions, he has also done several neo-expressionist paintings in the ’60s (the “Black Period” and the “bichos” paintings).

  • Art Movement: Concrete Art (Concretism), Neo-Concretism
  • Painting school: Frente
  • Genre: abstract
  • Field: painting, engraving, drawing

Early life and education

Serpa was born in the Tijuca neighborhood of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

From 1946 to 1948, Serpa studied printmaking with printmaker Axl Leskoschek in Rio de Janeiro. Serpa was also mentored by the art critic, Mário Pedrosa. But in general terms, Serpa did not have much formal training in art.

Career

From 1949 and 1952, Serpa taught painting, sculpture, and art theory at the Museum of Modern Art, Rio de Janeiro, where he often held an open studio which incorporated critical review of student work with a new pedagogy of allowing instinctual exploration of innate creativity. The teaching style also reflected new ideas about national identity, and had a focus on the modern, incorporating ideas of democracy that were taking place in the country as a whole – all in direct contrast to the more traditional, European based art school model.

This weekly event became a salon for many up and coming artists that would later be major contributors to the neo-concrete and concrete art movement in Brazil.

Serpa had also previously taught art therapy to psychiatric patients at the Occupational Therapy center of the National Psychiatric Hospital in Brazil.

Serpa’s first works were created in 1951. The paintings were serialized, and often incorporated architectural elements.

In 1954, Serpa co-founded Grupo Frente, which included artists Aluísio Carvão, Lygia Clark, Helio Oiticica, among others.

In 1954, Serpa published a book he wrote with Mario Pedrosa called, Crescimento e criação, which incorporated his work as a teaching children. He often gave free art classes to children.

From 1957 to 1959, Serpa won the foreign travel prize at the 6th Salão Nacional de Arte Moderna in Rio de Janeiro. This prize allowed him to travel to Europe, focusing on Italy and Spain, but also including France, Germany, Holland, Portugal, and Switzerland. During this time Serpa lived in Paris in 1957, where his work was displayed at concrete and neo-concrete art shows.

In the 1960s, Serpa worked as a paper conservator at the National Library. This work led to experimentation with paper collage, where he incorporated methodologies from the conservation, restoration, and preservation techniques he used in this position.

He often worked with Lygia Pape on art projects.

Serpa’s 1962 series, Fase negra (Black Phase), reflected the political environment in Brazil at that time.

In mid-1960s, Serpa reconnected with geometric art, which moved his work toward kinetic and op art.

Personal life

In 1949, Serpa married Lygia Serpa. They had a son, Yves Serpa, who was born in 1951; a daughter, Leila Serpa, born in 1955; and son, Heraldo Serpa, born in 1958.

In 1973, Serpa died at the age of 50 from a heart attack and stroke.

Source: wikipedia.org

  • LiteratureH. Nathan, ed., Ivan Serpa: Pioneering Abstraction in Brazil, exh. cat., New York: Dickinson Roundell Inc., 2012, p. 65 (illustrated)
  • Catalogue Essay“The key problem of Concrete art does not just involve color, but rather its infinite modulations.” Ivan Serpa

    The art critic Frederico Morais considered Ivan Serpa’s Amazônica and Mangueira series of paintings to be undoubtedly Brazilian in their organic sensuality and palette. The Amazônica works were named after their exuberant green and brown hues, while the Mangueira series is largely greens and pinks, the colors of the Mangueira Samba School in Rio de Janeiro. The formal proximity between these two series is significant—it was with the carnival parades organized by Mangueira that artists such as Hélio Oiticica had become associated with throughout the 1960s, bringing these series of works into the context of the contemporaneous enthusiasm for all forms of popular culture. Morais further emphasized how these series marked a return to the constructivist vein within which Serpa had been such a prominent figure from the early 1950s onwards. For Morais, this phase in the artist’s trajectory that began around 1967 would find “original solutions of an optic or geometric character that resulted from a subtle game of poetic spatiality.” This analysis, which dates from the mid-1980s, finds a heightened significance today in our expanding understanding of Pop Art in a global context. Serpa proposes in these series of paintings not only a return to his former constructivist interests, now with a new “Brazilian” palette, but a reinterpretation of the significance of the Neo-Constructivist movements in light of the international rise of mass consumerist culture and the local popular traditions. If art concret proposed precise methods through which art and design could inform society at large, Serpa by the late 1960s was engaging not with the prospect of avant-garde art affecting the masses, but with the very fact.

    Ivan Serpa’s interest in geometric abstraction has been traced back to 1947 when together with fellow artists Almir Mavignier, Abraham Palatnik and the art critic Mario Pedrosa, he participated in the art therapy workshops at the Psychiatric Hospital Engenho de Dentro in Rio de Janeiro. It has been increasingly acknowledged by prominent curators and art critics, such as Paulo Herkenhoff, that the mid-twentieth century rise of geometric abstraction in Brazil had its origins in the experience that these artists had with the work of the patients. A fact that corroborates this argument was Serpa’s early abstract canvases attracting attention during the first edition of the São Paulo Biennial in 1951 when he was awarded the young painter prize therefore contradicting the argument that abstract geometrical painting arrived in Brazil through the sole influence of Max Bill.

    Given the prestige of the Biennial prize, it is perhaps not surprising that a significant group of artists in Rio de Janeiro gathered around Ivan Serpa to form the Grupo Frente around 1953. This was a loosely abstract geometric group whose members would later form the core of the Neoconcrete movement. These included Aluísio Carvão, Lygia Clark, Hélio Oiticica, Lygia Pape, Franz Weissmann amongst others.

    Throughout the 1950s Serpa worked as an artist while also holding a critical role as an art educator. Serpa’s open classes took place at the Museum of Modern Art in Rio de Janeiro, transforming it into a progressive alternative to the then conservative art schools such as the National School of Fine Art (ENBA). Hélio Oiticica’s early work, for example, was very much influenced by Serpa’s teaching— this is particularly evident in Oiticica’s Grupo Frente work and in his subsequent Metaesquemas series where strong compositional associations between the two artists can be found. Very much informed by the increasing interest in art concret in Brazil, particularly following Max Bill’s retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in São Paulo and his international sculpture award at the 1951 São Paulo Biennial, Serpa’s own work in the 1950s was marked by an exploration of rhythmic arrangement of lines within geometrical compositions.

    In 1957 Serpa was awarded the foreign travel prize at the VI National Salon of Modern Art in Rio de Janeiro and he spent two years travelling between Italy and Spain, which perhaps explains why he did not become associated with Neoconcretism in 1959.

    Upon his return to Brazil, Serpa resumed his courses at the Museum of Modern Art in Rio and later participated in exhibitions that are now considered pivotal in the transition between constructivist-oriented trends and the return of figurative tendencies in Brazil such as Opinião 65, which placed artists from France and Brazil side by side, working loosely with tendencies such as New Figuration and Pop Art. During the 1960s Serpa began exploring parallel lines of aesthetic enquiry, including a strongly expressive and figurative mode. The Amazônica series shows the artist reaching a synthesis of these diverse modes of creative production. The constructivist influence returns, yet it is now “softened” by curved lines that recall a Pop and Op aesthetic combined with “tropical” colors, a sign that Serpa was in tune with the radical Tropicalist ideals that began to cause shockwaves in the Brazilian cultural milieu from the late 1960s onwards. The Brazilian themes are in this sense significant as they emphasize a proximity with the emerging idea of Tropicália: a Brazilian answer to international popular culture which had profound effect on the art, theatre, literature and, above all, music.

    In this way, having held a fundamental role in the formation of many significant artists over the period, including Cesar and Hélio Oiticica, from the 1960, these very artists would have an effect on Serpa. The respect Serpa earned from his colleagues and students alike is perhaps best exemplified by artist Antonio Manuel, who acknowledged Serpa’s significance both in statements and art works produced in homage, such as his Clandestina newspaper which held the headline Painter Teaches God to Paint, after a priest’s comment at Serpa’s funeral service in 1973. Perhaps because of his early death, Serpa remains less known outside Brazil, yet in his home country his significance as both artist and educator remains unquestioned.

Source: https://www.phillips.com/detail/ivan-serpa/NY010513/26

Selected Solo Exhibitions

2015

  • Ivan Serpa ,Galerie 1900-2000 ,6e, Paris, France
Selected Group Exhibitions

2017

  • Grupo Frente ,Galerie Lelong & Co, New York ,Chelsea, New York, USA

2015

  • Serpa + Zalszupin ,Bergamin & Gomide ,Sao Paulo, Brazil

2011

  • Cut Construction: Brazilian Geometric Abstraction ,Galeria Raquel Arnaud ,Sao Paulo, Brazil

2008

  • Arte Brasileira no Acervo MAC USP ,Museu de Arte Contemporânea da Universidade de Sao Paulo ,Sao Paulo, Brazil

Ivan Serpa was a Brazilian artist who was born in 1923. Their work was featured in several exhibitions at key galleries and museums, including the Galerie Lelong & Co, New York and the Bergamin & Gomide. Ivan Serpa’s work has been offered at auction multiple times, with realized prices ranging from $715 USD to $230,500 USD, depending on the size and medium of the artwork. Since 2011 the record price for this artist at auction is $230,500 USD for Série Amazonica, N°27, sold at Phillips New York in 2011. Ivan Serpa has been featured in articles for the Art Nexus, the ArtDaily and the ArtDaily. The most recent article is Another Lygia Makes it to MET written by Alberto Barral for the Art Nexus in April 2017. The artist died in 1973.

Artist’s alternative names: Ivan Ferreira Serpa

Source: https://www.mutualart.com/Artist/Ivan-Serpa/E21280768FF02DD5/Biography

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Breakthrough: A conversation with Fernando Cocchiarale about the exhibition “Ruptura” and the foundation of Concrete art

Fernando Cocchiarale artwork
Fernando Cocchiarale artwork

Breakthrough: A conversation with Fernando Cocchiarale about the exhibition “Ruptura” and the foundation of Concrete art

BY CYNTHIA GARCIA

Judith Lauand (1922), Espiral (Spiral), 1956, enamel paint on eucatex, 40 cm diameter.

The exhibition “Ruptura” (Rupture), first presented in New York in 2017, is now in São Paulo at Galeria Luciana Brito, with fifty small to medium-sized artworks by eleven pioneering artists of Brazil’s signature movement, Concrete art.

Geraldo de Barros (1923-1998), Arranjo de Três Formas Semelhantes Dentro de Um Círculo, 1953, enamel paint on Kelmite cardboard, 60 x 60 cm

“Brazil is a romantic country. Concrete art was a movement that needed discipline, and Brazil also needed discipline, a certain character, order, to educate the people. I think that Concretism was important in this sense,” renowned art critic Mario Pedrosa said just months before his death in 1981, in describing why the movement flourished in the country. It also explains the frenzy around Swiss artist and former Bauhaus student Max Bill, who landed in São Paulo in the 1940s and gained guru-like status among a group of young artists who were captivated by the concepts of Concrete art he promoted, as first expressed ten years earlier by Dutch artist Van Doesburg in Paris. Backed by the new theories and with representational art no longer able to answer their issues with the industrial world, Grupo Ruptura (Rupture Group) was founded in 1952 in São Paulo.

Anatol Wladyslaw (1913-2004), Untitled, 1953, gouache on paper, 50,5 x 35 cm.

Concrete art advocated a wholesome revolutionary practice based on Constructivism and Mondrian’s Neoplasticism, wrapped up in the Bauhaus experience. In the words of the group’s mentor Waldemar Cordeiro, “Concrete art synthesizes all modern art tendencies that developed quantitative methods of structuring images based on media arising from progress in mechanics and engineering; it poses an extensive repertoire of image processing using machine language. Quantification in Concrete art, however, does not mean numerical conversion of geometric aspects but instead capturing the digital structure of perceptual analog values. In this respect, Concrete art may be described as more akin to Gestalt psychology than to geometry.”

Hermelindo Fiaminghi (1920-2004), Untitled, 1956, enamel paint on Eucatex, 44,5 x 44,5 cm.

Among the seven original founding members, four were European immigrants fleeing the Nazis: Austrian Lothar Charroux (1912-1987), Hungarian Kazmer Féjer (1923-1989), as well as Anatol Wladyslaw (1913-2004) and Leopoldo Haar (1910-1954), both from Poland. The Brazilian-born artists in the group where Waldemar Cordeiro (1925-1973), Geraldo de Barros (1923-1998), Hermelindo Fiaminghi (1920-2004), Maurício Nogueira Lima (1930-1999) and Luiz Sacilotto (1924-2003). Following the Bauhaus credo, most of them expanded their practices and contributed to the fields of industrial design, architecture and landscape design.

Waldemar Cordeiro (1925-1973), limited edition of aluminum lamp with discs originally designed for his landscape projects, 1957:2018, 54 x 30 x 30 cm, ed:20.

This exhibition also launches a special edition of twenty units of a shrewd modernist 1957 garden lamp with six parallel aluminum disks originally designed by Waldemar Cordeiro for his signature landscape projects. Charismatic and argumentative, Cordeiro was a visionary who died just as his ideas were gaining notoriety outside the intellectual circle. He was the group’s spokesman, author of the Rupture Manifest (1952), and also penned harsh art chronicles published regularly in the mainstream media throughout the 1950s. “The fascination with the machine led to the demise of naturalistic beauty” was his poetic explanation of the advent of Concrete art. His interpretation of its rigor was expressed as, “the precision of art is not a craftsmanship precision, but one of meanings.” But when it came to the dispute with Rio’s rival Neo-Concrete group, Cordeiro lashed out, “[They] have not yet given the qualitative leap that will allow them to state the problem of vanguard art in a straightforward manner,” and to deepen the antagonism with Neo-concrete’s mentor, he whipped, “I no longer doubt Ferreira Gullar is aspiring the impossible: a Concrete art that is no longer concrete.”

Kazmer Féjer (1923-1989), Plexiglass 01, c. 1970, plexiglass cast, 22 x 85 x 35 cm.

This must-see show at Luciana Brito also honors the last two original Concrete artists still living: the only female member, Judith Lauand, now ninety-six years old, and poet Augusto de Campos, eighty-seven, whose contribution to the current event comes in the form of a book with concrete poems hailing his colleagues.

One of South America’s most prominent art experts, Fernando Cocchiarale, wrote the exhibition’s presentation. For more than three decades, the Rio-born scholar, curator and author has been a teacher at PUC-RJ University and at Escola de Artes Visuais do Parque Laje, both in his native town. From 2000 to 2007, he was chief curator of Rio’s MAM, among other important posts in the field of visual arts. In 2013-2014, Cocchiarale co-curated, along with Arlindo Machado and Analívia Cordeiro, the exhibition that won the year’s critics award, “Waldemar Cordeiro: Fantasia Exata” (Exact Fantasy), at Itaú Cultural in São Paulo and in Rio’s Paço Imperial.

Manifesto Ruptura (1952) by Waldemar Cordeiro (1925-1973), poster design by Leopoldo Haar (1910-1954)

Fernando, tell us about the onset of the influential Manifesto Ruptura.
On December 9, 1952, the Museu de Arte Moderna de São Paulo opened the first show of Grupo Ruptura, the pioneering São Paulo branch of the Concretist movement. That day saw the release of the group’s founding document, the “Ruptura Manifesto” by Waldemar Cordeiro, theorist and spokesman for the group’s ideas. This concise text exposed a set of new spatial, chromatic and formal principles with a rigor never before seen in the history of Brazilian art. It conveyed the meaning of the rupture proposed by its signatories Lothar Charoux, Waldemar Cordeiro, Geraldo de Barros, Kazmer Fejer, Leopoldo Haar, Luis Sacilotto and Anatol Wladyslaw, later joined by Hermelindo Fiaminghi, Judith Lauand and Maurício Nogueira Lima.

Leopold Haar (1910-1954), photo document of undated work, 18 x 24 cm.

What did the manifesto advocate?
The manifesto included a list of trends that were the group’s artistic rivals, whose apparent modernity concealed their incomprehension of the new, as they were producing “new forms out of old principles.” These tendencies encompassed “all the varieties and hybrids of naturalism; the mere negation of naturalism, that is, the ‘wrong’ naturalism of children, the insane, the ‘primitive’ artists, the expressionists, the surrealists, etc.; the hedonist non-figurativism spawned by gratuitous taste that seeks the mere excitement of pleasure or displeasure.”

Lothar Charroux (1912-1987), Untitled, 1956, India ink on paper, 34 x 50,8 cm. Courtesy Galeria Luciana Brito

What set apart Grupo Ruptura from other vanguard movement of its day?
The artists of the “Ruptura Manifesto” questioned their contemporary adversary, informal abstractionism, and all the figurative trends that had for centuries dominated Brazilian art. This simultaneity of trends of various historical periods from which they broke away in a single manifesto revealed the limits of the initial modernism in Brazil. Unlike similar movements in Europe, it did not promote a spatial or discursive break away from the principles of classical art, nor did it generate any “ism”—a factor that lent a radical, entirely new and unique sense to the rupture headed up by Cordeiro.

Luiz Sacilotto (1924-2003), Concreção 5837 (Concretion 5837), 1958, enamel paint on aluminum, 50 x 80 cm.

How do you analyze the movement in relation to modernism per se?
Processes of modernization effectively founded in the European paradigm of rupture were very rare. They were exceptions especially if we consider the unfinished experiences of modernization in Latin America, Asia and Africa. The issues conveyed by the group were of another, more profound and radical order: to break away from the colonial past that hindered the effective modernization of Brazilian art and of the country itself.

Mauricio Nogueira Lima (1930-1999), Objeto Rítmico nº 4 (Rythmic Object Nº4), 1953, automotive paint on chipboard sheet, 50 x 60 cm.

What is the contribution of Waldemar Cordeiro, main theorist of the movement?
For two decades Cordeiro’s participation was decisive in consolidating São Paulo and Brazilian vanguards. Founded on the principles proposed by Concrete art, he promoted a rupture from Brazilian figurative modernism of the first half of the twentieth century. He also contributed to the theoretic and practical integration between art, landscaping, urban planning, criticism of art and politics. Not only that, he also engaged himself in the critical debate with the concrete vanguard group from Rio de Janeiro, Grupo Frente, the embryo of Neoconcretism. In the 1960s, Cordeiro  approached the worldwide emergence of Neofigurativism. Between 1968 and 1973, the year he passed away, he dedicated himself mainly to the investigation of computer art.

Waldemar Cordeiro, Untitled, 1952.

To wrap up, what is your view on the legacy of the Grupo Ruptura?
The group’s unprecedented renewal became fundamental in unfolding important repertoires that today constitutes the vast, multifaceted and complex Brazilian contemporary art.

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Maria del Mar YoMePermito.com

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Maria del Mar Yomepermito.com

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¿Qué es Coaching?

El Coaching es un método por el cual un Coach acompaña y guía a una persona para que pueda conseguir sus objetivos, ya sea alcanzar más claridad, autoconfianza o superar obstáculos, de esta manera liberar el potencial del cliente a través de una serie de preguntas poderosas y así se convierta en un observador más efectivo de sí mismo.

El coach no resuelve problemas, sino facilita el crecimiento del coachee para que éste, por sí mismo haga frente a sus desafíos. 

El Coach trabaja con el Coachee (cliente) como un compañero en el trayecto de su transformación.

¿Porqué elegir a Tu Coach Personal?

 En la vida, a menudo surgen dificultades que limitan el progreso de los objetivos que se desean alcanzar, un coach te ayuda a superar esos obstáculos y así poder avanzar. 

La falta de confianza en uno mismo representa un obstáculo a la hora de tomar decisiones acertadas, un coach puede ayudarte a encontrar claridad y dirigirte a un camino más proactivo.

Si deseas gestionar mejor tu tiempo, un coach es perfecto para ayudarte a organizarte.

Un Coach te ayudará a ser consciente de lo que realmente quieres y a encontrar la manera de conseguirlo.

Son muchas las razones que pueden motivarte a elegir a tu Coach Personal ya que en un proceso de coaching vas fortalecido el compromiso con tu propia vida, con tus emociones y mejor relación contigo y tus seres queridos. También te ayudará a explotar todo tu potencial y a resaltar tus cualidades. De esta manera irás creando tu mejor versión.

El crecimiento personal se hace mucho más simple en compañía de un guía que te ayudará afrontar retos, gestionar eficazmente las emociones negativas y los conflictos internos que te pueden paralizar.

¿Porqué hacer Coaching Online?

Vivimos en un mundo donde podemos conectarnos con un solo click y tener acceso a  personas y recursos en cualquier parte del mundo. El internet ha cambiado nuestras vidas creando un mundo de nuevas posibilidades. Gracias a esto, es más fácil conectarse el coach más adecuado, sin importar su ubicación. Las barreras geográficas desaparecen y pueden mantenerse sesiones con personas de todo el mundo. 

Dentro del coaching online pueden encontrarse beneficios como la flexibilidad de horarios y comodidad de trabajar en línea. Podemos adaptarnos al ritmo de vida y las necesidades del cliente, ahorras tiempo, aumenta la posibilidad de reducir costos. 

Otro motivo para hacer tus sesiones de coaching Online es que te proporciona la posibilidad de que seas tú quien escoja un lugar tranquilo y cómodo, estas características dependerán de tus preferencias. Permitiendo adecuar tu espacio como quieras.

¿Cuánto dura un proceso de Coaching?

Un proceso de coaching personal no tiene una duración determinada, no hay una respuesta fija, todo depende de cómo es la persona y cuál sea su objetivo. Hay casos muy concretos que con pocas sesiones es suficiente, y otras que por los cambios que se desean realizar el proceso dura varios meses. Además que el cliente o Coachee tiene la potestad de finalizar el proceso de Coaching cuanto desee, con previa notificación al Coach Profesional.

¿A quién va dirigido el Coaching Online?

Un proceso de coaching está dirigido a todas aquellos personas que estén dispuestos abrir su corazón y su mente para escucharse a sí mismos, que deseen alcanzar un objetivo, o que estén viviendo una situación que quieran cambiar. 

El objetivo del Coach de Vida se relaciona con el desarrollo personal (calidad de vida, autoestima, autoconocimiento, etc.)

El compromiso y la sinceridad es fundamental, ya que el resultado del proceso de coaching sólo es posible si el cliente acciona y  llevando acabo lo que aprende en las sesiones.

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CONCRETE ART

Concrete art, Constructivism, Constructivism
arte concreto
arte concreto

CONCRETE ART

In 1930, Dutch artist Theo Van Doesburg and four of his friends openly declared war on every kind of impressionism, sensibility and subjectivity in art. The concrete art group and the magazine Art Concret, which they founded in Paris, argued for rational, universal art “entirely conceived and shaped by the mind”, without “receiving anything from nature’s formal properties, or from sensuality or sentimentality”1.

Heir to Mondrian’s neoplasticism and to the principles promoted by the De Stijl movement, concrete art sought “absolute clarity” through a “simple, visually controllable” structure that signified nothing beyond itself. The emotional impulses perceptible in traditional abstraction were excluded in favour of a logical composition based on predetermined mathematical principles.

Concrete art’s Zurich home crystallised a few years later when Max Bill (1908-1994)—influenced by his studies at the Bauhaus and his friendship with members of the Abstraction-Création group in Paris—drew up his own theory on concrete art. Bill advocated a rational art, developed according to its own rules and integrating everyday life. Like the artists of the Allianz association, which Bill joined in 1937, he favoured the use of neutral, geometric, easily understandable shapes.

These Zurich concrete artists—including Richard Paul Lohse (1902-1988), Leo Leuppi, Walter Bodmer, Verena Loewensberg, Camille Graeser (1892-1980), Gottfried Honegger (1917-2016) and Sophie Tauber-Arp—all showed the same predilection for skilfully calculated geometric arrangements. In that vein, Lohse opted for modular compositions in which all elements are mutually supportive, independent and equal; Graeser favoured systematic composition principles like addition, rotation or progression, while Honegger ended up entrusting the production of mathematical calculations to a computer. The visual effect is that of an almost rhythmic chromatic polyphony, which seems to be articulated—as in the works of Fritz Glarner (1899-1972)—according to warm/cool, bright/dark and neutral/intense relationships.

For the artists of concrete art, the work primarily designates a balanced, coherent whole, whose elements are defined by their relationships with one another within the image. These relationships very often become symbols of an ideal, democratic organization, based on all individuals benefiting from the same rights and freedoms.  

[1] Carlsund, Doesbourg, Hélion, Tutundjian, Wantz, « Base de la peinture concrète », in Art Concret, n°1, 1930, Paris.

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Bellas Artes

Cubeman covid19-protection
Cubeman covid19-protection
Bellas Artes - Pintura
La pintura es una de las Bellas Artes.

¿Qué son las Bellas Artes?

Las Bellas Artes refieren a las principales formas de realización artística o representación estética cultivadas históricamente por la humanidad, y consideradas formas “puras” de arte que emplean técnicas, materiales y procedimientos diferentes entre sí. Cada una de las siete, no obstante, engloba una multitud de prácticas, estilos y tendencias reconocidas.

Estas artes forman parte tradicionalmente de los elementos duraderos y trascendentales de la humanidad: aquellos considerados dignos de un lugar central en la alta cultura, tanto como documentos o testimoniales de una época, una forma de sentir, o como símbolos que atañen a una concepción específica del mundo y de la existencia.

Tradicionalmente se reconocen seis formas de las Bellas Artes: la pintura, la música, la literatura, la danza y la escultura. Posteriormente se añadieron el cine (el séptimo arte), la arquitectura y la narrativa gráfica o arte secuencial (el noveno arte).

Hay que decir que el concepto de Bellas Artes está vinculado con la idea del museo y del arte histórico, y no tanto del arte contemporáneo, que ha puesto en jaque o en cuestionamiento dicho concepto. Hoy en día el arte se contempla desde perspectivas diversas, dado que la noción tradicional de Bellas Artes ha sido acusada a menudo de ser etnocéntrica (privilegia la concepción europea del arte) y culturalmente excluyente.

Historia de las Bellas Artes

Los antiguos griegos estudiaron la representación artística (sobre todo Aristóteles) y la comprendían en dos categorías oponibles: las superiores y las menores. Las primeras eran más elevadas, poéticamente poderosas y trascendentales, mientras que las segundas eran más vulgares y sencillas. Esta distinción se suponía a partir de los sentidos empleados para percibir la belleza (vista y oído eran los sentidos superiores).

Sin embargo, el término Bellas Artes se empleó propiamente a partir del siglo XVIII para agrupar a las prácticas artísticas valoradas en la época y tratar de unificar las numerosas teorías que había sobre la belleza, el estilo o el gusto. Inicialmente se incluía entre ellas la declamación y la oratoria, pero fueron sustituidas en el tiempo.

¿Cómo se clasifican las Bellas Artes?

Bellas Artes - Música
La música busca alcanzar la belleza mediante ritmos, melodías y sonidos.

La división clásica de las Bellas Artes se establece a partir de los materiales que usa y del modo en que los utiliza, de la siguiente manera:

  • Arquitectura. Emplea los diversos materiales de construcción para confeccionar viviendas, edificaciones y espacios urbanos que sean hermosos y funcionales, estéticos y habitables al mismo tiempo.
  • Danza. Emplea el cuerpo humano y el ritmo musical como una forma de expresión de contenidos artísticos.
  • Escultura. Emplea la piedra, la arcilla o diversos materiales sólidos para lograr representaciones artísticas tridimensionales, ya sean figurativas o abstractas.
  • Pintura. Emplea pigmentos obtenidos de diversas fuentes naturales y artificiales, para representar estéticamente la realidad mediante el color y las formas sobre lienzos y otras superficies.
  • Música. Mediante diversos instrumentos construidos por el ser humano, busca alcanzar la belleza mediante ritmos, melodías y sonidos armónicamente orquestados para suscitar una experiencia estética en el escucha.
  • Literatura. Empleando el lenguaje como materia prima, compone relatos, representaciones teatrales o descripciones poéticas que luego pueden leerse y disfrutarse estéticamente.
  • Cine. Empleando instrumentos técnicos complejos, capta la luz, el sonido y el tiempo mismo en secuencias de eventos simulados o reales que componen un relato, un discurso o una representación audiovisual de la realidad.

Características de las Bellas Artes

Las Bellas Artes son diversas entre sí, pero suponen un conjunto uniforme de características:

  • Aspiran a la belleza. Del modo que sea y a través de las técnicas y materiales que sean, pero las Bellas Artes buscan comunicar una experiencia específica de lo bello, lo armónico, lo trascendente o lo profundo.
  • Son universales. En principio, las obras de arte tendrían que ser apreciables por toda la humanidad, sin importar las particularidades de su proveniencia, religión o sexo.
  • Son duraderas. Las obras de arte deberían durar en el tiempo y poder comunicar su contenido a las generaciones venideras, ya sea en museos, reproducciones o soportes especializados para ello.

Última edición: 24 de junio de 2020. Cómo citar: “Bellas Artes”. Autor: María Estela Raffino. De: Argentina. Para: Concepto.de. Disponible en: https://concepto.de/bellas-artes/. Consultado: 13 de julio de 2020.

Fuente: https://concepto.de/bellas-artes/#ixzz6S87GwhZi

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The Fantastic Four: Zurich Concrete and Special Friends

Richard Paul Lohse
Richard Paul Lohse

The Fantastic Four: Zurich Concrete and Special Friends

BY QUINN LATIMER

Richard Paul Lohse Fünfzehn systematische Farbreihen innerhalb eines symetrischen Systems (Fifteen Systematic Colour Sequences Within a Symmetrical System), 1950–65 Oil on canvas

The traces, shadows and aftershocks of Concrete art – and, in particular, the Zurich Concrete school – have been seen and felt everywhere in contemporary Swiss art production, with its emphasis on hard-edged, geometric abstraction. The term ‘Concrete Art’, coined in 1930 by Theo Van Doesburg in a manifesto written for the first issue of Art Concret, defined and delineated a departure from realism, nature and symbolism. Its reductionist principles of line, colour and plane organized into austere, systemic wholes – themselves copped and refined from the Bauhaus and De Stijl – were meant to ‘represent abstract thoughts in a sensuous and tangible form’, as Max Bill, the movement’s ringleader, once wrote. Concrete art was intended to create new ‘object[s] for intellectual and spiritual use’.

If such sincere proclamations sound a tinny Utopian alarm today, the kind of reduced, geometrically-prone art they proposed remains insistently de rigueur, from the Neo-Geo antics of French Switzerland (led by godfather John Armleder) to the Northern Swiss gangs of younger Basel and Zurich-based artists, who increasingly process Concrete art’s methods through the filters of digitization or consumerism. Consequently, the exhibition ‘The Fantastic Four: Zurich Concrete and Special Friends’ did not come as a particular surprise. At Haus Konstruktiv, the ‘Fantastic Four’ of the Marvel comic from whence this somewhat cloying title came, are reconfigured as the superheroes of Zurich Concrete: Bill, Camille Graeser, Verena Loewensberg and Richard Paul Lohse. The ‘special friends’ comprised a motley, intergenerational group of contemporary artists – among them, Saâdane Afif, Bruno Jakob and Shirana Shahbazi – whose radically disparate production can still be located, at times, in Concrete art’s shadow.

Haus Konstruktiv’s permanent collection is notably broad, and the exhibition mostly rode its able shoulders. Graeser’s lucid oil paintings on canvas, with their grounding in graphic design – like many of the Zurich Concretes, he worked in all areas of design: furniture, architecture, advertising – bookend his career. Gestoppte Rotation (Stopped Rotation, 1943) proved prescient of the geometric, abstract photography movement of today, while the funny, poignant Drei Farben: drei gleiche Volumen, 1/12 grün bewegt (Three Colours: Three Equal Volumes, 1/12 Shifted Green, 1975/76), featured one of his horizontal bands of colour attempting to make a break for it.

Loewensberg’s wonderful paintings from the late 1960s and ’70s, meanwhile, look like radio frequencies or lighting bolts swathed in colour, conjuring computer approximations of Clyfford Still’s (more famous) drippy abstractions from the same period. Bill’s revelatory painting of powdery pastel hues blossoming from a spiral, Betonung einer spirale (Accentuation of a Spiral, 1947), however, took the award for sheer timelessness.

In the wake of such works, the contemporary inclusions were somewhat disappointing and the choices difficult to interpret – surely there are other Swiss-related artists whose work follows Concrete art more explicitly – but some of the pairings were nevertheless inspired. Best known for her photorealist, figurative murals rendered by Iranian sign painters, Shahbazi showed large geometric works that were both lovely and surprising. If Killian Rüthemann’s site-specific installations – playfully dark retorts to geometric abstraction’s legacy – fit perfectly, Afif’s punk-ish performance documentation was less expected. Still, Concrete art’s intentions to unite art and life in all its ably designed forms bore this contribution out. And should the spectator have persisted in the misguided thinking that this Swiss movement remained regional, there was one scene-stealing side project: a series of sketches, drawings and paintings by Fritz Glarner for the famous 1960s-era Rockefeller Dining Room in New York. The artist, who emigrated to the US in 1936, designed the room for Nelson Rockefeller himself, bringing Zurich Concrete – and Glarner’s own brand of Mondrian-inflected wit, with its jam of flat, hard-edged geometric forms tricked out in blue, red and yellow – to the most American and yet international of settings.

Quinn Latimer is a writer and contributing editor of frieze. Her most recent book is Like a Woman: Essays, Readings, Poems (Sternberg Press, 2017).

Richard Paul Lohse was a Swiss painter and graphic artist and one of the main representatives of the concrete and constructive art movements. Lohse was born in Zürich in 1902. His wish to study in Paris was thwarted due to his difficult economic circumstances.

Born: September 13, 1902, Zürich, Switzerland

Died: September 16, 1988, Zürich, Switzerland

Art forms: Painting

Associated periods or movements: Concrete art

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