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SIMBOLISMO

SIMBOLISMO

El Simbolismo es la tendencia artística que se vale de símbolos para buscar el conocimiento intelectivo y la expresión conceptual.

El simbolismo por antonomasia es un movimiento francés del siglo XIX. Entienden el mundo como un misterio y el arte como un sueño, lo que les relaciona con la revelación freudiana de las leyes de la experiencia psíquica, que tiene como consecuencia la búsqueda de las leyes del arte mismo en el estudio de los objetos producidos por los pueblos primitivos. De esta investigación se nutre la mayor parte del arte de los últimos años del siglo XIX. Entre sus grandes figuras puede citarse a Gustave Moreau, Puvis de Chavannes y Odilon Redon, siendo su máximo representante Gauguin. Fueron sus precendentes los nazarenos, los prerrafaelitas y William Blake.

Propugnan una pintura de contenido poético contraria a los valores del pragmatismo y el materialismo propios de la industrialización y reivindican la búsqueda interior de verdades universales.

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Pérez Art Museum Miami

FRANCISCO CERÓN/EL ALMA DE LA CIUDAD

FRANCISCO CERÓN/EL ALMA DE LA CIUDAD
Por Dra. Milagros Bello

Francisco Cerón es un artista multidisciplinario que va desde la pintura a la fotografía, pasando por el arte digital, la escultura y la instalación, desplegando una visión socio antropológica que capta la vida humana en sus múltiples dimensiones. Toma prestados temas de la vida cotidiana para demarcarlos visualmente hacia sus propios fines.
Alineado con el “digitalismo” contemporáneo, condensa códigos visuales que aluden a los seres humanos y sus entornos desde multi perspectivas culturales y sociales. Ceron es un cazador de imágenes de la sociedad contemporánea, camina por el mundo con un enfoque visual agudo, con una mirada alerta, que se concentra penetrante en los quehaceres humanos y sus localizaciones.
La creación del artista se dirige a la ciudad y a sus principales signos y movimientos. Ceron se apodera del corazón de la zona, del centro neurálgico del lugar, de los trasfondos del sitio, produciendo en su obra un inextricable entretejido de imágenes sobrecargada de alusiones sociales. El artista resucita el espíritu de los estilos Pop y Neo-Pop, a través de su hiper producción masiva de imágenes colectivas, pero con una sensibilidad hacia el factor humano y el núcleo intrínseco de la ciudad. Se acerca al Pop, pero con otro tinte, con otro abordaje, que, aunque retomando los lugares comunes de la ciudad los amalgama con figuras de referencia humana y cultural, creando un distintivo sistema representacional. El núcleo de la obra no lo conforma la mera infiltración de prototipos de consumo colectivo, sino la reflexión y conexión con un significado social más profundo. Lo popular se ve elevado a una política de la imagen en la que domina un interludio de segmentos singulares de orden personal.
Ceron como diseñador gráfico en el mundo comercial, ha transformado inteligentemente su profesión hacia una reflexión artística profunda sobre la sociedad. Formado en el vocabulario visual del comercialismo, el artista ha logrado traspasar con éxito al ámbito del arte de comentario socio antropológico. Su obra se convierte en un compuesto de significantes puros de los lugares inanimados de la ciudad, como códigos de calles, semáforos, puentes, medios de transporte, monumentos urbanos, edificios y calles emblemáticas, plazas, que funcionan como conjuntos de imágenes-paradigma de la mentalidad colectiva, pero que al análisis detenido muestran un segundo nivel de significado, que hacen reflexionar sobre lo humano, lo social y lo existencial. El método de Ceron cambia del POP o Neo Pop, sus obras digitales se producen a partir de fotografías de orden social que el artista ha capturado en su deambular inquisitivo de los sitios que visita. Son fotografías que develan la intimidad más interna de la ciudad, que se focalizan en las luchas diarias, y los movimientos y acciones de los habitantes de estos lugares; transeúntes, vendedores ambulantes, seres que caminan, que se encuentran, que conversan, que intercambian, son captados en instantes imprevistos. El artista recopila minuciosamente los trajines y ejercicios humanos de la ciudad y luego los asume como resonancia visual en la obra digital. Esta es la pauta base de la que parte este creador. En su propuesta artística, está la obra digital y le complementa a manera de instalación, el conjunto de fotografías que le sirvieron de sustento productivo visual.

En cada obra digital se observa, siguiendo la pauta POP, una amalgama dinámica de figuras planas silueteadas, colocadas en el centro, el cual es siempre el punto turbulento focal del cual emerge el conjunto, proliferándose en radiales hacia afuera. A nivel compositivo, Ceron establece un esquema de trabajo visual; abigarra las imágenes en una agitada espiral de figuras anamorfosicas, que se entretejen se incrustan unas a las otras, se colapsan, se reintegran, se recomponen, creando sorpresivas combinaciones referenciales. El artista entrecasa magistralmente cada figura en un armonioso y a la vez caótico conjunto. El espectador descubre detalles conocidos y nuevos signos inesperados que surgieron de las pesquisas visuales del artista. Cada obra crea un mundo inventivo imaginario que es la ciudad conocida y una que descubre nuevos resquicios jamás vistos. La obra muestra no sólo fragmentos sígnicos de los lugares turísticos, sino las estructuras y funciones de las zonas. Cada pieza articula subjetividad y objetividad en un solo momento perceptivo.

Francisco Ceron-911
Francisco Ceron-911

SERIES
SERIE USA

9/11. MEMORIAL NY, USA, una obra de orientación sociopolítica, que ensambla signos referenciales al ataque terrorista y destrucción del World Trade Center de Nueva York. Fue inspirada al artista de cuando viviendo en USA, presencio de primera mano la conmoción política y social del histórico momento. En el plano frontal, posa una paloma de mirada severa; a la manera de un halo idealizado, aparecen puntos-pixeles, en una cita a Lichtenstein, contorneando precariamente su impositivo cuerpo. A su lado izquierdo, se lee 9/11 Memorial en homenaje a los muertos. Del lado derecho, signos gráficos de “policía”, “bomberos”, “reporta an emergency”, aluden a la crisis, al horror y al caos del ataque. A través de un chaleco salvavidas en el plano medio, se percibe entrecortado el skyline de Nueva York, quebrado en dos colores; el fondo muestra un horizonte de edificios en negro, y un cielo alucinado de amarillos y de puntos – pixeles, característica cita a Lichstenstein. A través de signos gráficos, la paloma, el salvavidas y los colores encendidos el artista se conecta con la conmoción de la ciudad y su agudo estado de desequilibrio.

Francisco Ceron Coca cola
Francisco Ceron Coca cola

MUNDO COCA-COLA, ATLANTA, USA, muestra en el centro el gran arquetipo de la botella de Coca-Cola como emblema del consumismo americano, con una corona triunfal conformada por botellas de diferentes ediciones históricas de la bebida, en contrapeso aparece un aviso de “prohibidas bebidas abiertas en esta exhibición” como señal reguladora de los lugares, lo que es un rasgo característico en las obras de Ceron, como evocaciones a la autoridad y sus controles
Imponente y protagónica la botella se proyecta como una efigie de poder sobre el trasfondo de la ciudad de Atlanta, incrustado todo en un cielo rojo dinamizado por círculos y puntos-pixeles en gradientes cromáticos. La obra surge como reflexión social, de los poderes del consumismo en la sociedad americana, sobre todo después de visitar la sede de la empresa en Atlanta.

Disney by Ceron

DISNEY, ORLANDO, USA, alude a la fantasía estereotipada de felicidad que venden los parques Disney y que subyace a la esperanza social en la mentalidad americana. En el centro sobresalen, a la manera de pareja imaginaria, los sonrientes caracteres Mickey y Minnie, encerrados en su burbuja celestial; Dumbo el elefante volador se viene en un escorzo forzado hacia el plano frontal del espectador. En la parte superior el castillo de Dysney, el Barco de los Piratas, Los Siete Enanitos, y letreros sobre peligro de cocodrilos, muestran un panorama de los delirantes contextos que ofrece el parque como ciudad de diversión. En una crítica subtextual, en la cual el artista alude al espíritu del “American Way of Life”.

Sobe

SOBE (South Beach), USA, propone una amalgama delirante de segmentos y entrecruzamientos de la playa Sur de Miami, como prototipos de la imagen-venta que se ofrece al turista. La obra se enmarca en una lujuriosa luz cromática de altos contrastes, que transfieren evocaciones del sol y de la playa; se ven desde edificios del Art Deco Americano, las palmeras típicas de la zona, señales de calles famosas, signos regulatorios del aparcamiento, la bicicleta color flamingo, transporte básico del vecindario, y la típica caseta de salvavidas policromada con la bandera de América. Todo se estructura en un amasijo reverberante de figuras encajadas unas en las otras, y que se proyectan contra una línea de horizonte de aguas turquesas y amarillosas arenas; el cielo es una explosión de formas pixeladas multicolores y al centro del plano medio, un gran circulo solar envuelve el conjunto. Ceron se apropia de la imaginería turística reconstituyéndola en una singular mixtura de marca, como paradigma del consumo masivo.

Serenissima

SERIE EUROPA
LA SERENISSSIMA,
es una obra de poética visual con un singular abordaje barroco, que hace homenaje a la ciudad de Venecia, sus aguas, y su cultura. En el plano central aparece la mitad de una góndola desplazándose frontalmente hacia el espectador. La nave aparece abarrotada de señales direccionales, – Oporto, Padova, Trieste, Belluno, – como indicadores de kilometrajes de distancia y de los traspasos entre lo acuático veneciano y lo terrestre circundante. En la parte frontal, aparecen banderillas de Taxi, señales funcionales de los sofisticados servicios de tránsito de la laguna. En primer plano una máscara dorada alude al Carnaval de Venecia y a la comedia del arte. En el trasfondo, domina la monumental imagen de la Torre del Reloj de San Marcos, o “la Torre del Reloj del Moro”, como emblema ineludible para el turista. El cielo, como en otras obras, se pixela y se contrasta entre rojos y amarillos. El skyline es una línea lejana de horizonte de históricas casas e iglesias Venecianas. Ceron “vende” la imagen turística de Venecia en un amalgamiento frenético de imágenes contrapuestas. La composición barroca crea una tumultuosa percepción invasiva, que capta la dinámica de esta ciudad dominada no solo por las aguas, sino también por una turística excesiva.


SERIE COLOMBIA
PUERTO RESISTENCIA.CALI,
de profunda orientación sociopolítica, la obra alude al estallido social ocurrido en Cali entre abril y julio de 2021, que el artista vivió de primera mano.
Se observa en el centro, una monumental escultura en forma de antebrazo basada en el monumento al Holocausto de Miami y que representa la mano de Kay Kimi Krachi, dios maya de la batalla. En la mano una pancarta con la palabra “Resistir”. La pieza terminada en coloraturas sanguíneas muestra fotografías de los caídos en este sitio de concentraciones sociales y de protesta. Ceron resignifica artísticamente un evento de orden social que repercutió en todos los niveles de Colombia. Esta obra revela la sensibilidad social del artista hacia su entorno, y un convenimiento político social, también mostrado en su obra 9/1. MEMORIAL NY, USA, Dentro del arte contemporáneo, Ceron propone una cadena de significantes culturales y de la Humanidad que esconde una sutil, pero acida critica al consumismo.


Dra. Milagros Bello
Curadora y Crítica de Arte
Miembro de la Asociación Internacional de Críticos de Arte

Perez Art Museum PAMM
Pérez Art Museum Miami

DEBORAH RAMIREZ MIAMI ART WRITER

Deborah Ramirez is a music writer, blogger, media consultant and former newspaper editor. She has a special love for all forms of roots music, from Latin jazz and salsa to blues, zydeco and Americana. She has interviewed musicians as varied as Eddie Palmieri, Willie Colon, Johnny Winter and Joe Cocker, and her work has appeared in The Miami Herald, The Sun Sentinel, The Chicago Tribune and The Los Angeles Times, among other publications. She previously served as the executive editor of El Sentinel, Florida’s largest Spanish-language weekly newspaper and was a member of the Sun Sentinel Editorial Board. Before moving to South Florida in 1992, she worked as an assistant city editor at the San Juan Star in Puerto Rico. Deborah is also involved in theater production. In 2018, she helped promote the Off-Broadway musical “Unexpected Joy,” co-written by Bill Russell and Janet Hood and is currently working on several theater projects. Deborah has a master’s degree from Columbia University School of Journalism and a bachelor’s degree from the University of Puerto Rico. She is fluent in Spanish and English.

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Pérez Art Museum Miami

Silvia Karman Cubiñá

Silvia Karman Cubiñá
Silvia Karman Cubiñá

Director and Chief Curator, The Bass Museum of Art, Miami Beach

SILVIA KARMAN CUBIÑÁ is the Executive Director and Chief Curator, Bass Museum of Art, Miami Beach in 2008. Previously, she was the Director of The Moore Space, Miami, from 2002-2008. In the past, she held the position of Adjunct Curator at inova, the Institute of Visual Arts; University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee; and at The Mexican Museum in San Francisco and the Cuban Museum of Art in Miami. She was the Puerto Rico commissioner to the 1997 Bienal de Sao Paolo. She has curated numerous exhibitions, lectured extensively and participated in grant panels and award selection committees, including serving as a juror for the Guggenheim Museum’s Hugo Boss Award for 2006 and juror at the Bienal de Lyon in 2008. In 2007, she was a finalist for the Walter Hopps Award for Curatorial Achievement and was a fellow in the Center for Curatorial Leadership (CCL) fellowship program. Ms. Cubiñá currently serves on the Knight Foundation National Arts Advisory Board and on the Board of Directors of the AAMD American Alliance of Art Museum Directors. In 2012, Ms. Cubiñá was awarded the distinction of Chevalier de l’ordre des arts et lettres by the French Ministry of Culture.

“My CCL experience gave me more than managerial and administrative skills, it allowed me access to successful museum professionals and board members and their experiences. Ultimately, it enabled me to own the idea of being a museum director.

Who is The Bass Museum of Art

MISSION STATEMENT

The Bass, Miami Beach’s contemporary art museum, creates connections between international contemporary art and the museum’s diverse audiences. The Bass shares the power of contemporary art through experiences that excite, challenge and educate.

ABOUT THE BASS

The Bass is Miami Beach’s contemporary art museum. Focusing on exhibitions of international contemporary art, The Bass presents mid-career and established artists reflecting the spirit and international character of Miami Beach. The Bass seeks to expand the interpretation of contemporary art by incorporating disciplines of contemporary culture, such as design, fashion and architecture, into the exhibition program.  The exhibition program encompasses a wide range of media and artistic points of view that bring new thought to the diverse cultural context of Miami Beach.

Central to the museum’s mission, The Bass maintains a vigorous education program for lifelong learning and visitors of all ages. The Bass IDEAS education initiative uses art as a catalyst for creativity and positive growth, especially in the area of early childhood education. The active school program led by the City of Miami Beach called STEAM+, takes The Bass IDEAS off-site by engaging children in Miami-Dade County Public Schools and integrating arts education into the curriculum.

HISTORY

The Bass Museum of Art opened in 1964 through the donation of a private collection by John and Johanna Bass to the City of Miami Beach. The museum opened in what was formerly the Miami Beach Public Library and Art Center, a 1930s Art Deco building designed by Russell Pancoast, grandson of Miami Beach pioneer John Collins. The building itself already had a rich history on Miami Beach as the first public exhibition space for art in South Florida, and was placed on the National Register in 1978.

In 2001, the original museum building was renovated, and a new wing, designed by renowned architect Arata Isozaki, was added to house galleries, offices and a museum shop. The new galleries gave the museum a total of 16,000 square feet of exhibition space, essential for the presentation of temporary exhibitions and continued growth.

In 2009, The Bass experienced another wave of institutional growth as it consolidated its governance in a 501c3 non-profit corporation, hired a new director and developed a new board. The museum re-focused its mission and programming to reflect the new development of Miami Beach as an art destination, catering to the evolving and diverse nature of Miami Beach residents and tourists.

By 2017, The Bass concluded a comprehensive transformation and reopened to the public on October 29, 2017. Again working with architects Arata Isozaki and David Gauld, the renovation expanded the internal structure to create an almost 50 percent increase in programmable space, including four new galleries, a museum store and cafe, and a designated education facility to better serve expanded programs and increased attendance.

BOARD OF DIRECTORS

  • CHAIRMAN George Lindemann
  • TREASURER Clara Bullrich
  • SECRETARY Laura Paresky Gould
  • MEMBERS
  • Adriana Abascal
  • Barbara Becker
  • Olga Blavatnik
  • Criselda Breene
  • Trudy Cejas
  • Michael Collins
  • Brian Ehrlich
  • Christina Getty
  • José Ramón González
  • Lisa Heiden-Koffler
  • Alina T. Hudak
  • Doug Kimmelman
  • Diane Lieberman
  • Pamela Liebman
  • David Martin
  • Ariel Penzer Milgroom
  • Tracy Wilson Mourning
  • Thomas C. Murphy
  • Dan Och
  • Inés Rivero
  • Alisa Romano
  • Ali Scharf-Matlick
  • Oscar Seikaly
  • Tatyana Silva
  • Cathy Vedovi
The Bass Museum of Art

2100 Collins Avenue
Miami Beach, FL 33139
305. 673. 7530

MEDIA CONTACT
Sabrina Anico, Communications Director
[email protected]

Perez Art Museum PAMM
Pérez Art Museum Miami

New Perspectives in Latin American Art

Hélio Oiticica. Metaesquema. 1959
Hélio Oiticica. Metaesquema. 1959. Gouache on board. 19 7/8 × 26 3/4″ (50.5 × 68 cm). The Museum of Modern Art. Purchased with funds given by Patricia Phelps de Cisneros in honor of Paulo Herkenhoff, 1997. © 2008 Projeto Hélio Oiticica

New Perspectives in Latin American Art, 1930 2006: Selections from a Decade of Acquisitions

Nov 21, 2007–Feb 25, 2008

MoMA

  • MoMA, Floor 3, Exhibition GalleriesThe Paul J. Sachs Drawings Galleries
  • MoMA, Floor 2, Exhibition GalleriesThe Paul J. Sachs Prints and
    Illustrated Books Galleries

This exhibition presents some two hundred works by Latin American artists that have been added to the collection over the past ten years. The works on view embrace several artistic mediums and comprises a variety of styles, from early modernism and geometric abstraction to informalism and conceptual art.

New Perspectives in Latin American Art surveys the wide range of these recent acquisitions and features both historical and contemporary Latin American artists, including Joaquín Torres-García, Alejandro Otero, Hélio Oiticica, Lygia Clark, Lygia Pape, Carmen Herrera, Geraldo de Barros, Leo Matiz, Willys de Castro, León Ferrari, Gego, Gerd Leufert, Mira Schendel, Waltercio Caldas, Anna Maria Maiolino, Victor Grippo, Guillermo Kuitca, Arturo Herrera, Gabriel Orozco, Carlos Garaicoa, and Santiago Cucullu.

The exhibition is organized by Luis Pérez-Oramas, The Estrellita Brodsky Curator of Latin American Art.

MoMA PRESENTS AN EXHIBITION OF LATIN AMERICAN AND CARIBBEAN ART
ADDED TO THE COLLECTION OVER THE PAST TEN YEARS
Exhibition Includes Over 200 Works of Art, Comprising Paintings, Sculptures, Drawings,
Prints, Photographs, and Media Works
New Perspectives in Latin American Art, 1930–2006:
Selections from a Decade of Acquisitions
The Paul J. Sachs Prints and Illustrated Books Galleries, Second Floor, and
The Paul J. Sachs Drawings Galleries, Third Floor
November 21, 2007–February 25, 2008

New Perspectives in Latin American Art, 1930–2006:
Selections from a Decade of Acquisitions presents some 200 works by Latin American artists
that have been added to the collection over the past ten years. Including drawings, illustrated
books, media works, paintings, photographs, prints, and sculptures, the exhibition embraces a
diversity of artistic mediums and comprises a variety of styles. New Perspectives in Latin
American Art emphasizes MoMA’s sharpened focus on Latin American acquisitions since 1996, and
covers periods and artists that were overlooked in the past, offering a more accurate view of the
broad and varied range that exists in Latin American modern and contemporary art.
The exhibition is organized by Luis Pérez-Oramas, The Estrellita Brodsky Curator of Latin
American Art, The Museum of Modern Art, and will be on view from November 21, 2007 through
February 25, 2008, in The Paul J. Sachs Prints and Illustrated Books Galleries, Second Floor, and
The Paul J. Sachs Drawings Galleries, Third Floor, as well as in the hallways and the stairway
between the two floors.
The selection of works in the exhibition encompasses a chronological timeframe between
1930 and 2006—parallel to the Museum’s lifespan. Works in the show are organized by themes,
stylistic relationships, and visual analogies to one another, not necessarily by chronology or
movement. The oldest work, Color Structure (1930), is a painting by Joaquín Torres-García
(Uruguay), and the most recent one, Architectonic vs. HR (2006), is a print series by Santiago
Cucullu (Argentina). The entire repertoire of certain artists will be presented through prints,
drawings, and three-dimensional objects, including the works of León Ferrari (Argentina) and Mira
Schendel (Brazil)—two artists to be featured in a 2009 MoMA exhibition titled León Ferrari and
Mira Schendel: Written Paintings/Objects of Silence.
For the first time in the history of the Museum, the full array of movements and artistic
mediums associated with early Constructivist trends in Latin America are on display in a selection
of seminal works. Included in these galleries are works by Joaquín Torres-García (Uruguay),
Gyula Kosice (Argentina), Hélio Oiticica (Brazil), Lygia Clark (Brazil), Sérgio Camargo (Brazil),
Willys de Castro (Brazil), Gego (Venezuela), Gerd Leufert (Venezuela), Alejandro Otero
(Venezuela), Jesús Rafael Soto (Venezuelan), and Carmen Herrera (Cuba).
Mr. Pérez-Oramas explains, “This exhibition comes at a time of momentum in Latin
American initiatives in the Museum, created through the newly established Latin American and
Caribbean Fund and generous endowments and donations that have enabled new curatorial and
research positions and projects in the field. Furthermore, it renews a tradition of presenting Latin
American acquisitions that was established by Alfred H. Barr, Jr., in the early 1940s.”
While some of the artists whose works are featured in the show, such as Lygia Clark
and Hélio Oiticica, are known internationally, others are completely new to U.S. audiences.
Meaningful connections can be made, for instance, between Neo-Constructivists such as Oiticica
and Kosice, and the current interest among contemporary artists in territoriality, architecture,
construction, and the phenomenology of time—as seen in the works of Victor Grippo (Argentina),
Marco Maggi (Uruguay), Eugenio Dittborn (Chile), Los Carpinteros (Cuba), and Rivane
Neuenschwander (Brazil).
The earliest work in the exhibition, Joaquín Torres-García’s Construction in White and
Black (1938), belongs to a series of gridded, bichromatic, abstract compositions made between
1935 and the early 1940s. In this work, irregular, geometric forms evoke primal architectonic
structures, and the dramatic contrast between light and shadow on the many planes creates an
effect of depth and volume. The painting reflects the artist’s deep engagement with the
indigenous art and architecture of the Americas and, in particular, his interest in Incan stonework.
The strong shading in each rectangular compartment gives the impression of stacked blocks,
visually mimicking Incan masonry.
Alejandro Otero’s series Ortogonales (Collages) 1–10, (1951–52) is among the earliest
examples of nonobjective abstraction in the Americas. These works were the precursor to Otero’s
monumental murals for the City University in Caracas, one of the most important regional projects
of the mid-twentieth century, and the inspiration for the artist’s late series Colorythms and
Tablones. Inspired by Piet Mondrian’s Broadway Boogie Woogie (1942–43), which is also in
MoMA’s collection, the grid of colored lines in Ortogonales is a dynamic structure that seems to
have a visual existence beyond the two-dimensional structure of conventional painting.
Lygia Clark’s Poetic Shelter (1960) is one of a series of movable metal sculptures titled
Bichos (Critters) that make reference to animals and organic structures. Sundial (1960), another
Clark sculpture in the same gallery, is from the same series. Poetic Shelter is a key piece in which
Clark presents a painted metal structure that liberates plane and line from their inanimate
condition and recovers their vitality through movement and transformation in space.
Gego’s (Gertrude Goldschmidt) Drawing without Paper (1988) belongs to a series of works
with the same title, created between the mid-1970s and the late 1980s, consisting of threedimensional metallic structures made of wire, wood, thread, and various found objects, which
function as drawings in space. This particular Drawing without Paper contains a fragment of one of Gego’s signature repertoires, the Reticuláreas—geometric, weblike structures that can be configured in an endless number of ways.
Sergio Camargo’s Orée (1962) belongs to a limited series of works the artist made in the
early 1960s. In this key sculpture, a rough piece of wood serves as a base for a patterned relief
that is inserted into it.
Mira Schendel’s Droguinha (c. 1964–66) is one of the artist’s most significant threedimensional works. Titled with a slang expression that signifies “nothing” or “something
worthless,” it is composed of knotted rice paper that Schendel intertwined by hand, evoking the
act of weaving.
León Ferrari’s Reflections (Reflexiones) (1963) belongs to a limited series of threedimensional drawings made in the early 1960s, generically called Writings in the Air. A boxlike
object, Reflections is contained by two flat surfaces composed of intricate, abstract, gestural ink
lines on paper and glass. The wires contained within it reproduce the convoluted lines of the
drawing at the back of the box, one of Ferrari’s stylistic signatures of the 1960s. Works like these
represent a form of organic abstraction and can be linked to more recent artists from
Latin America such as Ana Mendieta (Cuba), Guillermo Kuitca (Argentina), Gabriel Orozco
(Mexico), José Damasceno (Brazil), and Arturo Herrera (Venezuela), whose works also appear in
the exhibition.
Victor Grippo’s Life, Death, Resurrection (1980) is one of the most important
achievements in the artistic career of this leading figure in Latin American Conceptualism. This
sculptural installation includes a violin filled with corn, a worm-eaten piece of found wood, and
lead forms that are filled with and surrounded by red beans.
Popular imagery and everyday life play an important role in the work of many artists from
the region, as seen in works in the exhibition by Alejandro Xul Solar (Argentina), Cildo Meireles
(Brazil), Enrique Metinides (Mexico), and Álvaro Barrios (Colombia), alongside recent productions
by artists such as Vik Muniz (Brazil), Fernando Bryce (Peru), Carlos Amorales (Mexico), and
Ernesto Neto (Brazil).
Álvaro Barrios’s Popular Prints series (1974–84), also known as Grabados populares, were
an alternative to producing traditional limited editions; they were issued in great numbers, printed
in local newspapers, and signed by Barrios for anyone who asked him to do so. These prints often
display the lush, dreamlike quality found in his paintings and collages, which combine art
historical, cultural, and religious references in fantastic and surreal scenes.
Eugenio Dittborn’s Airmail painting (1983) is one of a series created with pencil, gouache,
and stamps on kraft paper, that were normally folded and then mailed in large envelopes to
various artistic venues. The creases in this work were created by the repeated folding and
unfolding of the large sheet of paper throughout its journey, a feature that underlines the physical
quality of passing time. By repeating the icon of a house in each compartment, Dittborn questions
the concept of a transient place where one is in constant arrival and departure.
MoMA and Latin American and Caribbean Art
With over 3,000 works, MoMA currently holds the world’s most comprehensive collection of Latin
American and Caribbean art, representing important figures in early modernism, figurative
expressionism, surrealism, abstraction, and conceptual and contemporary art. The Museum’s long
history of collecting from the region began in the 1930s, when it became the first institution
outside Latin America to collect, display, and study this art. Through those activities, MoMA
played an important role in shaping the perception of Latin American and Caribbean art in the
United States.
Alfred H. Barr, MoMA’s founding director, and Abby Aldrich Rockefeller, its cofounder, were
early champions of the inclusion of Latin American artists in MoMA’s collection. Mrs. Rockefeller
donated the first such works, with a gift of 36 paintings and 105 drawings, including important
works by Diego Rivera and José Clemente Orozco. The tradition continued throughout the
twentieth century, with important gifts from Nelson and David Rockefeller shaping the collection,
and continues today under the leadership of MoMA Director Glenn D. Lowry. Over the past ten
years, 530 works by Latin American and Caribbean artists have been acquired with support from
Kathy Fuld, Agnes Gund, Mimi Haas, Marlene Hess, Patricia Phelps de Cisneros, and Anna Marie
and Robert Shapiro, and others.
SPONSORSHIP:
The exhibition is made possible by Kathy and Richard S. Fuld, Jr., with additional support from the
Friends of Contemporary Drawing of The Museum of Modern Art.
PUBLIC PROGRAMS:
Works of Art as Objects
Thursday, January 24, 2008, 6:30 p.m.
The Celeste Bartos Theater, 4 West 54 Street
To complement the exhibition New Perspectives in Latin American Art, 1930–2006: Selections
from a Decade of Acquisitions, scholars will explore the ways in which selected seminal works and
artists revolutionized the visual arts in their countries in a given period. Gabriel Pérez-Barreiro,
curator of Latin American art, Jack S. Blanton Museum of Art, The University of Texas at Austin,
examines Gyula Kosice’s Mobile Articulated Sculpture (1948); Juan Carlos Ledezma,
independent curator, focuses on Alejandro Otero’s Ortogonales (1951–52); Amy Rosenblum
Martín, assistant curator, The Bronx Museum of the Arts, examines Mira Schendel’s Droguinha
(1967); and Anna Indych-Lopéz, assistant professor of art, The City College of New York, The
City University of New York, discusses Victor Grippo’s Life, Death, Resurrection (1980). Luis
Pérez-Oramas, The Estrellita Brodsky Curator of Latin American Art at MoMA and organizer of
the exhibition, moderates the discussion.
Contemporary Poetry from Latin America
Wednesday, February 13, 2008, 6:30 p.m.
The Celeste Bartos Theater, 4 West 54 Street
The Museum of Modern Art invites selected poets to read their own poetry, and to respond to
works on view in the exhibition New Perspectives in Latin American Art, 1930–2006: Selections
from a Decade of Acquisitions.
This program is part of the Modern Poets series, which revitalizes Frank O’Hara’s legacy and
MoMA’s historical commitment to poetry by inviting poets to bring the literary tradition to the
Museum’s collection. Poets read historical works and their own work, reflecting on modern and
contemporary art.
Tickets for both events ($10; members $8; students, seniors, and staff of other museums $5) can
be purchased at the lobby information desk, the Film desk, or online at
www.moma.org/thinkmodern.
Press Contact: Meg Blackburn, 212/708-9757 or [email protected]
For downloadable high-resolution images, please register at www.moma.org/press.
Public Information:
The Museum of Modern Art, 11 West 53rd Street, New York, NY 10019
Hours: Wednesday through Monday: 10:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. Friday: 10:30 a.m.-8:00
p.m. Closed Tuesday
Museum Admission: $20 adults; $16 seniors, 65 years and over with I.D.; $12 full-time students
with current I.D. Free, members and children 16 and under. (Includes
admittance to Museum galleries and film programs)
Target Free Friday Nights 4:00-8:00 p.m.
Film Admission: $10 adults; $8 seniors, 65 years and over with I.D. $6 full-time students with
current I.D. (For admittance to film programs only)
Subway: E or V train to Fifth Avenue/53rd Street
Bus: On Fifth Avenue, take the M1, M2, M3, M4, or M5 to 53rd Street. On Sixth
Avenue, take the M5, M6, or M7 to 53rd Street. Or take the M57 and M50
crosstown buses on 57th and 50th Streets.
The public may call 212/708-9400 for detailed Museum information. Visit us online at www.moma.org

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