Thursday, April 17, 2025
Home Blog Page 3

Curator Talks and Tours: Gyula Kosice’s “Intergalactic”

Curator Talks and Tours: Gyula Kosice's "Intergalactic"
Curator Talks and Tours: Gyula Kosice's "Intergalactic"

Curator Talks and Tours: Gyula Kosice’s “Intergalactic”

March 20, 2025
7:00 PM – 8:00 PM
At PAMM 1103 Biscayne Blvd, Miami, FL 33132

For the opening of Gyula Kosice: Intergalactic, join exhibition co-curators María Amalia García and Mari Carmen Ramírez for a tour and intimate conversation.

The curator-led tour and Intergalactic Member Lounge are currently at capacity. Members are still welcome to explore the exhibition during our member preview, starting at 11am, or use the member unlimited admission benefit at any other time. This way, we can ensure an enjoyable experience while preserving the integrity of the artwork.

One hundred years after his birth, Gyula Kosice: Intergalactic celebrates the career of the Argentine artist Gyula Kosice (b. 1924, Košice, Czechoslovakia; d. 2016, Buenos Aires, Argentina), an experimental artist, sculptor, poet, and theorist. Co-founder of Arturo (1944) and Madí (1946), two constructive art groups centered in the Río de la Plata region between Uruguay and Argentina, he was also a prominent figure in the international avant-garde after 1945. His practice introduced original artistic ideas, such as interactive sculptures, which questioned the relationship between the art object and the spectator and experimented with a wide range of materials, many of which had never been used in art.

Like Julio Le Parc and Carlos Cruz-Diez, he incorporated light and motion yet, was one of the first to incorporate water in his works. Intergalactic focuses on his experimental production, in which motion was a constant and essential feature. It includes works that he created between 1950 and 1980, such as acrylic sculptures, kinetic reliefs, and drops of water, most of which incorporated lights and were activated by aerators and motors.

The exhibition features Gyula Kosice’s most ambitious work, The Hydrospatial City (1946–2004), an experiential installation comprised of architectural prototypes that speculate on the possibility of human settlement beyond Earth brought on by socioeconomic inequality, environmental degradation, and astronomical population growth. As an alternative, he proposed a city of semi-open, modular habitats suspended 5000 feet above the ground and powered by oxygen and hydrogen harnessed from water vapor in the clouds.

Schedule
11am–7pm Member Exhibition Preview
6–7pm Curator-led, members-only tour
7–9pm Public Exhibition Opening
7–9pm Member Appreciation Lounge: Intergalactic
7:30pm Curator Talks and Tours: Gyula Kosice’s Intergalactic

Free with museum admission. Admission is $18 for adults and free for members.

Perez Art Museum PAMM
Pérez Art Museum Miami

Jaye Rhee’s Fragile Terrain Is a Pixelated Dreamscape With a Dose of Existential Dread

Jaye Rhee’s Fragile Terrain Is a Pixelated Dreamscape With a Dose of Existential Dread
Jaye Rhee’s Fragile Terrain Is a Pixelated Dreamscape With a Dose of Existential Dread

Jaye Rhee’s Fragile Terrain Is a Pixelated Dreamscape With a Dose of Existential Dread

Editor review

Walk into Locust Projects right now, and you’ll find yourself drowning—not in water, but in pixels. Jaye Rhee has conjured a paper-cut hallucination of Miami’s oceanfront, a swirling mass of 700 pixelated cubes and 200 rounded objects; each meticulously handcrafted from recycled, custom-printed paper. This process of handcrafting each element, from the initial design to the final placement, is a testament to Rhee’s dedication and artistic skill. It is a landscape that is not a landscape, a place that exists nowhere except in memory, screens, data, and the flickering remnants of our over-digitized lives.

But here’s the allure: It is breathtakingly beautiful. Fragile Terrain is seductive and artificial, a film set masquerading as nature, a virtual world that crinkles under your breath. It’s a mirage built on paper and nostalgia, and like all mirages, it makes you question what is real. Where does nature end and technology begin? Are we experiencing the world or just its representation?

Rhee—trained at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and now based in New York—doesn’t just make art; she hijacks your senses. This isn’t some polite, decorative thing. Her work is sly, calculated, and loaded with existential contradictions. These contradictions, such as the juxtaposition of the natural and the digital, the beautiful and the artificial, are at the heart of her work. It’s landscape painting for the algorithmic age, a callback to the 19th-century Romantics who longed for untouched nature, only this time; the longing is filtered through pixels, data points, and mass production.

It is also impossible to overlook the ominous undertone running through this show. This fragile, handcrafted illusion of paradise is built from waste—a stark reminder that even our idyllic visions are shaped by consumption and excess. The tech that allows us to replicate nature is aiding in its destruction. That is the gut punch here: Fragile Terrain is both a love letter and a warning sign, a call to action.

And yet—god, it is gorgeous. The whole thing shimmers like a broken screen, a heat mirage, a glitch in the system. Stand there long enough, and you’ll start to feel the pull of it, the weight of all those hand-folded, perfectly imperfect pixels, each one whispering: Is this real? Does it even matter? This contemplation is part of the experience Rhee invites you to have with her work. What are your thoughts? How does it make you feel?

Jaye Rhee has built something that floats between worlds, where nature is a ghost, the digital is physical, and everything—absolutely everything—is fragile. You should see it before it disappears.

Final Verdict: A poetic mind-bender of an exhibition. It will make you question everything and look damn good doing it.

Perez Art Museum PAMM
Pérez Art Museum Miami

Jaye Rhee: Fragile Terrain

Jaye Rhee
Jaye Rhee

Jaye Rhee: Fragile Terrain

Through Apr 05, 2025

weekly on Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday

From: 11:00 AM to 5:00 PM

The intersection of digital technology and environmental consciousness materializes in a striking installation that transforms recycled paper into an immersive coastal landscape. Fragile Terrain, a newly commissioned multimedia exhibition by international artist Jaye Rhee, opens at Locust Projects with a Meet the Artist Reception on Thursday, February 13, from 7-9 p.m., and runs through April 5.

The 2,800-square-foot Main Gallery becomes home to a meticulously crafted sculptural environment featuring 700 pixelated paper cubes and 200 rounded paper objects. This handcrafted installation, constructed entirely from custom-printed recycled materials, creates an abstracted vision of Miami’s iconic oceanfront landscape while challenging viewers to consider the relationship between digital representation and natural reality.

Drawing parallels to 19th-century romantic landscape painting, Rhee’s work explores humanity’s complex relationship with both nature and technology. The installation raises questions about how digital simulacra influence our sense of identity and connection to the environment, while acknowledging the environmental impact of the very technology it references.

Jaye Rhee is an interdisciplinary artist whose work examines the complex relationships between real and constructed environments, with a particular focus on how visual culture mediates identity, memory and perception. Born in Seoul, South Korea, Rhee now lives and works in New York. She received both her BFA and MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

Her diverse practice, encompassing video, photography and performance, has been showcased at prominent institutions worldwide, including Buffalo AKG Art Museum, Norton Museum of Art, Queens Museum, The Bronx Museum of the Arts, Mori Art Museum in Tokyo, Seoul Museum of Modern Art and La Triennale di Milano. Rhee’s contributions to contemporary art have been recognized through numerous awards, including the Doosan Yonkang Art Award, Franklin Furnace Fund and the Seoul Museum of Art Young Artist Grant.

LOCUST PROJECTS

297 NE 67th St, Miami, FL 33138

t. (305) 576-8570

[email protected]

Perez Art Museum PAMM
Pérez Art Museum Miami

Crossroads: Rubem Valentim’s 1960s

Crossroads: Rubem Valentim’s 1960s
Crossroads: Rubem Valentim’s 1960s

Crossroads: Rubem Valentim’s 1960s

Nov 21, 2024 – Apr 6, 2025

Crossroads: Rubem Valentim’s 1960s

Ground Floor / Dr. Shulamit Katzman Gallery
Ground Floor / Kadre Family Gallery

Explore the works of Afro-Brazilian painter Rubem Valentim at Crossroads: Rubem Valentim’s 1960s

ICA Miami presents the first US museum exhibition of the late Afro-Brazilian painter Rubem Valentim (b. 1922, Salvador, Brazil; d. 1991, São Paulo). A singular voice in modernist painting and geometric abstraction, Valentim explored the medium’s formal concerns and social resonances across cultures and spiritual practices. This exhibition focuses on works Valentim produced in the 1960s, and the transformation of his work and thinking during this time.

Valentim split the decade between Brazil, which was then poised between rapid industrialization and military dictatorship, and Europe, where he first came upon the African art and Third World politics that would influence his painting practice. Having moved from his native Salvador, Bahia, to Rio at the end of the previous decade, in the 1960s, Valentim produced crisp paintings, characterized by rational form and symmetrical composition. Like the most progressive artworks produced in Brazil at the time, such as the paintings of Waldemar Cordeiro and the photographic experiments of Geraldo de Barros, Valentim’s paintings of this period are characterized by compositional clarity and easy communicability, and concerned with offering tools to a quickly urbanizing population to better function with new systems and velocities of communication, new technologies, and new ways of living in modernizing––if still quite segregated and economically uneven––cities.

From 1963 to 1966, Valentim lived in Europe. Although he settled for most of this time in Rome, where he held his first exhibition outside Brazil, he also visited other cities. In London, he saw African sculptures for the first time in person. The impact of this encounter is registered in the paintings of this period: works that retain the sharp lines and shallow pictorial spaces of geometric abstraction, but in which generic forms become shapes that allude to totems, objects used in worship ceremonies, fragments of temple architecture, and to signs, such as axes and arrows, associated with Afro-Brazilian deities. Valentim’s sojourn abroad culminated with his participation in the First World Festival of Negro Arts held in Dakar, Senegal, in 1966.

In 1967, upon returning to live in Brasilia, the country’s new modern capital, Valentim began a radical series of works titled “Emblems.” Produced in shallow bas-relief, these works extend into the physical space of the viewer, rejecting any remaining illusionistic possibility that the picture plane offers. They also further reduce Valntim’s palette, often employing only a single color over a pristine white background. While still using abstracted geometric forms, Valentim searched to deepen his connection to the art of Afro-Brazilian religious practice, and create paintings as a technology to interpret cosmological meaning. In the process of embodying this new task, the paintings grow increasingly ideographic, whereby sign and meaning fuse and representation itself is troubled.

Valentim’s work can be found in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Pinacoteca do Estado de São Paulo; Museu de Arte Moderna do Rio de Janeiro; Museu de Arte Moderna da Bahia; Museu de Arte de Brasília; Museu de Arte de São Paulo (MASP); Museu Afro Brasil, São Paulo; and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. His work has been exhibited at the Venice Biennale and the São Paulo Biennial. In 2019, he was the subject of a major retrospective exhibition, “ Rubem Valentim: Afro-Atlantic Constructions,” at MASP.

“Crossroads: Rubem Valentim’s 1960s” is organized by ICA Miami and curated by Gean Moreno, Director of the Art + Research Center at ICA Miami.

Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami (ICA)

61 NE 41st St.
Miami, FL 33137

Perez Art Museum PAMM
Pérez Art Museum Miami

Keiichi Tanaami: Memory Collage

Keiichi Tanaami: Memory Collage
Keiichi Tanaami: Memory Collage

Keiichi Tanaami: Memory Collage

Through Mar 30, 2025

weekly on Sunday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday

From: 11:00 AM to 6:00 PM

Keiichi Tanaami: Memory Collage

Special Exhibition / 2nd Floor

The Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami, presents “Keiichi Tanaami: Memory Collage,” the artist’s first US solo museum exhibition. Keiichi Tanaami (1936-2024, Tokyo) has been a pioneering figure in Japanese and global Pop art for seven decades, creating magnificently immersive works across media in order to consider American and Japanese culture in the post-war period. Tanaami anticipated the crossover of popular culture and fine art, and through his connections to design has taken a radical and critical approach to how images of desire and violence transform society. Works included in this exhibition, produced between 1965 and 2024, track the artist’s use of collage to express the complex media landscape of our time.

Tanaami’s life and work are deeply informed by his upbringing in Japan, the trauma of the Second World War, and the country’s postwar reconstitution. Although the war had forced Tanaami and his mother to flee to the countryside in 1943, the massive United States air raids on Tokyo at the end of the conflict, as well as his experience in air raid shelters, had immense impact on the then-nine-year-old boy and continue to haunt his imagination. Tanaami’s hallucinatory works brim with American airplanes, search lights, monsters real and imagined, and fleeing masses. Sexual images permeate his works across decades, as do synthetic colors; Tanaami records popular culture commercializing desire in order to suppress the devastation of war. Tanaami graduated from the Musashino Art University, Kodaira, Japan, with a degree in graphic design in 1960. He forged a successful career in design and advertising, working as the first art director of Japanese Playboy and creating record covers for Jefferson Airplane and the Monkees, which contributed to the introduction of psychedelic culture in Japan.

During the 1960s, Taanami’s artistic practice frequently took the form of exuberant collages overflowing with clippings from international magazines. These dense collages are fascinating indexes of postwar visual culture, drawing from Western and Japanese news sources, commercial forms, and chapbooks. Tanaami would also elaborate on these fantastic sets of images through engagingly musical, surreal, and psychedelic animations that today are classics of avant-garde film.

Combining disparate media, Tanaami creates worlds that explore how war distorts perception through fragmentation, nightmares, and hallucinatory visions. During the 1970s, Tanaami’s iconic paintings combine idyllic landscapes with advertising, erotic imagery and anti-war slogans. Over subsequent decades, Tanaami would continually expand these worlds, quoting manga, theater and increasingly art history, from sources as varied as the sixteenth-century French School of Fontainebleau and Japanese woodblock (ukiyo-e). In recent years the artist has explored the role of the artist in visual culture through his Pleasure of Picasso (2020–) series, which make playful and technical use of appropriation and repetition while considering the flattening of social and commercial art and history today.

Additionally, the exhibition concisely surveys Tanaami’s recent work, a period of great productivity and experimentation for the artist. In epically large-scale painting and complex moving image, the artist has deployed technology to scale his kaleidoscopic visions. Through these radically produced, digitally printed and visually saturated paintings, Tanaami reflects on a contemporary regime of pervasive images, and the ever-present specter of history.

“Keiichi Tanaami: Memory Collage” is organized by ICA Miami and curated by Alex Gartenfeld,  Irma and Norman Braman Artistic Director, and Gean Moreno, Director of the Art + Research Center at ICA Miami, with the assistance of Donna Honarpisheh, Associate Curator of the Art + Research Center at ICA Miami.

Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami (ICA)

61 NE 41st St.
Miami, FL 33137

Perez Art Museum PAMM
Pérez Art Museum Miami

iWitness @ The Betsy: Kilombo

iWitness @ The Betsy: Kilombo
iWitness @ The Betsy: Kilombo

iWitness @ The Betsy: Kilombo

Through Mar 30, 2025

From: 07:00 PM to 09:00 PM

Join iWitness and The Betsy Hotel for the launch of Kilombo, an inspiring exhibition of documentary photography by award-winning photographer and visual anthropologist Maria Daniel Balcazar. Opening December 2, 2024, at The Betsy Hotel, Kilombo is a powerful tribute to the resilience and vibrancy of the African legacy in Brazil, captured through stunning large-scale images.

This exhibition marks the debut of iWitness @ The Betsy, a dynamic and ongoing collaboration that merges art, hospitality, and education. This exciting initiative is the result of a partnership between iWitness: IPC Institute of Visual Journalism, The Betsy Hotel, and the Wolfsonian Public Humanities Lab. Together, they aim to spark meaningful conversations about democracy, justice, and the vital role cultural traditions play in shaping identity.

Don’t miss the chance to witness the beginning of this powerful collaboration and celebrate the enduring influence of culture and heritage through the lens of documentary photography.

Art of Black Miami

The Betsy – South Beach

1440 Ocean Drive
Miami Beach, FL 33139

(305) 333-5142

Toll Free: 844-539-2840

[email protected]

Perez Art Museum PAMM
Pérez Art Museum Miami

Gustavo Nazareno: Afro-Latin Baroque

Opera Gallery_Gustavo Nazareno, Iku reading a poem for a pink sky, 2024
Opera Gallery_Gustavo Nazareno, Iku reading a poem for a pink sky, 2024

Opera Gallery Miami

Gustavo Nazareno: Afro-Latin Baroque

Through Mar 29, 2025

Mon-Sat : 11 AM – 8 PM | Sun: noon – 6 PM

Brazilian artist Gustavo Nazareno explores the rich intersection of cultural traditions through his compelling paintings that blend historical and contemporary influences. Gustavo Nazareno: Afro-Latin Baroque marks his first solo exhibition in the United States and will be on display at Opera Gallery from March 6-29.

This exhibition features 16 new paintings that delve into the intertwined legacies of faith, art and resilience within Afro-Brazilian and Latin American traditions. Running alongside his Bará charcoal drawing exhibition in Bal Harbour, the collection showcases Nazareno’s engagement with cultural syncretism and spirituality.

Rooted in the Afro-Brazilian artistic heritage of Minas Gerais, Nazareno’s work bridges the visual traditions of Brazilian Baroque masters with the spiritual aesthetics of Candomblé and Santería. His paintings employ chiaroscuro techniques reminiscent of Caravaggio while incorporating elements from contemporary fashion photography, creating compositions that feel both timeless and relevant.

The artist’s figures exist beyond traditional constraints, embodying an ethereal presence that blurs boundaries between the mythical and real. Through this body of work, Nazareno pays homage to the intertwined artistic legacies of Brazil and Cuba—lands shaped by resilience, faith and artistic expression.

By reinterpreting Baroque aesthetics through the lens of Afro-Brazilian spirituality, Nazareno invites viewers into a space of reflection and reimagined histories, continuing to push the boundaries of contemporary painting while engaging with historical traditions.

Videography © Gabriel Volpi

Opera Gallery Miami is pleased to present ‘Afro-Latin Baroque,’ a solo exhibition by Brazilian artist Gustavo Nazareno, marking his first solo presentation in the United States. Featuring 16 new paintings, this exhibition explores the intertwined legacies of faith, art, and resilience within Afro-Brazilian and Latin American traditions. Running alongside ‘Bará’ in Bal Harbour composed of charcoal drawings, ‘Afro-Latin Baroque’ showcases Nazareno’s deep engagement with cultural syncretism, spirituality, and the enduring power of artistic expression.

Nazareno’s work is rooted in the vibrant Afro-Brazilian artistic heritage of Minas Gerais and its complex relationship with Catholic iconography. Through a contemporary lens, he bridges the visual traditions of Brazilian Baroque masters such as Aleijadinho and Mestre Valentim with the spiritual aesthetics of Candomblé and Santería, creating compositions that feel both timeless and urgent. His paintings evoke the grandeur of Baroque theatricality, while embracing the ritualistic essence of Afro-Latin religious practices, forging a dialogue between historical legacies and contemporary identity.

In ‘Afro-Latin Baroque,’ Nazareno continues his exploration of duality—sacred and profane, light and shadow, movement and stillness. His figures resist fixed identities, existing beyond traditional gender or temporal constraints, embodying an ethereal presence that is both ghostly and divine. Drawing from the chiaroscuro techniques of Caravaggio and the expressive depth of contemporary fashion photography, his works blur the boundaries between the mythical and the real, evoking a sense of spiritual transcendence.

Speaking on the exhibition, Nazareno reflected, “This body of work is an homage to the intertwined legacies of Brazil and Cuba, two lands shaped by resilience, faith, and artistic brilliance. Through ‘Afro-Latin Baroque,’ I seek to explore the sacred convergence of Catholicism and Afro-Brazilian traditions, where the grandeur of Baroque art meets the vibrant spiritual essence of Candomblé and Santería.”

Through ‘Afro-Latin Baroque,’ Gustavo Nazareno continues to push the boundaries of contemporary painting, engaging with historical traditions while asserting a bold and deeply personal artistic vision. By reinterpreting Baroque aesthetics through the lens of Afro-Brazilian spirituality, he invites viewers into a space of reflection, reverence, and reimagined histories.

Opera Gallery Miami

151 NE 41st St., Suite 131
Miami, FL 33137

(305) 868-3337

[email protected]

Perez Art Museum PAMM
Pérez Art Museum Miami

Celebrating Art, Beauty and Cultural Legacy

Miami Art & Culture
Miami Art & Culture

Celebrating Art, Beauty and Cultural Legacy

Through Mar 23, 2025

Art, beauty and cultural resilience intertwine in this compelling multi-exhibition showcase. The Marshall L. Davis, Sr. African Heritage Cultural Arts Center presents Celebrating Art, Beauty and Cultural Legacy from December 1 through March 23.

The exhibition features three distinct installations. Margarette Joyner’s A Legacy of Elegance displays twelve colonial-era costumes that blend African textiles with 19th-century fashion, offering a reimagined perspective on historical high-society garments. Black Beauty as an Act of Resistance explores the significance of African-descended women’s beauty rituals through a recreated 1930s back-porch hair shop, highlighting the contributions of David and Laurel Julius, founders of the Sunlight School of Beauty Culture. Laurel Julius, who worked as a stylist for Madame CJ Walker, later established beauty schools with her husband in Alabama and Jamaica.

The third component, Double Exposure, showcases the work of A.J. Brown, lead singer of Third World Band. His acrylic paintings span various styles including portraiture, abstraction, landscape and still life, drawing inspiration from American, Jamaican, Ethiopian and Caribbean diaspora cultural traditions. Brown’s artistic vision combines his musical background with visual expressions of nature and cultural heritage.

Marshall L. Davis, Sr. African Heritage Cultural Arts Center

6161 NW 22nd Ave.
Miami, FL 33142

Perez Art Museum PAMM
Pérez Art Museum Miami

Drone Art Show Miami

Drone Art Show Miami
Drone Art Show Miami

Drone Art Show Miami

A Mesmerizing Fusion of Music and Technology: Drone Art Show Miami

Attending the Drone Art Show Miami at Miramar Regional Park was magical. This event masterfully blended the elegance of classical music with the cutting-edge spectacle of a choreographed drone display, transforming the night sky into a breathtaking, luminous canvas.

The atmosphere was enchanting from the moment the show began at 8 PM. Under a sky illuminated by candlelight, a talented string quartet performed classical masterpieces with precision and emotion, setting the perfect tone for the night. Just when the audience was lost in the beauty of the music, the drone art show began, turning the sky into a dynamic, ever-changing work of art. The synchronization between the drones and the music was impeccable—each light formation moving harmoniously with the melodies, creating a truly immersive experience.

The Miramar Regional Park provided an excellent setting for this open-air event, allowing guests to enjoy the spectacle without obstruction. The ADA-compliant venue ensured accessibility for all attendees, and while parking was available at an additional cost, arriving early was key to securing a good spot. The event organizers ensured everything ran smoothly, from door openings 90 minutes before the strict late-entry policy, which helped maintain the immersive experience for all.

At 65 minutes, the show was perfect—long enough to fully appreciate the artistry yet brief enough to leave the audience wanting more. The balance between music, technology, and visual storytelling was mesmerizing. It was an experience that felt both futuristic and timeless, proving that art, in all its forms, continues to evolve and inspire.

For anyone looking for a one-of-a-kind cultural experience, the Drone Art Show Miami is an absolute must-see. Whether you’re a fan of classical music, innovative technology, or simply looking for a unique night out, this event delivers an unforgettable evening under the stars.

Final Verdict: 5/5 – A stunning fusion of music, light, and innovation.

Drone Art Show Location in Miami

Miramar Regional Park

16801 Miramar Pkwy, Miramar, FL 33027, United States

  •  Dates: April 4 and 5
  •  Time: Show starts at 8 PM. Doors open 90 mins prior to the start time, and we encourage you to arrive early as late entry is not permitted.
  •  Duration: 65 minutes approx.
  •  Location: Miramar Regional Park
  •  Parking: Available at an additional cost. Parking will open around 6 PM.
  •  Accessibility: The venue is ADA compliant
  •  Age requirement: 8+
Perez Art Museum PAMM
Pérez Art Museum Miami

A Fascinating and Eye-Opening Read on a Forgotten Modernist

Marlow Moss (Modern Women Artists) by Lucy Howarth
Marlow Moss (Modern Women Artists) by Lucy Howarth

A Fascinating and Eye-Opening Read on a Forgotten Modernist

Reviews: Marlow Moss (Modern Women Artists) by Lucy Howarth

As someone who loves art and is always eager to learn about artists beyond the usual canon, I find Lucy Howarth’s Marlow Moss (Modern Women Artists) fascinating. I had heard of Piet Mondrian and the De Stijl movement, but I had no idea how influential Marlow Moss was in shaping geometric abstraction. This book completely changed my perspective on modernist art and the overlooked role of women in its development.

Howarth does an excellent job of bringing Moss’s life and work to light. The book is well-researched and provides a compelling narrative of an artist who challenged artistic conventions and defied societal norms. I was particularly struck by Moss’s introduction of the double line—a technique Mondrian later adopted—which made me realize how often women’s contributions have been downplayed or erased from history.

What I appreciated most was how accessible and engaging the writing was. While it’s clear that Howarth is a scholar, she doesn’t overwhelm the reader with overly technical analysis. Instead, she presents Moss’s work in a way that makes you appreciate its significance, even if you’re not an art historian. The book is also beautifully illustrated with images of Moss’s paintings and sculptures, making it easy to see her unique vision and how it evolved.

Reading this book left me inspired but also frustrated at how little recognition Moss has received compared to her male counterparts. I wondered how many other women artists have been similarly overlooked. Marlow Moss (Modern Women Artists) is an important and necessary book, not just for those interested in modern art but for anyone who wants to understand the full story of art history.

I highly recommend this book to art lovers, students, and anyone who enjoys discovering hidden stories. It’s a must-read for those who appreciate modernism and want to explore beyond the usual names. Marlow Moss deserves to be known, and thanks to this book, she finally gets the attention she has long been denied.

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Eiderdown Books (September 9, 2019)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 64 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1916041620
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1916041622
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.31 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.08 x 0.43 x 7.8 inches
Perez Art Museum PAMM
Pérez Art Museum Miami

De Stijl and Bauhaus

De Stijl and Bauhaus: The Revolutionary Visions that Shaped Modern Art and Design

The early 20th century was a period of unprecedented artistic transformation, spurred by the devastation of World War I and the growing embrace of modernity. Two movements—De Stijl in the Netherlands and Bauhaus in Germany—emerged as revolutionary forces, reshaping art, design, and architecture in ways that still resonate today. Though distinct in their philosophies and execution, both movements shared an unshakable belief in the unity of art and life.

De Stijl: The Birth of a New Artistic Consciousness

In 1917, a group of young Dutch artists came together to form a movement that embodied their vision of a new artistic era: De Stijl (The Style). Cofounded by painters Theo van Doesburg and Piet Mondrian, De Stijl sought to move beyond the limitations of individual artistic expression and instead embrace a universal aesthetic. As the founders boldly declared:

“There is an old and a new consciousness of time. The old is connected with the individual. The new is connected with the universal.”

De Stijl artists believed that the rigid separation between art and life had to be abolished. Art was no longer a mere aesthetic pursuit; it was an essential component of constructing an ideal environment. The movement sought to create a “new, plastic unity” in which all creative disciplines—painting, architecture, design—were harmonized under a fixed set of principles. These principles, inspired by mathematical order and modernist ideals, emphasized pure abstraction, geometric forms, and a strict use of primary colors (red, blue, and yellow) alongside black, white, and gray.

Mondrian’s Composition with Red, Blue, and Yellow (1930) exemplifies this philosophy, reducing painting to its most fundamental elements: straight lines, primary colors, and asymmetrical balance. Van Doesburg, meanwhile, expanded De Stijl’s reach into architecture and typography, influencing the modernist visual language that would become ubiquitous in the 20th century.

Bauhaus: The Marriage of Art, Craft, and Industry

Just two years after De Stijl’s formation, another radical artistic vision took root in Germany. In 1919, architect Walter Gropius was appointed director of the Weimar School of Arts and Crafts and promptly reimagined it as the Bauhaus—a revolutionary institution that would redefine the intersection of art, craftsmanship, and industrial design.

Gropius believed that the artificial divide between fine art and craft was obsolete. In his Bauhaus Manifesto, he declared that strong foundational design and craftsmanship were essential for all artistic disciplines. The Bauhaus curriculum was groundbreaking, offering not just painting and sculpture but also courses in furniture design, weaving, bookbinding, metalwork, typography, and industrial production.

What set the Bauhaus apart was its emphasis on preparing students for the modern industrial age. Unlike traditional art academies, which focused on individual artistic expression, the Bauhaus sought to integrate art into everyday life. Students were trained in machine-age technologies and mass production techniques, ensuring that their work was not only aesthetically striking but also functionally efficient.

The faculty of the Bauhaus included some of the most influential artists of the 20th century, including Vassily Kandinsky and Paul Klee, whose theories on color and form deeply influenced modern abstraction. The Bauhaus aesthetic—characterized by clean lines, geometric simplicity, and functionality—became a defining feature of modern design, shaping everything from architecture to graphic design.

The Fall and Legacy of Bauhaus

Despite its profound impact, the Bauhaus faced political resistance. When Adolf Hitler rose to power in 1933, one of his first acts was to shut down the school, suspecting that its progressive ideals and radicalized student body posed a threat to Nazi ideology. However, rather than extinguishing its influence, the closure of the Bauhaus only accelerated its spread. Many of its instructors, including Gropius, fled Germany, bringing Bauhaus principles to institutions around the world. Gropius himself ended up at Harvard University, where he continued to shape the future of modern architecture.

Enduring Influence: The Legacy of De Stijl and Bauhaus

While the De Stijl movement gradually faded after the death of van Doesburg in 1931, its principles remain embedded in contemporary design, influencing everything from minimalist architecture to corporate logos. Bauhaus, despite its short lifespan, became one of the most influential design movements in history, setting the foundation for modernist architecture, furniture, and graphic design.

Both movements challenged the idea that art was merely for aesthetic appreciation. Instead, they envisioned a world where art was seamlessly integrated into daily life, shaping everything from the buildings we inhabit to the objects we use. A century later, their radical visions continue to define the visual language of our modern world.

Perez Art Museum PAMM
Pérez Art Museum Miami

Collectors Round Table

Dahlia Dreszer
Dahlia Dreszer

‘Bringing the Outside In’ Presents: Collectors Round Table!

A Panel Discussion on Building Collections, Supporting Emerging Artists, and Market Dynamics in Contemporary Art

‘Bringing the Outside In’ presents a Collectors Round Table panel discussion featuring leading voices in the art world.

Green Space Miami is thrilled to announce Collectors Round Table, a captivating panel discussion featuring prominent voices in the contemporary art world. This event is part of the programming for the solo exhibition Bringing the Outside In by Dahlia Dreszer, on view from March to May 17th, 2025.

Join us on Wednesday, March 19th, 2025, at 7:00 PM at Green Space Miami Museum (7200 Biscayne Blvd, Miami, FL 33138) for an evening of insightful conversation, networking, and exploration of the art world’s most pressing topics.

RSVP Today!

Admission is free, but space is limited. Reserve your spot now to secure your place at this exclusive event.

RSVP Link: Eventbrite.com


Event Highlights

The Collectors Round Table will bring together a distinguished panel of art leaders to discuss:

  • Strategies for building and maintaining art collections
  • The importance of supporting emerging artists
  • Navigating market dynamics in contemporary art

Featured Panelists:

  • Kathryn Mikesell, Co-Founder and Executive Director of Fountainhead Arts
  • Mindy Solomon, Founder of the Mindy Solomon Gallery
  • Donnalynn Patakos, Art Advisor

About the Exhibition: Bringing the Outside In

Dahlia Dreszer’s solo exhibition transforms Green Space Miami into an immersive experience, exploring how homes become vessels for cultural memory and identity. Through tropical botanics, site-specific installations, and large-scale photographs featuring intricate arrangements of flowers, ancestral textiles, and cultural artifacts, the exhibition blurs the boundaries between interior and exterior worlds.

The exhibition is complemented by a live plant installation by Tournage, creating a dynamic and ever-evolving environment for visitors.

Exhibition Dates: March – May 17th, 2025
Public Hours: Wednesday – Sunday, 12:00 PM – 6:00 PM


Why Attend?

  • Gain insider knowledge from leading art collectors and advisors
  • Connect with fellow art enthusiasts and professionals
  • Explore the intersection of art, culture, and identity through Dahlia Dreszer’s groundbreaking exhibition

This event is a must-attend for collectors, artists, and anyone passionate about contemporary art and its evolving landscape.

About Green Space Miami

Green Space Miami is a dynamic cultural hub dedicated to showcasing innovative contemporary art and fostering meaningful dialogue within the community. Located in the heart of Miami, the museum is committed to supporting emerging artists and providing a platform for thought-provoking exhibitions and events.

Address: 7200 Biscayne Blvd, Miami, FL 33138
Website: @dahlia.dreszer

Join us for an unforgettable evening of art, conversation, and inspiration at the Collectors Round Table!

About the Artist

Born in Colombia and raised in Panama, Dahlia Dreszer is a photo-based artist whose work explores the intersection of identity, memory and heritage. Dreszer’s large-scale photographs transform cultural narratives into layered compositions that blur the boundaries between interiors of homes her family has lived in, and the outside world. Her immersive installations combine still-life images of flowers (an important symbol in the artist’s family history), textiles, and family heirlooms, creating a surrounding visually bursting with color and detail in which to explore a story of diaspora and belonging.
A graduate of Emory University specializing in photography, Dahlia’s approach challenges traditional still-life, merging reality and artifice, inviting viewers to explore the transient nature of culture and identity.

Perez Art Museum PAMM
Pérez Art Museum Miami

CONSTANTIN BRANCUSI

CONSTANTIN BRANCUSI
CONSTANTIN BRANCUSI

CONSTANTIN BRANCUSI

Eduardo Planchart Licea

Considerado como uno de los grandes escultores del siglo XX (quizás el más famoso, desde luego el más caro), la influencia de
su obra es inabarcable. Perteneció a esos primeros vanguardistas arriesgados y originales que asentaron las bases del arte moderno. Esos que deambulaban por el París de principios de siglo. Con ellos, admiradores de la riqueza del arte primitivo (paleolítico en caso de Brancusi) y creadores de un nuevo lenguaje sin precedentes, allanaría el terreno para la posterior escultura,
pintura y diseño industrial.
Constantin Brancusi vivió una infancia llena de trabajos en el campo, de agricultor a ganadero. Después empleado en una tintorería, una droguería y finalmente en una posada, donde tendría su gran golpe de suerte. Durante una discusión, alguien lo desafió a
fabricar un violín y el joven, bendecido con un don en sus manos, convirtió una caja de naranjas en uno. Un gitano sacó música de él
y Brancusise ganaría la simpatía de uno de sus clientes, muy acaudalado que pagó sus estudios. Apenas sabía leer ni escribir. 4 años después, Brancusi sabía que su destino era ser escultor. De Bucarest viajó a París en 1904 e inició su carrera. Primero como lavaplatos, después bajo el ala de  Rodin y finalmente desarrollando su propio estilo junto a Modigliani, Picasso, Duchamp y compañía.
Inspirándose en el arte primitivo africano, y sobre todo en el arte prehistóricomediterráneo y balcánico, Brancusi fue simplificando las formas hasta volverlas tan geométricas que no podían ser otra cosa que abstracción, aún dejando ciertos rastros de figuración.
Formas puras y elementales que rozan lo espiritual. Esculturas cargadas de ancestrales simbolismos (el pájaro, el cilindro alargado,
el huevo…) que con un trabajado pulido del material se convirtieron en símbolos por sí mismas.
Su «militancia» en el arte moderno dio lugar a uno de los primeras anécdotas de la historia sobre este concepto, que como sabemos fueron muchas y tan divertidas como delirantes y ridículas. En 1926 las aduanas estadounidenses consideraron que su «Pájaro en el espacio» no era una obra de arte sino un extraño objeto manufacturado en el extranjero a saber para que motivos y por tanto sujeto al pago de una tasa. Tras 4 años de juicios la sentencia dictaminó que efectivamente se trataba de una obra de arte y Brancusi quedó exento de pagar, algo que, según dicen, no divirtió demasiado al escultor, que era un hombre arisco, excesivamente antisocial y convencido misántropo.

“Hay imbéciles que dicen que mi obra es abstracta; eso que ellos llaman abstracto es lo más realista, porque lo que es real no es el exterior sino la idea, la esencia de las cosas.”

Este film fue realizado por Brancusis yMan ray en 0ylos 40, es inédito.

Perez Art Museum PAMM
Pérez Art Museum Miami

La aventura estético espiritual de Rafael Montilla

Black Square by Kazimir_Malevich
Black Square is an iconic painting by Kazimir Malevich.

Rafael Montilla, Diario de la India

Eduardo Planchart Licea
PhD Historia de Arte Latinoamericana UNAM

“Las escaleras de los terraplenes estaban pintadas de blanco con dibujos rojos junto a llamativos templos, unos al lado de otros de colores diferentes, eran como pinturas de abstracciones geométricas de diversos colores, tonalidades, texturas, combinaciones, armonías y atributos de formas; con colores similares a las decenas de saris de mujeres y niñas que se bañaban juntas una al lado de la otra, en las orillas donde el canvas era el Ganges.” (Rafael Montilla, Diarios de la India, 1993).

La abstracción pictórica de la serie Variaciones (2018-2021) de Rafael Montilla, artista caraqueño radicado en Miami, crea un lenguaje visual alejado de lo figurativo, lo anecdótico y lo narrativo, al asumir una estética que materializa lo trascendente para comunicar vivencias, cual alquimista del Ser. En la historia del arte moderno occidental, esta aventura estética la inició una serie de cuadros paradigmáticos, con títulos que rompían con la tradición poética del titular, eran nombres inverosímiles y anti-poéticos como: Cuadrado Blanco sobre Negro, 1913; Cuadrado Negro sobre Negro, 1915. Provocaron revuelo, escándalo y perplejidad, a pesar de haber surgido en un contexto histórico donde todo parecía estar cambiando por el advenimiento de la utopía comunista en Rusia, que devino en pocos años en distopía genocida. Al exponerse aquellos cuadros negros y blancos monocromos en la exposición 0.10, 1915 en Petrogrado, el mundo cultural clamó escandalizado: el arte había muerto. Afortunadamente no era así, el ucraniano K. Malevich (1835-1935) estaba creando un arte inspirado en los iconos rusos y en su misticismo. Décadas después, esta senda la asumió M. Rothko (1903-1970), al abandonar el expresionismo para adentrarse en el abstraccionismo geométrico como vía de acercamiento a lo sagrado, al concientizar que toda su vida había estado recreando mitos arcaicos. Estas son algunas de las propuestas fundacionales del arte del siglo XX, que fundamentan el lenguaje visual de Rafael Montilla. No podríamos dejar de mencionar su admiración por el rumano C. Brancusi (1876-1957), hacedor de obras dominadas por el anhelo de plena libertad, fundamentadas en el simbolismo de la ascensión y el vuelo en sus innumerables versiones de aves en esculturas de madera, piedra, bronce…, siendo su obra cumbre La Columna sin Fin, 1934-1938, 15 módulos romboidales de hierro cubiertos de aluminio, con un recubrimiento orgánico de 30 metros de altura en Targa Gu, Rumania, complejo escultórico en homenaje a los soldados rumanos caídos en la Primera Guerra Mundial, integrado por la Tabla del Silencio y La Puerta del Beso. “Este es el mensaje de mi columna, visto por la Mesa del Silencio y La Puerta del Beso… arden como una inmensa fogata… que se transforme en iluminación con el fin de unir el cielo con la tierra.” (Constantin Brancusi). Arte hierofánico inspirado en el arte popular rumano, en las columnas romboidales de las casas tradicionales, esta búsqueda de Brancusi lo llevó a crear esculturas como El Espíritu de Buda, 1933, que afirman una abstracción cuyo objetivo es crear metáforas de lo sagrado.

Esta aventura estético-espiritual la asume R. Montilla a través de la abstracción geométrica y las vivencias de su peregrinación por la ancestral India, experiencia que ha ido transmutando en arte en series como Variaciones (2018-2021). Cada una de estas pinturas nace de la investigación teórica y en el trabajo de taller. Esto se evidencia en el cuadro Variación 0.113, 2020, donde una línea amarilla resplandeciente genera tensiones entre franjas y fragmentos de cubos deconstruidos, sobre fondos de amarillo azafranado, generando tensiones entre dos intensidades cromáticas, que contrastan con la otra mitad del cuadro dominada por el negro, negación del color que hace referencia a la oscuridad nocturna, metáfora de los agujeros negros siderales. En cuya superficie levitan líneas rosáceas y rojas, develando progresiones emocionales. Se establece un símil al tránsito de la ignorancia a la iluminación. Solapándose significaciones para que el otro tenga el gozo cognitivo y existencial de descubrirlas, vivencias internas incomunicables, tal como lo sería el racionalizar el impacto sensible de los conciertos de Brandenburgo de J.S. Bach. Crea así esta pintura contrastes que, al alejarse de la realidad, indagan en lo que no vemos sino en lo oculto y lo presentido.

La Variación 0.114 es dominada por el blanco, absorción sintética del todo, unidad fusionada con la totalidad cromática como génesis. Es un plano de color que por su pureza acerca al receptor a la blancura de las nubes, que al tornarse grises pueden provocar chubascos, para dar nacimiento a mantos de vida al abrazar la lluvia la tierra. Color asociado también a la espuma marina que nace de las profundidades oceánicas para regalar su espumosa blancura entre rompientes ecos. Existe una compleja simbología alrededor del blanco, pero en la obra de R. Montilla se impone la ética y la mística, crea un fragmento de cubo deconstruido verde y gris entre la resplandeciente blancura. Esta Variación emana armonía al evadir la violencia de los contrastes cromáticos. A diferencia de la Variación 0.115, 2020, en donde el fondo blanco es invadido por un fragmento de cubo rojo, color asociado a la sangre, la vida, al amor apasionado, al ardor del guerrero, así cuando el héroe celta Cuchulain es dominado por la ira, su cabeza es rodeada por una corona de fuego flameante, que en el mito es neutralizada por la vergüenza que le provoca al héroe la desnudez de las doncellas que se despojan de sus vestiduras, para sofocar su incandescente cólera. Es la belleza, eros y la seducción como vía de neutralizar el tanático furor guerrero. Dialéctica que recreó Botticelli en el Renacimiento en el cuadro Venus y Marte, 1483, para evidenciar el equilibrio que debe tener eros sobre tánatos. Sentido también presente en esta Variación, donde la ira, la pasión y el belicismo del rojo son neutralizados por la pureza y la inocencia de la blancura.

Cada uno de estos cuadros se convierte en una lectura abierta, manifestación de lo numinoso, dialéctica llamada por los griegos hierofanía, y por el hinduismo budista darsana. Dos extremos laterales de cubos deconstruidos entrelazan la Variación 0.112, 2018, en el primer plano destaca una franja amarilla que pareciera saltar fuera del cuadro, pintados sobre azul celeste. En un segundo plano se percibe otra franja de colores suaves: rosados, blancos, ocres, verdes que contrastan con fragmentos de líneas rojizas. Se está ante una melodía cromática que comunica lo indecible, que anuncia el milagroso peregrinar uránico del astro solar como símil de la iluminación mística.

El amarillo domina el plano de la Variación 0.107, 2019, a través de una primera mirada un observador incauto podría percibir un plano solar, en un primer nivel sería acertada esta conjetura. Pero el tramado de líneas paralelas y entrecruzadas genera otro nivel semántico que se relacionaría a las abstracciones de Pierre Mondrian (1782-1944), influenciado por Madame Blavatsky y la teosofía. En cuadros como Broadway Boogie-Woogie, 1943, al crear una estética que buscaba expresar la fuerza y la armonía del universo, con una paleta limitada a colores primarios y líneas que asocian lo horizontales a la pasividad, y la verticalidad a la actividad. En estas últimas versiones, Mondrian representa la retícula de la dinámica ciudad de Nueva York, y su pasión por el jazz que le transmite a los cambios cromáticos un ritmo musical que impregna esta icónica serie. Las franjas de líneas de la Variación 0.107 no se fragmentan ni cambian abruptamente como los colores y el ritmo musical de Broadway Boogie-Woogie, sino hay un continuo cromático de líneas verdes, que crean un discurso geométrico de franjas paralelas entrecruzadas. La superior se pliega sobre sí en un cuadrado, y la inferior se complementa en una serie de estructuras que penetran el amarillo como muelles de un acuoso río, haciendo referencia al color del Ganges que tiende al amarillo y a los marrones propios de las turbulentas aguas que vienen de las alturas del Himalaya al fluir por Varanasi, se encuentran con terraplenes y escaleras desde donde los devotos se sumergen en las turbias aguas para liberarse del karma y del imperturbable ciclo de reencarnaciones, como los hindúes perciben la existencia.

El sentido de este cuadro se revela en el Diario de la India del artista, al rememorar las experiencias vividas en el Ganges: “Disfrutaba mucho los amaneceres con sus múltiples colores en diversas tonalidades y brillos, que cambiaban a cada segundo con el ascenso del sol. Los blancos, grises, rojos, amarillos, azules, anaranjados, verdes, morados contrastan con los coloridos saris que las mujeres lavaban junto a todo tipo de ropa de vestir; mis ojos eran atrapados por la abstracción geométrica que formaban las sábanas, manteles, cobijas, fundas, paños cuadrados, rectangulares lavados y extendidos sobre las escaleras para que el sol los secara.” (Diario de la India, 1993).

El formato de Variación 0.126 crea una atmósfera lúdica de formas que parecieran estar construyéndose y deconstruyéndose en bandas, cual caleidoscopio giratorio de color y forma, la obra se convierte en poiesis esotérica que lleva del no-ser al ser. El de formato irregular está caracterizado por una geométrica poligonal, encerrada sobre sí, negada a una simetría perfecta. Las líneas que lo rodean parecieran transformarse debido a la energía potencial que emanan. El plano de color posee diversas tonalidades de amarillos, que asocian la obra a lo solar y a su peregrinar celeste. Este dinamismo perpetuo se revela en la forma hexagonal, con sus seis lados, en cuyo interior palpita un polígono. Dinámica geométrica que expresa la energía cósmica, a la búsqueda de un reacomodo por el movimiento interior que se desprende de su centro, que pareciera estar transformándose en potenciales giros, en una silenciosa danza que se visualiza por las bandas cromáticas que se le desprenden, analogía al descorrer del velo de la ignorancia. Tal cual como cuando un mándala es internalizado por el iniciado, al generar transformaciones en la dimensión interior del meditante, al adentrarse en sus laberintos mentales y combatir sombras y demonios para reencontrarse consigo mismo. Estas geometrías sacras generan progresiones matemáticas que llevan de la multiplicidad a la unidad como expresión de la divinidad (uno = todo). Tensiones simbólicas paralelas a la cromática que van del amarillo-lumínico al blanco, para transitar a los marrones como expresión de lo telúrico.

En contraste, la Variación 0.19 es dominada por un vértice triangular rojo entre un fondo de azul celeste, asociado al festival ritual de la India del Holi, que se celebra en primavera. El rojo es predominante en el ritual colectivo entremezclado con gamas de verde y marrones para promover simbólicamente las lluvias y las buenas cosechas.

Estamos, por tanto, en la obra pictórica de Rafael Montilla, en un lenguaje que está creando un abecedario plástico y simbólico a través de sus abstracciones del Ser, que busca que el público sea motivado por la estética a evadir la ignorancia de la ilusoria trama que es la realidad, para poder ver más allá de la maya, y poder escapar al cartesiano “pienso luego existo”, y adentrarse en el “Soy y luego existo” propio de la filosofía oriental, creador de rupturas ontológicas-existenciales en la conciencia al transformar la forma de ver, sentir, amar y vivir.

Analisis:

Este texto de Eduardo Planchart Licea sobre Rafael Montilla y su obra Variaciones es una profunda reflexión que conecta la abstracción visual con dimensiones espirituales y filosóficas. La comparación de Montilla con los grandes maestros de la abstracción, como Malevich, Rothko y Brancusi, destaca el enfoque de Montilla hacia lo trascendental, buscando el alma de las formas a través de colores y composiciones geométricas que evocan experiencias místicas.

Lo interesante de este análisis es cómo se inserta la obra de Montilla dentro de un contexto más amplio de la historia del arte moderno y la conexión con lo espiritual. Al igual que Rothko, quien utilizaba el color para alcanzar lo sagrado, Montilla crea una atmósfera en la que las formas geométricas no sólo están aisladas como elementos visuales, sino como vehículos de experiencia interna. Este texto sugiere que Montilla no está simplemente pintando abstracto, sino que está creando un lenguaje simbólico cargado de significados cósmicos y filosóficos.

La referencia a la India y su influencia en la obra de Montilla es particularmente relevante. La relación con el misticismo hindú, los rituales y la percepción del mundo en términos no dualistas, reflejada en el concepto de “Soy y luego existo”, nos remite a una forma de ver el arte no como una representación de la realidad, sino como un medio para experimentar y trascender esa realidad. Montilla, por lo tanto, no es solo un pintor; es un alquimista visual que transforma la abstracción en un portal hacia una conciencia más profunda.

Además, el texto resalta el uso simbólico del color en sus obras, como el amarillo (símbolo de lo solar y lo espiritual) y el rojo (pasión, vida, guerra), creando tensiones emocionales y visuales que reflejan el conflicto entre lo material y lo inmaterial, lo humano y lo divino. Este contraste cromático es una metáfora del viaje del alma, en la que las emociones y las experiencias interiores se condensan en formas geométricas que invitan al espectador a una reflexión más allá de la superficie.

En resumen, el texto de Planchart Licea no solo describe las obras de Montilla, sino que las contextualiza dentro de un universo de ideas y símbolos que buscan trascender la experiencia visual para tocar lo esencial. La pintura se convierte en un lenguaje de revelación, un espacio donde lo inmenso y lo íntimo se encuentran. La obra de Montilla, como la de sus predecesores en la abstracción, desafía la percepción convencional del arte, invitando a los espectadores a explorar lo invisible y lo eterno a través de lo visual.

Perez Art Museum PAMM
Pérez Art Museum Miami

Juanita Reverón

Armando Reverón y Juanita Mota de Reverón
Armando Reverón y Juanita Mota de Reverón

Juanita Reverón

La historia de Armando Reverón y Juanita Mota de Reverón está envuelta en un aura de magia, tragedia y delirio. En este texto, la desaparición de Reverón no solo sella el destino de Juanita, sino que transforma el mítico Castillete en un escenario de espectros y ausencias. Con una prosa poética y evocadora, se teje un relato donde la identidad se desdobla y la locura se convierte en una forma de resistencia ante la pérdida. La luz y la sombra, elementos esenciales en la obra del maestro, cobran aquí un significado existencial, marcando el tránsito entre el olvido y la persistencia de la memoria.

Este texto fue extraído del perfil de Facebook de Daniel Hernández (https://www.facebook.com/danher50)

Por Víctor Mosqueda Allegri

Cuando Reverón fue enviado al manicomio por última vez y para siempre, Juanita rápidamente murió de tristeza, dicen los cronistas. Murió ahogada por la espuma blanca, prístina y cegadora, de un oleaje de recuerdos; murió aplastada por la oscuridad de El Castillete, donde la luz había decidido partir junto con Reverón para no volver; murió de silencio y melancolía. Murió de cordura y abandono; porque incluso el último de los Panchos decidió marcharse, sin ánimos de mirar atrás. Tomó una maletita de cuero, y metió allí algunos de sus cachivaches y medio racimo de cambures. Se marchó a la selva que rodea las playas de Macuto, para alfabetizar a los monos que se encontrara en su camino, y enseñarles a usar, también, tenedores, corbatines y sombreros. Con el último Pancho y la luz, también se fueron las visitas. Juanita se quedó sola en un rancho laberíntico lleno de muñecas; en un harem de concubinas enamoradas, sin su señor. Pero también las muñecas empezaron a marcharse poco a poco. Cada noche, Juanita contaba a sus compañeras y a la mañana siguiente una hacía falta. Algunas aparentemente lograban escapar ilesas. Pero a otras las encontró a medio camino de huida. Una despeñada por el desfiladero delante del rancho, siendo devorada por los cangrejos de la playa. Otra, destazada en los bordes de la selva, quizás por un cunaguaro o algún felino mayor. Una última destripada por zamuros daltónicos, que no hacían diferencia entre trapo sucio y carne humana.

Pero todo acabó cuando se terminaron de marchar los pájaros. En la malla del patio, no quedaban ni los piojos de algún pajarito de papel. Sólo entonces, la luz terminó de abandonar cada espacio respirable, y las tinieblas inundaron El Castillete. Juanita tuvo que aprender a caminar a tientas, a vivir a tientas, como un ciego, como un lúcido, incluso a plena luz del abrasador sol de la costa. No era posible ver un solo color en kilómetros de paisaje; ni amarillo, ni verde, ni naranja, ni azul… ni mucho menos blanco.

Juanita entonces abrió el baúl de Armando y sacó sus ropas. Cosió y descosió a ciegas y los arremendó a su medida. Se puso la ropa raída encima y se subió a un cocotero. Despeinó docenas de cocos y con sus pelos se hizo una barba poblada, con la que adornó la mitad de su cara y se hizo también un vello corto y rizado que rellenó buena parte de su pecho y abdomen. Cambió el color de su piel con los patuques blancos de Armando. Buscó los pinceles, las telas, el atril, se sacó la camisa, se ató un mecate fuertemente a la cintura, tan fuerte que cortaba la respiración y las ideas, y comenzó a pintar. Poco a poco Juanita se fue diluyendo de El Castillete, y la luz comenzó su lento regreso. Con Armando Reverón una vez más en su rancho trabajando todo el día, un nuevo Pancho se presentó para el oficio de portero, las muñecas regresaron del más allá, por medio de ritos espeluznantes que la misma noche realizó, los pájaros volvieron, esta vez con esposas e hijos, y las visitas comenzaron a tocar a la puerta esperanzadas de ver al maestro.

Mientras tanto, en la celda de un psiquiátrico, moría rápidamente Juanita Mota, de tristeza, de soledad, de oscuridad y de cordura. Armando, en su rancho, la dibujaba día y noche, con el recuerdo fijo en una obsesión, tratando de traerla de regreso, y con ella, al resto de la luz.

Comentario de Sandro Oramas

Poético y conmovedor este texto pero obviamente lejos de la realidad. Si bien admiro y respeto el autor, siento la obligación de aclarar, más allá de lo que pudiera aportar este el ejército literario y narrativo, que Juanita no murió inmediatamente después de su esposo (Reverón) sino muchos años más tarde. No murió en la celda de un psiquiátrico ni abandonada, todo lo contrario, murió acompañada por sus vecinos de la comunidad y allegados quienes la cuidaron hasta sus últimos días en el castillete. De esto y más soy testigo porque la conocí personalmente. Apenas tenía 10 años. Pernocté en el castillete compartiendo a temprana edad las tareas museológicas de mis padres mientras trabajaban en el rescate las muñecas y objetos de utilería artística de Reverón para convertir el castillete en un museo, que inauguró más tarde nuestro querido Aquiles Nazoa. Aún las telas vírgenes de Reverón colgaban del techo del Caney central y Juanita nos preparaba el desayuno en la vieja cocina donde por años cocinó para su adorado Armandito. El olor de las muñecas mezclado con el aroma del salitre e impregnaba el reluciente verdor de las mañana en el castillete. Una imagen que me quedó literalmente tatuada en la memoria. Por eso puedo hablar con propiedad ya que soy de las últimas personas que tuvieron el privilegio de vivir desde las entrañas del tiempo el espacio vivencial de Reverón. Creo que si bien todos tenemos la libertad de idealizar e inspirarnos con las figuras de Reverón y Juanita, también demasiados mitos y desafortunadas leyendas se han sembrado en el imaginario popular y la historiografía de lo que fué la verdadera identidad y vida del pintor y su consorte. De allí una imagen trillada de “el loco de Macuto” y de Juanita Mota la musa “negra” del artista perverso, cuando en realidad Juanita era simplemente una mujer sencilla del pueblo que Reverón veneró no solo como modelo sino como a una virgen hasta el final de sus días. Dignifiquemos entonces la imagen y genio del artista y su consorte con el mayor respeto a su memoria, como un patrimonio ejemplar del genio creador de los venezolanos.

Perez Art Museum PAMM
Pérez Art Museum Miami
Page 3 of 116
1 2 3 4 5 116
- Advertisement -

Read our latest edition and order a hard copy below, click on the cover

Miami Art

Stella Sarmiento Jewelry, cuban link chain
Miami Art

Recent Posts