Art of Latin America: 1900-1980

Page 1

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OF L A T I N

A M E R I C A

1900-1980

M A R T A

T R A B A

Distributed by The Johns Hopkins University Press for the Inter-American Development Bank

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ART


ART OF LATIN AMERICA: 1900 -1980 © Inter-American Development Bank, 1994 Distributed by The Johns Hopkins University Press 2715 North Charles Street Baltimore, Maryland 21218-4319 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 94-075175 ISBN: 0-940602-73-3 ISBN: 0-940602-71-7 (PBK) Graphic design: Dolores Subiza

COVER: ALEJANDRO OBREG6N. THE WAKE. 1956. OIL ON CANVAS, 140 X 175 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. PURCHASE FUND, 1957. PHOTOGRAPH BY MICHAEL GEISSINGER.

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The opinions and views expressed in this publication are not necessarily those of the Inter-American Development Bank.


The Inter-American Development Bank takes great pleasure in publishing Marta Traba's last work. While it was written a little over 10 years ago, its appearance in print is peculiarly timely. It comes at a moment when the significance of the role culture plays in development is acknowledged at the highest decision-making levels. Marta Traba was more than aware of the relationship, and at all times sought to situate art criticism within the proper economic, social, and political context. It is this understanding that leads the Bank and other international organizations to lay ever greater stress upon the human aspect of development, viewed as sustainable, shared progress. In one of its reports, the recently created UNESCO World Commission on Culture and Development explains the emphasis it places on the importance of culture and art for human development by stating that without a cultural and spiritual rebirth there can be no economic rebirth. Unquestionably, new models for development must not be limited to technical concerns but must extend to include the contributions of thinkers, artists, community leaders, and educators. Five centuries after the great encounter between the civilizations of the Old and New Worlds, Latin America can exhibit a rich variety of artistic expression, enjoying worldwide renown. The variety is precisely the challenge Marta Traba had to face in writing her book. As she herself asked, how is one to arrive at an overall view of the artistic product of more than two score countries, differing widely in tradition, culture, and language? Her task was to disentangle a confused web of disparate expression in an endeavor to establish a Latin American plastic identity. Art of Latin America: 1900-1980 provides a broad overview of art activity in the southern portion of our hemisphere. In some cases it evidences a rethinking by the author of positions previously taken that had given rise to heated controversies. In furtherance of its commitment to culture, the Bank will make copies of this work available to universities and other teaching institutions throughout our hemisphere, particularly ones concerned with the arts. Marta Traba was one of the outstanding figures in the Latin American art world. This is the last testimony of her thought.

Enrique V. Iglesias

President Inter-American Development Bank

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PREFATORY NOTE


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FOREWORD

vii

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

xv

CHAPTER I. INTRODUCTION

1

CHAPTER II. MEXICAN MURALISM: ACCOMPLISHMENT AND IMPACT

13

CHAPTER III. NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE

53

CHAPTER IV. DECADES OF CHANGE

83

CHAPTER V. NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS (1960-1980)

133

ARTIST INDEX

167

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TABLE OF CONTENTS


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THE METAPHYSICS OF LIGHT

This valuable study represents a valiant effort to present a view of Latin American art as a coherent whole, rather than a disjointed summary of artistic achievement in the individual countries of the area. It results from exhaustive research by the author into developments in art from 1900 to 1980—research that enabled her to paint a broad panorama in which theory is abundantly supported by fact. Marta Traba could not conceive of art criticism in separation from the economic, political, and social reality of the region. In consequence, the present text describes the evolution of modern art in Latin America as conditioned by such factors—the relationship between life as it was lived in the several countries and their artistic accomplishments. The principal theses of this study are as follows: • The Mexican Muralist Movement was not merely a consequence of the Mexican Revolution, but reflected a new attitude toward art, awakened by modernist winds blowing from Europe. • While the Mexican Muralists were at work, countries that had received large numbers of European immigrants—Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico, for example—became centers of lively experimentation in matters of form. Individual artists from still other countries, such as Lam, Reveron, and Torres-Garcia, were active along similar lines, and eventually won international renown. In contrast, countries with a greater Indian population and which were less receptive to immigration—Colombia, Ecuador, and Peru, for instance—were more subject to the political influence of Mexican Muralism. • From the 1950s on, artists engaged in experimentation with form (i.e. the avant-garde) are no longer conspicuous by their rarity in Latin America: their ranks have swollen to a chorus of about 50 figures who may be termed outstanding. • In reaction to this conceptual avant-garde (which had powerful reasons for existence in developed countries), a number of Latin American artists brought about renewal in drawing and printmaking, forms of artistic expression that were modest in scope and permitted reproduction. • The most conspicuous characteristic of Latin American art is its unvarying aim of communicating with the public by means of visual images. The last days of dithyramb Marta Traba was born in Buenos Aires on January 25, 1930. She and her brother Alberto were the children of Francisco Traba and Marta Tain, descendants of

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FOREWORD


Spanish immigrants. Marta attended public primary school and received her secondary education from the capital's Liceo Nacional. After obtaining a degree in letters from the Faculty of Philosophy of the National University, she began to work as an editorial assistant for the magazine Very Estimar, directed by the art critic Jorge Romero Brest. It was there that her first published articles appeared in 1948, during which year she took art courses at the Sorbonne and later at the Louvre Museum in Paris. She made trips to Budapest and Rome, and in 1950, while in France, she married the Colombian journalist Alberto Zalamea. Her first child, Gustavo, later to become a painter, was born in the following year. Returning to Buenos Aires, she there brought out her first book, Historia natural de la alegria (A Natural History of Merriment). She was a mere 20 years old. She went back to Europe to study art history in Rome, where her husband served as correspondent for the Bogota newspaper El Tiempo. It was then that she initiated her career as a critic and creative writer in all fields of arts and letters. Dithyramb's long reign over art criticism written in Latin America was about to come to an end. The heat of invective

Marta Traba could be found in the forefront of all types of intellectual activity. She founded magazines, promoted colloquia, and gave courses and lectures. Impatient and vehement by nature, she was constantly stirring up arguments. She had but one rule of conduct: to tell the truth as she saw it, without reservations, concessions, or compromises of any kind. In expressing her aesthetic convictions, she aimed ever to instill community pride and to encourage creative artists. She felt this to be a personal obligation on her part. She never sought for approval. She hated the idea of giving up. Praise—even from her intimates and disciples—was repugnant to her. She would never take an easy way out and was fascinated by challenges to her pedagogical ability. The discussions in which she engaged led to a constant enlargement of her field of teaching. They strengthened her convictions, even with respect to the most everyday of matters, and her consciousness of advancing in the paths of knowledge. She was a great talker, and she wrote persuasively. The Argentine critic Damian Bayon said that Marta was at her best in the heat of invective. Her pamphlets and articles for periodicals poured forth as from an ever-erupting volcano. "She gave shelter to students wounded in the violent skirmishes of the period," her friend the poet Juan Gustavo Cobo Borda recalls. She gave birth to novels amid a whirlwind of participation in exhibitions in most of the countries of Latin America, to which word had come of the depth of her knowledge and the brilliance of the judgments she passed on new artists and their works, applauding them when they so deserved, while holding them to the highest of international standards. Dithyramb was a thing of the past.

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• VIII • FOREWORD


FOREWORD • IX •

An end to concessions The present book exemplifies the exacting aesthetic standards Marta Traba set for schools and received opinion. Arbitrary classifications are overriden by logical and coherent analysis. The reputations of established figures in art, literature, and politics are subjected to careful reexamination. The orthodoxy of acceptance is replaced by the skepticism of research and the reality of confrontations. In her autobiographical novel Las ceremonias del verano (The Ceremonies of Summer), awarded the Havana "Casa de las Americas" Prize by a jury chaired by Alejo Carpentier, in the caustic observations of her Homerica Latina, in her study Dos decadas vulnerables en las artes plasticas latinoamericanas (Two Vulnerable Decades in Latin American Plastic Art), in her articles for learned reviews, in her introductions to exhibition catalogs, and in endless personal discussions, Marta noted that at a period in which European art evidenced a decline, Latin America was failing to make use of elements of its culture as instruments of revelation. "We are free because others pay us no attention," she wrote on several occasions, seeking to arouse both creative artists and political leaders from their slumbers. The metaphysical role of light In her book En la zona del silencio (In the Zone of Silence), Marta Traba wrote: In my analysis, my aim is less to persuade than to provoke a reaction, to tell the public: These images belong to you; take possession of them. They represent you; take them for a covering, as a witch gathers her cloak about her. They give you a meaning that goes beyond outward appearence; put faith in its symbolic significance. They exalt you; let the artist—the sole mortal capable of performing this act of reevaluation disinterestedly, without demagogic intent or lapses into rhetoric

let the artist elevate you to a higher realm,

transformed in substance and being. In an article writen in 1960 for the Bogota magazine Semana, she described in lyric terms approaching poetry the wonder aroused in her by art: No matter how many galleries one may visit, filled though they may be with the most ingenious, the most dazzling, the most touching, and the most powerful of man's creations in painting, there is nothing to compare with the handling of light in the works of Jan Vermeer of Delft. Better than anyone before or since, Vermeer understood that light is not merely the definitive element in painting but that which imparts life to beings and objects in repose. This life has nothing to do with everyday existence, although outwardly it

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herself and the accuracy of her appreciations. She is shrewd in her judgment of


reflects the simplest of things—those to be seen in Dutch interiors. It is life infused with light, life preserved in a light that is eternal. It was Vermeer who came closest to realizing the great ambition, common to all artists, of making his painted creations immortal. The girl pouring from a jug in the small painting in the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the girl pausing from her music in the still smaller canvas belonging to the Frick Collection reveal the metaphysical role performed by light. Light has captured their very essence, taking them by surprise, absorbed in themselves—creatures of air that once seen are never to be forgotten. It has raised them to the very peak of creative effort and sustains them there by its power, soaring over the heaven and hell of all other painting. The utopia of identity The foregoing quotations provide keys to Marta Traba's aesthetic approach. Her carefully orchestrated precepts marked a sharp, dissonant break with then-current critical practice. Even when spellbound by the art of Uccello, Piero della Francesca, and Mantegna, she preserved a critical attitude strictly in keeping with her conscience. In seeking to define those individual identities that, taken together, constitute a common identity, she was harsh in dealing with both mediocrity and injustice. In the introduction to this book she wrote: "However material be organized, whether for studies of limited scope or ones of a general nature, the critic must take into account social, economic, or political circumstances that may bring about a complete change in a country's art." Making her way through the thicket of the area's social disturbances, cultural conflicts, abundant needs, and scanty satisfactions, she comes somewhat closer to the Utopian goal of assigning an "identity" to Latin American art. She recognizes that for art to be honest it must exceed the bounds of art. Throughout his creative career—and most emphatically in "Questioning the Enigma," delivered in the French Academy—the iconoclastic writer Eugene lonesco has sustained that all art possessing real depth transcends the problems peculiar to its own mode of expression, whether it be painting or literature, music or architecture, and that a work of art such as a cathedral is expressive of an entire cosmology. Joan of Arc This book, written with the resolution characteristic of Marta Traba's spirit, vibrates with convictions that she never made any attempt to conceal—convictions that represent an attack on the bourgeois society in which she grew up and a challenge to the establishment in Colombia and other American countries in which she was active.

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X • FOREWORD


FOREWORD • XI

In a composite interview the Colombian painter Beatriz Gonzalez constructed using selections from the many statements the critic made to the press, Marta Traba acknowledges that she took her hat off to good writers because of did not care for her fellow members of the middle class. I feel that the class from which I come is mean, stupid, and dishonest. Middle-class women are a caste of parasites who take to the streets in Chile to bang on the pots and pans they never scour in the kitchen, who play canasta in Colombia, who gossip as they sit under hair dryers in beauty parlors everywhere. She adds: I don't like to get into fights, but I have to, because it is my duty. I would prefer to live in a just society and serve it with meekness, loyalty, and passion.... My incredible struggles are always against forces that could reduce me to dust.... I should like to go on being Joan of Arc, ever Joan of Arc. In an essay written in 1982, after applauding gifts by American millionaires to museums in cities both large and small, and after lauding Nelson Rockefeller for dispelling the mystique of the unique by permitting reproduction in limited editions of works of art and objects of daily use to be found in his home, she expressed a few reservations in this last regard. "What magazines announce as objects of art are in fact aesthetic monstrosities: bronze animal groups, porcelain Harlequins and shepherdesses, images stamped out of gold and silver, and above all interminable variations on themes associated with the legendary American West—cowboys, bucking horses, horned bulls, rodeos, and Indians, all heavily rendered in bronze and marble.... The identification of art with material objects has been played up by the advertising media, to the point that everything becomes their prey. One of the latest examples is an ad in which a late-model automobile is skillfully centered in a ballet scene painted by Degas, where it apparently constitutes an object of admiration both to the instructor and to the ballerinas lined up at the barre." Following this choleric outburst against the lifestyle of affluent society, she undertakes an almost tender defense of the culture of poverty. A page or two later, however, she admits that there is much to be said for an affluent society, noting the value given to open space in new urban construction in New York— space that gives the public the same freedom it enjoyed in the light-filled interiors of the Gothic cathedrals or the open-air reaches of the Roman Forum. "Everything has begun to move in Manhattan, thanks to the new architects. The lobby of the admirable Citicorp building gives the community ample living room, and

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the prophetic qualities of their words. She then calls attention to the fact that she


through its glass walls one can fully appreciate the other skyscrapers that have sprung up around it. Curved facades and diagonally placed walls create a dynamic interplay of reflections. The new tower of the Museum of Modern Art, designed by the Argentine architect Cesar Pelli, seems severe until one looks to the back, where it is joined to the old building by superimposed transparent levels, similar in effect to the exposed escalators of the Place Beaubourg in Paris. The Trump Tower advances deceptively toward Fifth Avenue in terraces from which the skyscraper shoots up to the rear." Reevaluation of Mexican Muralism

Marta Traba gave evidence of this characteristically metaphysical vision in all that she undertook—in her inspiring classroom presentations, in her exciting television appearances, in her writing, in the introductions to the exhibits she organized, in the creation of museums, in help rendered any publication she might establish or stimulate to further world understanding. She had an inborn capacity for appreciating painters, from the masters of the Renaissance to young practitioners of abstraction. She brought them all to public attention, at times by rude insistence, in constant combat with mediocrity. When the Colombian painter Fernando Botero was 25, she wrote: It would not be wide of the mark to say that there are as many Fernando Boteros as the artist has had shows to date. This statement is not to be taken as disparagement. After all, Botero is only 25, and, as is normal with any good painter, he was not born with a style ready-made for use. He has been seeking for a style with the stubbornness, zeal, and effort of an explorer making his way through the jungle, seeking for a clearing in which he can set up camp—for how long he knows not. Up to the present Botero has been passionately searching for form, and the sudden turns that his search has taken, first in one direction and then in the opposite, leave the public disconcerted. The sharpness of her perceptions, apparently based on a preestablished set of value judgments, derived from long acquaintance with art and artists of all times. Her language abounded in figures of speech, but she never indulged in empty rhetoric. Her pronouncements were the antithesis of dithyramb. When she asserted that Picasso's Guernica exhibited the most varied, intense, and powerful grays of our day, she was speaking with knowledge gained from acquaintance with the discreet use of grays in canvases by Velazquez and the white in the habits of monks painted by Zurbaran. It is with the same knowledge that in this book she passes judgment on Szyszlo, Figari, Reveron, Tamayo, Obregon, Lam, and Torres-Garcia. And it is with the same boldness of spirit that she inveighs against the murals Portinari did for United Nations Headquarters in New York.

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• XII • FOREWORD


FOREWORD • XIII •

More than one enraged critic wanted to know who the upstart was who dared to come out against the Mexican Muralists at the 1965 Symposium of Latin American Intellectuals held at Chichen Itza in Mexico. In the present study, howsocial and political factors and weighing attitudes, she comes to this conclusion: In the considered and dispassionate reexamination of the Muralists now under way, there is general agreement that their work represents the most important movement in Latin American art of the early part of the century. It was the only one to make clear the need for something that went beyond easel painting, something capable of playing a role of social importance in emerging Latin American societies. Human dignity Marta Traba led an admirable existence—admirable both for the quality of her life and for the fact that it was dedicated to the cause of beauty and justice. She accepted her calling with a joy and enthusiasm that infused every act of daily living. She was ever a fighter, whether alone or in the company of her husbands— first Alberto Zalamea, from whom she was divorced in 1967, and then Angel Rama, the Uruguayan critic with whom she came to the United States in 1979 to lecture by invitation at Middlebury College, Harvard University, the universities of Maryland and Vermont, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. By that time she stood in the forefront of art criticism in Latin America and the Caribbean. Attracted to narration, she published in Mexico Conversacion al sur (Conversation in the South), in which she came to the defense of human dignity in response to the severities of the military in Chile and Uruguay. In 1983 the Art Museum of the Americas, located at the headquarters of the Organization of American States in Washington, D.C., undertook a project financed in part by the U.S. National Endowment for the Humanities. It involved an interpretive installation of the Museum's permanent collection, the aim being to present the art of Latin America in cultural context. Marta Traba was engaged to serve as guest curator for the project, and in amplification thereof she produced a text on developments in Latin American art during the course of the twentieth century. Regrettably she did not live to see the results of her labors, which were carried to conclusion with enthusiasm by her collaborators. In 1985 the OAS reinaugurated its permanent collection with an exhibition that illustrated the quality of its holdings, the complexity of the art scene in Latin America, and the contributions made by individual artists from throughout the region, all in accordance with the highest of professional standards. Since Marta Traba had delivered only a first draft of her study to the Museum, publication could be undertaken only after editing, a task rendered unusually difficult without input from the author. The Art Museum of the Americas

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ever, after delving for roots and searching for spiritual ancestors, after examining


toiled over the text for five years, at the end of which the budgetary situation of the institution did not permit publication. For another five years the OAS sought financial backing from outside, endeavoring to resolve problems relative to noncommercial distribution of the text. Finally, following discussions between representatives of the Organization of American States and the Inter-American Development Bank, the latter undertook to publish the work, with the intention of distributing copies to interested institutions and individuals, thereby contributing to a better appreciation of the achievement of representatives of Ibero-America and the Caribbean in the field of visual arts—the goal to which Marta Traba was so passionately dedicated. A flame in the wind Marta Traba and Angel Rama were pursuing their task of promoting better understanding of the significance of Latin American art at leading cultural institutions of the United States, when one day the Reagan administration decided to deny the couple residency. The present writer, at the time President of Colombia, intervened on their behalf. Marta related the incident in an article entitled "Testimonio," published in January 1983 by the Bogota magazine Semana. When he learned the United States government had denied us resident visa status and that we were faced with deportation, the President twice telephoned our house in Washington, offering us a place to stay and work. He asked me, "Would you like Colombian citizenship?" Without thinking twice I said "Yes." She received Colombian citizenship. In Colombia she did 20 television programs, she gave lectures, she took part in discussions and exhibitions. As always she sounded like an erupting volcano, but her analyses were increasingly profound, her expression clearer, her judgments more precise. In March 1983 she and her husband took up residence in Paris, but she continued to work for Colombian television. The government of Colombia was organizing a symposium of Latin American intellectuals, to be held in Bogota to consider what the future held for the region with the coming of a new century. Marta Traba and Angel Rama were to be guests of honor. Then November 27, 1983, the airplane in which they were flying to Bogota crashed against a hill outside Barajas Airport in Madrid, Spain. As a poem by the Colombian Porfirio Barba Jacob puts it: "She was a flame in the wind—and the wind blew it out."

Santafe de Bogota February 1994

Belisario Betancur Ex-president of Colombia

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XTV • FOREWORD


Publication of this work by Marta Traba brings to conclusion a task undertaken in 1983 by a group of individuals associated with the Art Museum of the Americas, under a grant from the U.S. National Endowment for the Humanities. It is not surprising, nor is it mere coincidence, that some of those individuals are still engaged in the study and promotion of art of Latin America and the Caribbean, though now as staff members of the IDB's Office of External Relations—clear evidence of the coordination in effort that characterizes the component agencies of the inter-American system. Three persons merit special recognition: Maria Leyva, Curator of the Permanent Collection of the OAS Art Museum of the Americas; Felix Angel, previously Curator of Temporary Exhibitions at the Museum and now Consultant to the Cultural Center of the IDB; and Rogelio Novey, formerly Advisor to the Assistant Secretary General of the OAS and Interim Director of the Museum and now Chief of Conferences and Cultural Activities of the Bank's Office of External Relations. They have accompanied the development of this project since its beginning. The late Susana De Clerck, Susana Ramsburg, and Ralph Edward Dimmick shared the difficult task of revising and editing the original manuscript without assistance from the author, who had been the victim of a tragic accident shortly following its completion. Dimmick was responsible for the English translation of the text published in the catalogue of the OAS Museum; he is also responsible for the translation that appears in this volume. Acknowledgment should also be made of two other members of the original working group: Angel Hurtado, at the time chief of the audiovisual program of the OAS Museum, and Ana Maria Escallon, researcher. It was Hurtado who brought the existence of Marta Traba's manuscript to the attention of Ana Maria Coronel de Rodriguez, the Director of the IDB Cultural Center. A scholar who provided inspiration and guidance for the project in its early stages was Professor Stanton Catlin, of the University of Syracuse. Backing for the project was supplied by Alejandro Orfila and Valerie McComie, at the time respectively Secretary General and Assistant Secretary General of the OAS. Finally, thanks are extended to Belgica Rodriguez, Director of the OAS Museum, who made the manuscript available to the IDB's Office of External Relations, which has been responsible for the final revision and publication of this work.

Muni Figueres de Jimenez

External Relations Advisor Inter-American Development Bank

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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS


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THE DIFFICULTY OF VIEWING AS A WHOLE THE PRODUCT OF MORE THAN a score of countries, representing a variety of cultures, traditions, and language areas, presents an all but insurmountable obstacle to writing a history of modern art in Latin America. This may explain why, up to now, such a text does not exist. Without one, however, Latin American art cannot be properly placed within the context of the twentieth century. It should not be viewed as a mere appendage of such firmly established cultures as those of Europe and the United States, but as an autonomous creative effort, mirroring a community that has been struggling since the late 1800s to assert and define a culture of its own. A review of the existing bibliographic material, ranging from newspaper articles to studies of considerable length, shows a variety of approaches to the subject. First, there is a considerable number of monographs on individual artists. For the most part these do not fall into the category of criticism based on modern techniques of analysis and evaluation, but consist rather of biographical details and literary panegyrics.1 Next in quantity are histories of modern art devoted to a single country. These are of several types. Some are systematic studies, covering all trends. Alfredo Boulton's volume on Venezuela is a good example.2 Others are little more than compilations of notes of various types ranging over a broad spectrum of artistic activity.3 In still others, the critic concentrates on a single aspect of this development.4 Works of more inclusive character are those that deal with cultural areas, examined in terms of pre-Hispanic traditions and influences received from abroad,5 and studies in which countries are grouped by geographical areas.6 A problem common to all derives from the difficulty of establishing uniform guidelines for value judgments. Standards are different for each country and in most cases are determined by purely local conditions, often of a transitory nature. The erratic character of criticism derives in part from the fact that it is a relatively new professional activity in Latin America. In societies that have known little more than a century of republican existence, one cannot work on the basis of long-established and generally received cultural values. The history is

I

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INTRODUCTION

• JOSE MARIA VELASCO. THE VALLEY OF MEXICO. COLLECTION OF THE NATIONAL ART MUSEUM MEXICO, MEXICO CITY.

OF

PHOTO-

GRAPH COURTESY OF THE ART MU-

SEUM OF THE AMERICAS ARCHIVE, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A.


one of violent breaks with the past, of affirmations followed by denials, of alternating confidence and skepticism with respect to powers of expression. However material be organized, whether for studies of limited scope or ones of a general nature, the critic must take into account social, economic, or political circumstances which may bring about a complete change in a country's art. Sometimes the circumstances are purely economic. It was the establishment of the Royal Tobacco Factory in Cuba that brought artists to that island early in the nineteenth century. They came to design ornamental paper cigar bands, but they were also responsible for the appearance of a remarkable output of popular prints strongly critical of the established order. In addition, in 1818 the Academy of San Alejandro was founded in Havana to provide the rising moneyed class with art modeled on that of Europe. As a result of these two factors, the art scene in Cuba was altogether different from that in other Latin American countries during the nineteenth century. Though rich and varied, it did not favor the introduction of modern trends in art, which, critics say, did not assert themselves until about 1925.7 The political event with the greatest influence on the modern art of a Latin American nation was the Mexican agrarian revolution. Even such outstanding figures as Diego Rivera, David Alfaro Siqueiros, and Jose Clemente Orozco—all of whom were European-trained—would probably have developed along quite different lines had they not been invited in 1921 by the Secretary of Public Education, Jose Vasconcelos, to do murals for the country's principal public buildings. Their compositions—which reflected both personal inclination and political indoctrination—were by-products of the Mexican Revolution. When imitated by artists in other countries, where conditions were not the same, the results were often unfortunately artificial. Sometimes change came about through the sudden appearance of an avant-garde group seeking to revolutionize artistic standards, as was the case with the Montparnasse Group8 in Chile in 1925. In other instances change was hastened by conflicts between groups, and by public discussions, such as those that took place in Buenos Aires between writers from Florida and Boedo, small towns in the environs of the capital. In most cases new trends in art were first advocated in the avant-garde, nationalistically inspired literary magazines that began to appear in the late 1920s and early '30s, for there tended to be a close alliance between plastic artists and poets and other writers. Thus the work of Amelia Pelaez was promoted in the Cuban magazine Revista de Avance', the Buenos Aires publication Martin Fierro lent support to Xul Solar; the Peruvian review Amauta championed Torres-Garcia; and Baldomero Sanin Cano joined battle in Bogota in 1925 in defense of Andres de Santa Maria (pp. 9, 10). These are but a few examples of the writer-artist relationship that existed before modern art succeeded in asserting itself in Latin America. If we take 1925 as the dividing line between old and new, we note that in each case the appearance of modern art was conditioned by the politico-social

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• 2 • INTRODUCTION


circumstances of the individual country. Nothing could be farther from Siqueiros' texts on aesthetics9 than the writings of Mario de Andrade and the group associated with Sao Paulo's 1922 Modern Art Week.10 In the 1920s, the Chilean poet Vicente Huidobro, who sought to "internationalize Chile," and the Peruvian writer Juan Carlos Mariategui, who advocated "Peruvianizing Peru," took stands that were not merely different but positively antagonistic; their artistic counterparts were, respectively, Roberto Matta and Jose Sabogal. The varying roads to political and economic development that the countries were taking at this same time tended to draw them apart, as did their search for national identity. The latter led to a revived interest in folkways and an effort to define cultural boundaries, with consequent balkanizing effects. The worst of these consists in the fact that it is impossible to establish that line of continuity that is the sole solid foundation for cultural development, for all that it may appear to take place "by leaps and bounds," as Walter Benjamin wrote. As a result of the desire each country felt to possess a more individual type of modern art than that boasted by its neighbors, there was a break with the common heritage in which all had hitherto shared: the struggles for independence in the nineteenth century; the colonial regime that preceded; pre-Hispanic Indian cultures (both strong and weak); the influx of Blacks from Africa; crossbreeding between natives and newcomers. Rather than being viewed as a basis for cultural continuity, racial integration is even today a highly controversial issue.11 The appearance of modern art in Latin America should not be seen as a mere side effect of its development first in Europe and then in the United States. Neither should it be seen as a simple transfer to Latin America of the new perspectives and techniques that had been generated by the profound changes undergone by the societies responsible for the Industrial Revolution. If we date the beginnings of modern Latin American art from the mid '20s, 50 years after the first Impressionist exhibition in Paris (1874), it is obvious that Latin America took half a century to accept the idea that art is of value in and of itself, and not as a mere representation of reality. It is important to understand that, if Latin America was a late bloomer in the field of modern art, it was because those fifty years were needed to prepare for what was to come. The background against which the development took place was not that of French Impressionism or Naturalism, or any of the "isms" current in Europe from 1905 to 1930, but the genre painting that artists of the late nineteenth century turned out in response to the bourgeois, provincial tastes of a society that was totally removed from the explosive growth of industry and cities in Europe and the United States. An important place in this background was occupied by foreigners—not the eighteenth-century travelers who meticulously sketched the landscapes of the New World and the appearance and customs of the inhabitants—but academic painters of distinction. Mexico was one of the main centers of attraction. Baron Jean-Louis Gros, who lived there in the years 1832-36, depicted the central valley long before Jose Maria Velasco (1840-1912) (p. xvi). The most summary criti-

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INTRODUCTION • 3 •


INTRODUCTION

cal analysis shows the difference between Gros' faultless academic style and Velasco's "learned constructions" with their "historical, philosophic, and folkloric overtones," to use terms employed by the Mexican critic Justino Fernandez.12 And it was an Englishman, Daniel T. Egerton, who was responsible for dramatic views of Popocatepetl. The German Johann Mauritz Rugendas (1802-1858), and later the Englishman Thomas S. Somerscales (1842-1927), devoted long hours to views of the Bay of Valparaiso, and had no equal in evoking the wild, cold South Pacific. The Frenchman Raymond Monvoisin (1790-1870) arrived in Chile in 1843. The Academy of Painting, founded in 1848, was headed first by the Italian Alessandro Cicarelli (1810-1874); he was succeeded as director by the German Ernst Kirchbach (1832-1880). They and Anthony Smith (1832-1877), the tireless observer of the Cordillera, were the first Chilean painters. By the middle of the nineteenth century foreigners were active in all parts of Latin America. Trained in the academic manner and adhering to all the established rules, they painted with great technical proficiency, and with increasing emphasis on landscape, as the Cuban critic Adelaide de Juan has observed.13 Since many of these painters were teachers, and since almost all the schools of fine arts were of their creation, one might conclude that it was they who taught painting and sculpture to every Latin American artist active at the end of the century. The conclusion is too simplistic, however. In the period between 1870 and 1920—when one can identify about 500 artists of some degree of interest—there was constant movement back and forth between Europe and Latin America. The foreign academics and landscapists established in Latin America practiced and taught different genres of painting. During the second half of the century, the two most in demand were historical paintings and portraits. Newly established national institutions sought enhancement in tableaux of heroes engaged in bold deeds. For their part, members of the moneyed classes that began to assert themselves following the wars of independence took pleasure in their own likenesses and in pictures devoted to mythological or biblical subjects, possession of which was supposed to convey a certain social standing. While landscape constitutes the outstanding feature of the scenes of the Paraguayan War painted by Candido Lopez (Argentine, 1840-1902), in itself it was of no interest to either of the patrons mentioned above. With very few exceptions, such as the previously mentioned Jose Maria Velasco, landscape did not come into its own until the twentieth century, when it had an extraordinary flowering, concentrated, however, in a few favorite areas—notably Mexico, Colombia, and Brazil. In 1978 the State Art Museum of Sao Paulo presented an exhibit of 54 landscape artists active in the first two decades of the present century. Two points are to be noted in regard to this flowering of landscape. First there were a large number of paintings in which landscape served merely as a backdrop—scenes of women washing clothes in streams, laborers working in the fields, and so on—all rather neutral from the descriptive viewpoint. There is no great difference between the washerwomen Andres de Santa Maria painted in

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4 •


INTRODUCTION • 5 •

Colombia and the manioc millers painted by Modesto Brocos y Gomez (18521936) in Brazil. Second, with the exceptions ofjoaquin Clausell (1866-1935) in Mexico Impressionists in capturing subjects rapidly and in producing color effects in which pigments are blended by the eye. They became tardy Postimpressionists who remained at all times within the established bounds as regarded genre and technique. No change or progress can be observed at any point. The Argentine Fernando Fader (1882-1935), who exhibited at the Costa Bazaar in Buenos Aires in 1905, is a typical example. Postimpressionist landscape painting did not therefore imply the appearance in Latin American art of the idea of painting for its own sake. It indulged in no more than a timid alteration of reality, which continued to be the artist's point of departure. Comparing Sketches of the Savannah, painted by the Colombian Roberto Paramo in 1910, with The River, executed by his compatriot Andres de Santa Maria in 1920, one notes that the latter is markedly more concerned with color values and the manner of applying paint to canvas, but the aim of both is to reproduce reality, transfigured though it may be by poetry or energy. Reveron, in Venezuela, went beyond the limit which Rafael Monasteries (1884-1961) never exceeded: one crossed the threshold into modern art or one did not. If the Postimpressionist landscapists were not strictly speaking modern, neither were they the romantics their nineteenth-century United States colleagues had been. From the time of Thomas Cole till the turn of the century, the Luminists and members of the Hudson River School never ceased to breathe the romantic spirit. It went well with the discovery of nature by writers such as Thoreau, Emerson, and Whitman, and expressed a longing for wide-open spaces and awesome vistas contrasting with the bleak spectacles of the advancing industrial era. The Postimpressionists were quite unacquainted with the romantic spirit of the foreign landscapists of the earlier generation. They engaged in diffuse realism, as void of heroism as of social protest. Paralleling them in the nascent century were a few—no more than a dozen—artists who practiced the type of social painting acceptable in the Paris salons, typified by the gentle humility of the peasants in Millet's Angelus. It was a type of genre painting that served in France to illustrate serialized novels such as Hugo's Les Miserables. It was picked up by a fewr artists whose emphasis was on the anecdotic. The episodes soon became cliches: The Sick Boy, painted by the Venezuelan Arturo Michelena (p. 7), is brother to The Sick Girl of the Chilean Pedro Lira (p. 7). Cuban beggars as depicted in popular prints are cousins of The Orphans painted by the Chilean Julio Fossa Calderon. The Soup of the Poor and Breadless and Out of Work (1885), painted by the Argentines Reinaldo Giudice and Ernesto de la Carcova, are fit companions to the hungry and jobless in the gloomy renditions of the Venezuelan Cristobal Rojas (p. 7). It is no coincidence that a majority of these artists lived in Paris and painted for the salons there in the years from 1885 to 1890. Contrasting with this operatically programmed realism (which in Eu-

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and Armando Reveron (1889-1954) in Venezuela, the landscapists copied the


rope reflected the terrible overcrowding of the industrial centers) were less pretentious but more successfully realized works turned out in Latin America. In 1911 the Argentine Antonio Alice (1886-1943) won the prize for painting at the first National Salon in Buenos Aires with his Portrait of the Painter Decoroso Bonifanti. He, the Brazilian Eliseu d'Angelo Visconti (1867-1944), and the Colombian Alfonso Gonzalez Camargo (1883-1941) asserted themselves as Intimists, and set the tone for an unpretentious type of painting whose significance is increasingly recognized as time goes by. While the journey the Venezuelan Jacinto Inciarte made to Rome about 1883 belongs to the history of the nineteenth century, around 1890 a large number of painters of present concern began to make the pilgrimage to the fountainheads of art instruction, particularly the School of Fine Arts in Paris and the Academy of San Fernando in Madrid. After 1900 these travelers, less conscious of being neophytes, began to shed the timidity evinced by those of two decades earlier. In 1915, after admiring some 600 Goyas at the Buen Retiro Museum in Madrid, Reveron felt he had been in Europe long enough and returned to Venezuela for good, taking up a hermit-like existence in the little "castle" he built on the beach at Macuto. The Colombian Andres de Santa Maria (1860-1945) and the Uruguayan Pedro Figari (1861-1938) went to the other extreme, doing almost the whole of their work in Europe. Figari's compatriot Joaquin Torres-Garcia (1874-1949) spent 43 years in the Old World before returning to Montevideo in 1934. The Mexican Rufmo Tamayo emphasized his divergence from the muralists by constant journeying between Mexico City, Paris, and New York in the years from 1926 to 1938. After his trip to France and Italy in 1912, the Argentine Emilio Pettoruti (b. 1892) divided his existence between the Old World and the New until his death in Paris in 1971. I have purposely mentioned some of the exceptional artists who, rising above their environments, took it upon themselves to introduce modern art into Latin America. They are recognized as forerunners of the art to come, owing to the exceptional quality and innovative character of their work. They were, however, the product of the same milieu as their less-talented colleagues, they received the same poor academic instruction, they struggled with similar problems, and they encountered the same lack of understanding on the part of a conservative and unreceptive public. One should recall that until their arrival in Europe they had had almost no contact with modern art. In celebration of the centennial of Argentine independence in 1910, an exhibition of paintings was staged at the old Argentine Pavilion in Buenos Aires. It featured Spanish artists such as Nonell, Mir, Rusinol, and Anglada Camarasa and Frenchmen such as Renoir, Bonnard, Monet, and Vuillard. (Picassos had first been presented in Buenos Aires at the Witcomb Gallery in 1904.) But Buenos Aires was an exception —a flourishing cosmopolitan center riding on a wave of prosperity. In contrast, despite the power of its closely knit cultural elite, Sao Paulo had no contact with works of the famous School of Paris until Tarsila do Amaral (1890-1973) took to frequenting

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• 6 • INTRODUCTION


ARTURO MICHELENA. THE SICK

BOY. 1886, NATIONAL ART GALLERY, CARACAS,

VENEZUELA.

(UPPER

LEFT). CRISTOBAL ROJAS THE LAST FIRST COMMUNION. 1888. NATIONAL ART GALLERY, CARACAS, VENEZUELA (UPPER RIGHT). PEDRO LIRA THE SICK GIRL (BELOW). PHOTOGRAPHS COURTESY OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS ARCHIVE, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A.

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INTRODUCTION • 7


the studio of Andre Lhote. 14 While snobbery had the beneficial effect ofkeeping the Buenos Aires elite up to date, this did not prevent the public that acclaimed the exhibit of the Japanese artist Foujita at the Miiller Gallery in 1932 from repudiating and mocking Pettoruti and Xul Solar. It is easy to imagine the artistic stagnation of the first two decades of the century in what we might call "closeddoor" countries in view of their unreceptiveness to immigration—those of the Andean area, Central America, and certain parts of the Caribbean. Genre painting reigned supreme; the public refused to accept anything other than literal reproduction of visible reality. Sometimes the merest of accidents had a profound effect on an artist's career. Jaime Sabartes, a friend of Picasso, set up a tailor shop in Guatemala City in 1907, and it was there that the young Carlos Merida saw for the first time a few examples of modern painting. This chance encounter proved decisive for the development of one of the most original of the pioneers of modern Latin American art. Wifredo Lam's visit to Picasso's Paris studio in 1930 was to bear fruit 12 years later in an impressive series of Picasso-like pictures of women of the tropics. Individual talent and chance were two factors of significance in the implantation of modern art in Latin America. The slow, laborious process of gaining access to modern art meant that until 1925 artists did not feel free to depart from representation of reality. It also meant, however, that Latin America skipped over the period of "isms" in European art. Fauvism, German and Scandinavian Expressionism, Russian Constructivism, De Stijl, Dada, and Pointillism all were without direct or indirect effect on Latin American artists. The innovations that became known and were timidly accepted fell in the areas of Impressionism—already in a second phase— and Cubism. With respect to the latter, reservations must be made similar to those expressed in the case of the former. The analytic and synthetic aspects of French Cubism, the use of planes, and the decorative manifestations found no reflection in Latin America. Instead we find a process of "Cubification" of stillrecognizable forms, combined in rather elementary fashion. It was not a matter of chance that the European artist most closely followed in Latin America was Andre Lhote, a now-forgotten painter of second rank, who engaged in the same sort of second-hand modernism. The break with Postimpressionist landscape painting came about through "Cubification" more in the manner of Cezanne than in that of Picasso. During the '30s it found its best expression in a dry, literal realism, deriving from enthusiasm for the Mexican muralists, the most important influence being that of Diego Rivera. Portraits painted in Argentina by Raquel Forner, Demetrio Urruchua, and Lino Eneas Spilimbergo; in Colombia by Ignacio Gomez Jaramillo; and in Cuba by Jorge Arche, and working-class scenes painted by the Argentine Antonio Berni or the Mexican Antonio Ruiz are all characterized by the same directness of expression and synthesis of elements in a well-combined whole. One might call it Diego Rivera seen in the light of Cubism. There were variations of course. An artist like the Argentine Luis Centurion took a more aesthetic approach to "Cubification," and the Brazilian Emiliano di Cavalcanti practiced it with exuberant exaggeration.

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8 • INTRODUCTION


ANDRES DE SANTA

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INTRODUCTION • 9 •

MARIA.

COUNTRY CONCERT. UNDATED. OIL ON

CANVAS,

ANTIOQUIA

16

X

MUSEUM,

21

CM.

MEDELLIN,

COLOMBIA. GIFT OF HELENA OSPINA DE OSPINA, 1955.

PHOTO-

GRAPH FURNISHED BY THE ANTIOQUIA MUSEUM.

In this introductory period one must also recognize the power exerted by Surrealism. Mexico provided a natural home for the movement and many of its outstanding figures gravitated there. The Frenchmen Antonin Artaud and Andre Breton appeared there in 1936 and 1938 respectively. One also notes the presence of the Peruvian Cesar Moro, the German Wolfgang Paalen, and, during World War II, two women painters, Remedies Varo of Spain and Leonora Carrington of England. All served to reinforce a century-old native tradition running from Jose Guadalupe Posada through Julio Ruelas and Frida Kahlo to Francisco Toledo.13 At the other end of the continent, in Argentina, Surrealism was practiced as an intellectual exercise, in accordance with orthodox European principles. Juan Batlle Planas was the unquestioned leader of the movement, and Aldo Pellegrini its official critic.16 Strange to say, these exceptions aside, though


• ANDRES DE SANTA MARIA. PROFILE. UNDATED. OIL ON CANVAS, 76 X 64 CM.

ANTIOQUIA

MUSEUM,

MEDELUN, COLOMBIA. ACQUISITION,

1948.

PHOTOGRAPH FUR-

NISHED BY THE ANTIOQUIA MUSEUM.

Latin America has been described as a "Surrealist continent," the theories of the European Surrealists and their "planned fantasies" had no repercussion there whatever. As we shall see, modern Latin American art derives in large part from the myths and magical beliefs that circulate in a majority of the countries, and has far deeper meaning than the limited fantasizing of a Rene Magritte or a Paul Delvaux. The importance of this element lies in the fact that it gives a "tone" to Latin American art that comes close to expressing the "identity" to which it aspires. An identity that embraces both group and individual tendencies in Latin American art is undoubtedly a Utopian ideal. It is not to be achieved by theorizing, but must derive from the works of art themselves. The way to the goal is a tortuous one, but it is not lacking in adequate guideposts.

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• 10 • INTRODUCTION


INTRODUCTION • 11 •

Notes Interpretation from the literary viewpoint is well exemplified by Tamayo (Mexico City: Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, 1958); from the angle of philosophical analysis, by Juan Flo's Torres-Garcia, published in Montevideo; from the research angle, Barbara Duncan's Torres-Garcia, published in the United States; from the viewpoint of the sociology of art, by Rita Eder's Gironella (Mexico City: Institute de Investigaciones Esteticas de Mexico). - Alfredo Boulton: Historia abreviada del arte en Venezuela (Caracas: Monte Avila). ! Good examples are Juan Calzadilla's El ojo que pasa (Caracas: Monte Avila, 1969) and Juan Garcia Ponce's La aparicion de lo invisible (Mexico City, 1968). * Cayetano Cordova Iturburu: La pintura argentina del siglo XX, Buenos Aires, 1958. ' Marta Traba: Dos decadas vulnerable* en las artes pldsticas latinoamericanas, 1950-1970 (Mexico City: Siglo XXI, 1973). (> Damian Bayon: Aventura pldstica de Hispanoamerica (Mexico City: Fondo de Cultura Economica, 1974). ' Adelaida de Juan: Pintura cubana (Mexico City: Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, 1980). " The group adopted this name as a sign of renewal and rebellion. Most of its members had lived in Paris and were influenced by the new ideas in fashion there. According to the Revista de Education de Chile (1928), when these artists reached Santiago they issued a manifesto and held a number of group shows. The principal characteristics of the Montparnasse Group and its epigones were: a lack of strict plastic style, a desire to transfer their own subjective reactions to canvas, and an indubitable lyric spirit. See Antonio R. Romera, Historia de la pintura chilena (Santiago de Chile: Zig-Zag, 1960). II David Alfaro Siqueiros: JYo hay mas ruta que la nuestra (Mexico City, 1945). A compilation often articles by the author. III Marta Rosetti Batista et al.: Brasil; !" Tempo modern is ta, 1917-1929, Documentafdo (Sao Paulo: Universidade de Sao Paulo, 1972). 1 ' See in this regard the controversy between the Argentine writer Julio Cortazar and the Peruvian Jose Maria Arguedas concerning Argueda's criticism of cosmopolitan writers in Amaru. 12 Justino Fernandez: El arte del siglo XIX en Mexico (Mexico City: Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, 1967). 1:5 Adelaida dejuan, op. cit. 14 Aracy A. Amaral: Tarsila, sua obra e sen tempo, 2 vols. (Sao Paulo: Editora Perspectiva/ Universidade de Sao Paulo, 1975). '•' Ida Rodriguez Prampolini: El surrealismo y el arte fantdshco de Mexico (Mexico City: Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, 1969). "' Aldo Pellegrini: Panorama de la pintura argentina contempordnea (Buenos Aires: Paidos, 1967).

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1I


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MURALISM: ACCOMPLISHMENT

II

AND IMPACT

MORE THAN SIX DECADES HAVE PASSED SINCE THE WALLS OF PUBLIC buildings in Mexico were first emblazoned with the works of the country's great muralists. Those compositions can now be viewed in perspective and discussed objectively, without the impassioned argument that they provoked until the early 1950s—an argument that was revived all but posthumously in 1970 by the construction of David Alfaro Siqueiros' Cultural Polyforum in Mexico City. It is generally agreed that the Mexican School had its roots in the 1910 revolution, but the statement is now qualified to some extent. The Mexican critic Jorge Alberto Manrique writes: "To view the Mexican School of Muralists solely as a product of the revolution that began in 1910 is a misinterpretation of which propaganda has taken maximum advantage."1 He points out that the social upheaval coincided with the revolution in poetry that occurred everywhere between 1920 and 1930. The Mexican writer Octavio Paz expresses a similar view: "Mexican mural painting springs not only from the change in social consciousness represented by the Mexican Revolution but also from the change in aesthetic perception that constitutes the European artistic revolution of the twentieth century."2 At a colloquium held at the National University of Mexico's Institute of Aesthetic Research November 7-10, 1979, the attempt was made to reevaluate a number of concepts in current usage. One of them was the term "the big three," applied to Rivera (pp. 12, 17, 18, 19), Siqueiros (pp. 21, 22), and Orozco (pp. 24, 25, 26). In this regard the critic Berta Taracena writes: "It is important to note that at this juncture it is no longer possible to speak of a 'Mexican School'—a term frequently used in a pejorative sense—with regard either to the Muralists or to other painters of the period. The expression has gradually given way to the

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MEXICAN

DIEGO RIVERA. DETROIT INDUS-

TRY. MURAL ON THE SOUTH WALL OF

THE CENTRAL COURT OF THE DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS, MICHIGAN,

U.S.A. FRESCOES EXECUTED 1931-33. DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS.

AC-

QUISITION

OF

OF

THE SOCIETY

FOUNDERS WITH FUNDS DONATED

BY EDSEL B. FORD. PHOTOGRAPH BY DIRK BAKKER FURNISHED BY THE DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS.


more general aesthetic concept of 'Mexicanism,' which defies all attempts at definition, owing to the complexity of its origins." In the considered and dispassionate reexamination of the Muralists now under way, there is general agreement that their work represents the most important movement in Latin American art of the early part of the century. It was the only one to make clear the need for something that went beyond easel painting, something capable of playing a role of social importance in emerging Latin American societies. As nationalistic tendencies came to the fore in the '20s and '30s, there was great debate of the prime obligation to establish a bond between art and society, particularly when the society in question was culturally deficient and lacked access to information that would make clear its role as the protagonist of history. The theoretical discussions found reflection in the work of a number of exceptional artists. The Mexican Muralists were vigorous in putting the idea into practice, expressing it with a conviction and sweep that no one has been able to duplicate since. The violence of the reaction to the Muralists when they moved clearly into the political arena is better understood when one recalls that at the same time efforts were being made in Latin America to introduce a type of art that was truly twentiethcentury in character, in clear opposition to nineteenth-century models. A number of artists were seeking on an individual basis to evolve an aesthetic language suited both to the world of their day and to national peculiarities, rejecting passive acceptance of European models. Today one has no difficulty in recognizing the debt owed by the Mexican Muralists to the new European art of their time. This applies particularly to Diego Rivera. During his years of apprenticeship in Europe he produced Cubist compositions in the manner of still lifes by Juan Gris, Braque, and Picasso. His color combinations were, however, highly original, and doubtless owe something to Mexican folk art. While Siqueiros and Orozco lacked Rivera's European experience, they nonetheless profited from the new freedom in the treatment of form that derived from Expressionism and from the spirit of experimentation that had taken the place of slavish adherence to academic precepts. Around 1907 "Dr. Atl" (Gerardo Murillo, 1875-1964) painted 12 gesso panels for the House of the People in Paris. He used pigment mixed with resin, producing a pastel-like effect. His Italo-French training influenced to some extent his panoramic concept of space—a concept similar to that of the Muralists. The moving forces behind the work of the Muralists were thus two. First there was the Mexican Revolution and the concurrent discovery of the spirit, the inherent worth, and the deep-rooted culture of the Mexican people, all of which had been obscured by the Europeanizing tendencies of the long period (1876-80, 1884-1911) of Porfirio Diaz's presidency. Second, there were the new tendencies abroad in the Old World, polarized around the right "to dare everything," as Paul Gauguin put it. But other forces were also at work—ones of a more immediate and local nature. One notes for example the influence exerted by the extraordinary printmaker Jose Guadalupe Posada (1852-1913) (p. 15), to which must be added that of two other great figures: Manuel Manilla (1830-1895) and Gabriel Vicente Gahona (1828-1899). In reality, one should take into consider-

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14 • MEXICAN MURALISM


JOSE

GUADALUPE

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MEXICAN MURALISM • 15

POSADA.

LA CATRINA, METAL ENGRAVING.

COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM

OF THE AMERICAS, OAS, WASHING-

TON, D.C., U.S.A. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS.

ation the whole mass of penny-press satirical graphics. Aimed at the general public, they constituted the most vigorous social criticism to be found in Latin America. It was a Frenchman, Jean Chariot (1898-1979), the Muralists' "fellowtraveler," who discovered Posada's work in a priritshop belonging to Bias Vanegas Arroyo, the son of Posada's printer Antonio Vanegas. Taking from folk art the figure of the skeleton, Posada portrayed as death's-heads members of the opulent society that flourished under Porfirio Diaz. Their presence in scenes of injustice and atrocity symbolizes the leveling effect of death, the theme so popular in late medieval art. In his fresco Dream of a Sunday Afternoon in the Alameda, Rivera painted himself as a child in a monumental tableau. A skull-headed woman leads him by one hand and gives the other to Jose Guadalupe Posada. The critic Luis Cardoza y Aragon has called this a tribute to "the universal figure of the Mexican Revolution." In the course of 30 years, Posada authored about 15,000 prints. He arrived on the scene when lithographs of satiric intent had become important factors in Mexican public life. Lithography was introduced to Mexico by an Italian, Claudio Linati, who opened up a printshop in 1826. By 1900, 10 years before Porfirio Diaz was to celebrate the centennial of Mexican independence and the modernization of the country with unbelievable pomp, no less than 37 printshops were functioning in Mexico City. In the years from 1847 to 1913, lithography of satiric intent flourished mightily. In 1847 Gabriel Vicente Gahona brought out in Yucatan Don Bullebulle, a ferocious take-off of society and manners, including


people in life's humblest stations. Posada worked for 25 different penny-press sheets at one and the same time. Rivera had his prints reissued in 1922, at which time Siqueiros and Xavier Guerrero began publication of El Machete, which was to last till 1938. At the turn of the century the Mexican satirical press was represented not only by penny sheets but also by periodicals, the most successful of which were ElArgos, La Patria, ElAhuizote, El Hijo delAhui^ote (in whose issues for 1911 and 1912 early drawings by Orozco appear), Fray Gerundio, El Fandango, La Risa del Popular, Gaceta Popular, ElDiablito Rojo, ElDiablito Bromista, LaArana, and La Guacamaya. Political criticism is the aim of all, but form derives primarily from the Mexican ballad, featuring the adventures and misfortunes of heroes, bandits, and victims of tragedies that had evoked popular interest. It exhibits a fondness for exaggeration and bloodshed, for dividing the world between the innocent and their persecutors, and above all for action. The emphasis on detailed description of episodes, the sharp division between good and evil, and the excessive indulgence in melodrama carried over into the work of the Muralists. Save for occasional excursions into symbolism or prophecy, their compositions consist in narratives of gigantic proportions. The ballad, transmitted orally or by the penny press, gave continuity and consistency to the Muralist movement. In Mexico the relationship between printmakers, Muralists, and folk art runs deep; it has roots in colonial art and in that of the the pre-Hispanic period. Triumphing over 35 years of dictatorship by Porfirio Diaz, the folk ballad, with the needs and tastes to which it gives expression, found reincarnation in the great narrative cycles of Diego Rivera (1886-1957), David Alfaro Siqueiros (18961974), and Jose Clemente Orozco (1883-1949). It also finds expression in the Tribute to ^apata painted by Rufmo Tamayo (1899-1991) (p. 29)? The monumental mural work of Rivera, Siqueiros, and Orozco has been the object of extensive study. The lengthy bibliography includes letters, autobiographies, and other writings by the artists themselves. Every text on modern Latin American art must review that work in order to explain its prestige and extensive repercussion. We shall follow the traditional order in dealing with the three. In his Zapatista Landscape (1915), his Portrait of Angelina (1917), and the still lifes he painted in Paris in 1916, Rivera showed himself surprisingly independent of the Cubist masters who then dominated the art scene. While Roses in a Vase (ca. 1914) partakes of some of the liberties that characterize Juan Gris' work, it exhibits none of the monochromatic refinement of the ocher compositions Georges Braque was painting in 1914 and 1915, nor does one observe the play of spaces and planes to be found in Picasso's still lifes of the same period. The violence and sensuality of the color effects and the realistic details that crop up unexpectedly make for a heterodox Cubism of exceptional qualities. A scant year after his return to Mexico, however, Rivera was painting in terms of the post-revolutionary situation. In 1921 he did Creation for the National Preparatory School, using encaustic, "putting the paint right on the wall, so that dollars can't unglue it." His first great works, however, are the murals he did for the Secretariat of Public Education. Covering 1585 square meters, they are overwhelming in effect. Rivera makes a strategic use of space, taking advantage of

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16 • MEXICAN MURALISM


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MEXICAN MURAL1SM • 17

• DIEGO RIVERA. ZAPATISTA LANDSCAPE; THE GUERRILLA. 1915. OIL ON CANVAS, 144 X 123 CM. NATIONAL ART MUSEUM, MEXICO CITY.

PHOTOGRAPH BY DIRK BAKKER FUR-

NISHED BY THE DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS, DETROIT, MICHIGAN, U.S.A.

overhangs, recesses, and staircase landings. One does not so much "read" as "experience" the mural: one rises from a landscape of low-lying jungles, ports filled with boats and thronged with women, up the sides of mountains. Legends—that of Xochipilli on the first landing

bring the narrative to a temporary halt, but

constitute no real break. At the second level one witnesses the birth of socialism, with the end of capitalism and the burial of the worker. Rivera had clearly learned from Giotto how a composition is structured. The murals painted for the National School of Agriculture in Chapingo in 1927 are of a different order. In the central panel one sees Mother Earth, with plants springing from the bodies of martyrs. As the critic Oliver Debroise has observed, one must let oneself be carried off into the world of dreams to appreciate this properly. Seeking to appeal both to the educated and to the public at large, the Muralists constantly vacillated between mere description and symbolism. The use of a system of symbols constitutes a highly complex plastic language, which can be deciphered only by the initiate. It takes a scholarly minded artist to make successful use of this manner of expression. In Orozco's case it constitutes an ontological statement, in that of Siqueiros it serves the end of political and ideological propaganda. To come back to Rivera, the murals at Ghapingo provide a primer of elementary symbols. The closed fist represents the germination of revolution; the partly open hand signifies its flowering; the fully open hand, its


DIEGO RIVERA. SLEEP. 1932, LI-

THOGRAPH NO. 17, 40.5 X 30 CM. COLLECTION OF THE INTER-AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT BANK, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. PHOTOGRAPH BY DAVID MANGURIAN.

fruit. The earth lies in bondage to capitalists, the military, and the clergy. Good and bad government are depicted as in the Sienese frescoes of the fourteenth century. The hammer and sickle appear in the center of the vault.

While Rivera was painting at Chapingo, Mexico was rocked by a new wave of violence—the War of the Cristeros.4 In 1928 Obregon was reelected only to be assassinated. Galles, who succeeded to the presidency, put a stop to the spread of the ejidos, settled relations with the United States, and came to new agreements with the great landholders. The frescoes and grisailles Rivera did for the Cortes Palace in Cuernavaca were commissioned by Dwight Morrow, then the American Ambassador in Mexico. Their verve and preciseness of outline reflect the influence of Uccello. The battle between the Aztecs and the Spaniards and the taking of Cuernavaca are portrayed by Rivera in the best Renaissance spirit. The equestrian figure of Zapata in the panel devoted to exploitation and insurrection is nothing less than a masterpiece. Between 1929 and 1935 Rivera executed monumental frescoes in the stairwells and entrance hall of the National Palace, works which according to the critic Antonio Rodriguez show Rivera's "exceptional feeling for architecture." Pre-Columbian Mexico, the Spanish conquest, the struggles for independence, the war with the United States, the 1910 Revolution with Zapata's cry for "land and liberty," the history of class struggle, present-day Mexico, and Mexico

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18 • MEXICAN MURALISM


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MEXICAN MURALISM • 19

• DIEGO RIVERA. DREAM OF A SUNDAY AFTERNOON IN THE ALAMEDA,

1947-48, FRESCO IN THE HOTEL DEL PRADO, MEXICO CITY, 4.80 X 15 M. PHOTOGRAPH

BY DIRK

BAKKER,

CONTRIBUTED BY THE DETROIT INSTI-

TUTE OF ARTS, DETROIT, MICHIGAN, U.S.A.

of the future- all are depicted in fresco in the Italian manner, painted on quickdrying wet plaster. There are, however, a few slight departures from tradition. For example, cactus juice was used instead of water to dissolve the pigments, with the result that some of the colors have oxidized. The narrative technique recalls the films of Cecil B. De Mille, with their sweeping movements of masses and their organized confusion. It is history turned into pageant and staged for ready comprehension on the part of the public. While Rivera was painting murals for the Palace of Fine Arts (1935) and the frescoes on movable frames for the Hotel Reforma (1939), Lazaro Cardenas was President of Mexico. This was the period of Mexico's expropriation of landed estates and the holdings of foreign oil companies. It coincided ideologically and politically with the nationalist movements that were sweeping all parts


20 • MEXICAN MURALISM

Dream of a Sunday Afternoon in the Alameda. Here, as we have already noted, Rivera makes a return to descriptive material derived from the folk ballad. Between 1930 and 1933 Rivera did a number of important works in the United States. The mural at the California School of Fine Arts in San Francisco (1930-1931) is clear and well balanced. In a satiric touch, Rivera has depicted himself from behind, seated on the scaffolding. The murals for the Detroit Institute of Arts (1932-33) mark a return to spatial complexity and to the cinematographic handling of masses. Of the 27 panels, the two largest (north and south) are of unequalled baroque opulence. The key figures appear amid a wild jungle of machinery. The Detroit murals were commissioned by Edsel B. Ford and refer in large part to the manufacture of automobiles. Certain small panels, such as the one with the personification of the worker, show a resemblance to the tubular compositions of Fernand Leger, and also to the puritanically geometric work of Charles Demuth and Charles Sheeler, the two principal American offshoots of European Cubism. The murals Rivera executed for Rockefeller Center in New York in 1933 and the 21 paintings on subjects from U.S. history, executed as frescoes on movable frames for the New Workers School in New York, suffered a series of politically motivated misfortunes, causing Rivera to adopt even more radical positions. One should note that throughout these years, and almost until his death, Rivera never ceased to practice easel painting, principally in the form of frontal views of children,1 in which he alternated between two-dimensional and three-dimensional effects, sometimes combining them with unexpected results. Diego Rivera died in 1957, five years after the presidency of Miguel Aleman, who had brought about a rapid modernization of the country, a broadening of the middle class, and the consolidation of the PRI—the Institutionalized Revolutionary Party. In 1945 David Alfaro Siqueiros gathered together a series of newspaper articles and published them in book form, under the title No hay mas ruta que la nuestra (Ours Is the Only Way).6 This phrase, which became the most celebrated slogan of the Muralist movement, appeared in the article "La pintura moderna mexicana." Siqueiros held that modern Mexican painting was the cultural equivalent of the Mexican Revolution. It merited economic support from the state and the political and financial backing of all existing or future entities representative of the people. The path it had taken was the only one that could be followed, "the one which, in a future much nearer than one might think, all artists of all countries—including the Paris-based and their adherents—will have to take beyond the shadow of a doubt. There is no other! Could anyone dare to deny it after even the most superficial analysis of the present world art scene? Are there signs of any other path? The movements in Paris, which were all that counted up to yesterday, are now meaningless." In "Vigencia del movimiento plastico mexicano contemporaneo" (Validity of the Contemporary Mexican Art Movement), which the critic Raquel Tibol included in Textos de David Alfaro Siqueiros,1 Siqueiros wrote in 1966: "As for free-

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of Latin America. Ten years later (1948) Rivera painted for the Hotel del Prado the composition that the critic Justino Fernandez has termed his masterpiece,


dom of artistic creation, we did not nor do we claim that anyone should be forced

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MEXICAN MURALISM • 21

DAVID ALFARO SIQUEIROS. THE

to follow our artistic line. To assert the contrary would be a calumnious false-

NEW DEMOCRACY. 1944. MURAL IN

hood." Taking a realistic view of the intervening 20 years, the painter seems to

PYROXYLIN. PHOTOGRAPH COUR-

recognize that Mexican art had rejected the Muralist formula and had taken

TESY OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE

three different directions—those of Surrealism, Neofigurative representation,

AMERICAS ARCHIVE, OAS, WASH-

and Geometric Abstraction.

INGTON, D.C., U.S.A.

Siqueiros' belligerent personality was undoubtedly responsible for much of the controversy surrounding the work of the Muralists. Rejoined the army of Madero before that president's assassination in 1913. He took a leading role in the establishment in 1922 of the Union of Technicians, Painters, and Sculptors, and shortly afterward he began publication of the polemical periodical El Machete. For half a century, until the inauguration of his Polyforum, he was in the eye of the storm—a storm which he himself provoked. "Our movement," he wrote, "runs contrary to that of the European avant-garde. We deny the fundamental principles of formalism and art for art's sake." He also attacked "the lamentable archaeological revivals (Indianism, primitivism, Americanism) so fashionable among us—revivals that are leading us to short-lived stylizations." He lent strong support to new technical media (exposed cement, air brushes, compressors, synthetic lacquers, sand mixtures, photomontages), in the use of which he showed himself a pioneer. He declared the traditional fresco techniques used by his companions to be obsolete. He attacked Orozco for being weak and romantic, and Carlos Merida for practicing a hybrid form of art. Siqueiros' capacity for polemic was inexhaustible, but he was incapable of defining politico-national art in coherent, persuasive terms.


DAVID ALFARO SIQUEIROS. MU-

RALS OF THE POLYFORUM. TWELVE PANELS EXECUTED IN 1960. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS ARCHIVE, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A.

These contradictions can also be noted in his compositions, executed not only in Mexico but in other parts of the world. In 1922 he returned from Europe, where he had met Rivera, and at once began to produce "art that is figurative and realistic—in other words modern." In the 10 years between his murals for the National Preparatory School (1922) and his reappearance as a creative artist in Los Angeles in 1932, he busied himself as a journalist and a trade-unionist. He traveled to Moscow; he was a militant activist in Buenos Aires and Montevideo, encouraging the organization of artists in national trade unions. The frescoes he did on cement in Los Angeles and his use of an electric spray gun for large-scale air-brush work made a deep impression on inquiring young U.S. artists. He proposed working on the basis of photographs in Buenos Aires in 1933, and in 1935 he engaged in a long public discussion with Rivera on the chemistry of plastics. In 1936 he opened his celebrated experimental workshop in New York. It was there that Jackson Pollock came to know and admire him, and that "accidental effect" was proposed as the principal element in new painting. Siqueiros fought in the Spanish Civil War, attaining the rank of major. Returning to Mexico in 1939, he painted the mural Fascism on Trial for the Mexican Electricians' Union. Of greater interest are the murals he did in Chilian, Chile. In Death to the Invader (260 square meters), he discovered that "the most extraordinary element in mural painting is the mobility provided by architecture and varying viewpoints." Visiting Cuba in 1943 he executed some small wall and ceiling paintings entitled Allegory of Racial Equality in Cuba. In Mexico a year afterward he painted Cuauhtemoc versus the Myth. Here he found sources of strength in historical allegory and the use of new materials. These two sources he also exploited in The New Democracy, done for the Palace of Fine Arts in 1945, and Patricians and Patricides, a 300-square-meter compo-

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22 • MEXICAN MURALISM


sition executed in pyroxylin, vinylite, and silicones. It is based on photographs, and in it he made use of the air brush. Other vast compositions of a similar nature are The Fight against Cancer, done for the Medical Center of the Mexican Social Security Institute; a work on the life and accomplishments of Ignacio Allende, done for San Miguel de Allende; and one for the Mexican National Museum of History in Ghapultepec Park. An exhibit organized by the Museum of Modern Art of Mexico, shown in 1947 at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, provided a particularly significant view of his sketches and experiments.8 At present historians and critics are in agreement in avoiding judgment on the aesthetic or creative value of his work, which is of a problematic nature and difficult to place. According to the critic Raquel Tibol, his theme is the expression of life force in man and his rapidly expanding and advancing world. Humanity's Earthly March toward the Cosmos, the centerpiece of the Polyforum, shows clearly the difference between Siqueiros and Rivera. The latter set identifiable masses in motion, whereas Siqueiros made of mass an indiscernible force. His allegory has something of the impact of poster art, differing from that of Rivera, whose symbols tend to be heavy-set and static. Siqueiros' involvement in a variety of activities outside the realm of painting kept him at a certain distance from the Muralist movement. Setting himself up as judge, he criticized Orozco in an article published in 1944. "Your ideas and your work," he wrote, "represent the iconoclastic, antimythical, and consequently lyrical period of our common effort. They evidence your extraordinary capacity for plastic expression, unexampled in the contemporary world. With almost mathematical precision they reveal the ideological errors into which many important men born of the revolution have fallen in the course of their political activities. They shared the unbounded faith of your early days, your first doubts, your ultimate tremendous skepticism and anguished fits of remorse for the mystique of the past. It is an attitude that in reality reflects a romantic weakness for considering human frailties as necessary evils of the movements in which men find themselves engaged."9 Four years earlier Jose Clemente Orozco had put the finishing touches on his master works, done for the city of Guadalajara. His paintings cover the cupola of the university auditorium, the main walls of the entrance to the government palace, and the whole interior of the Cabanas Hospice, which may be termed the Sistine Chapel of Mexican mural painting. Orozco worked under a number of foreign Expressionist influences, the most remote of them being that of the Russian Andrei Rublyov. The symmetrical plan of the Hospice, with three vast blank wall areas on either side of the nave and a central dome flanked by another pair of blank areas, provided Orozco with a perfect setting for telling a story. The artist made use of portraiture (Cervantes, El Greco, Hernan Cortes, Philip II), allegory (the banal, the unknown, the tragic; science, religion, despotism), symbolism (dictatorship, demagoguery, suffering humanity, the mechanization of the masses), realistic perspective (warriors, monks, friars), and the incarnation of myths. The energy radiated by this body of work bears little relation to the forward sweep of Siqueiros' masses and Rivera's carefully planned ensembles. The

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MEXICAN MURALISM • 23


• JOSE CLEMENTE OROZCO. DETAIL OF THE MURAL SOCIAL JUSTICE (FORCES OF REACTION), NATIONAL PREPARATORY SCHOOL, MEXICO CITY. 1923-24. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS ARCHIVE, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A.

fury of the four horsemen of the Apocalypse and outcry against injustice inflame Orozco's universe, culminating, in the best baroque tradition, in the vault of the dome, where man receives the gift of fire. The drama changes tone; it becomes reflective and philosophic, setting forth man's quest, through life, struggle, and death, for his ultimate destiny. This tragic sense of life, conveyed in strongly Expressionistic terms, was first evidenced in Orozco's 1923 murals for the National Preparatory School. The Trench, with its bold diagonal slash, is a masterpiece rhythmically in accord with the strictest principles of Italian Mannerism. Sketches made by Orozco before 1915, now in the Carrillo Gil Collection, show the artist in a caustically critical light. The Lecture (ca. 1913) looks back to Goya and forward to Jose Luis Cuevas. Its richly expressive, rapid strokes give a clear idea of the artist's gift for satire. In the years 1930-34, like Siqueiros and Rivera, Orozco spent a memorable period in the United States. In 1930 and 1931 he did a set of murals for the dining hall of Pomona College in Claremont, California, and about the same time another group, featuring political leaders from throughout the world, for the New School for Social Research in New York. Among the leaders, the figure of Lenin appears in the section on geometric research. Culminating his work in the United States are the murals Orozco did for Dartmouth College. In these he showed a capacity similar to that of Rivera and Siqueiros for painting a broad historical panorama of civilization, situating the first and second comings of Quetzalcoatl amid scenes of the native American world, the civilization that succeeded it, and the industrial age, and fusing modern sacrifices with that of Christ. The brushwork produces a Byzantine effect; the fresco technique employed is essentially traditional.

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• 24 • MEXICAN MURALISM


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MEXICAN MURALISM • 25 •

• JOSE CLEMENTE OROZCO DETAIL

OF THE MURAL MAN THE CREATOR (THE

SCIENTIST), UNIVERSITY

GUADALAJARA,

MEXICO.

OF 1936.

PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE

ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS

ARCHIVE, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A.

In 1934 Orozco returned to Mexico to execute an apocalyptic Catharsis for the Palace of Fine Arts in the capital and to finish the work he had begun in Guadalajara. This series was executed in a fresco technique in which lime and sand were applied to a concrete vault. Orozco continued thinking in grandly allegoric terms as can be seen from the murals he did for the Supreme Court Building in Mexico City (1941), the chapel of the Hospital de Jesus (1942-44), and the Turf Club (1945). An allegory of the nation covers 380 square meters at the National Normal School. In 1948 Orozco created an extraordinary mural, Juarez and His Times, for the National Museum of History at Chapultepec; this was executed in a mixture of powdered marble, cement, and lime on a steel backing. In 1949, the year of his death, he returned to Guadalajara to paint Hidalgo issuing his decree abolishing slavery. Sentences written before Orozco began his murals for the National Preparatory School give a clear idea of his aesthetic views. "Like a cloud or a tree," he wrote, "the true work of art bears absolutely no relationship to morality or immorality, to good or evil, to wisdom or ignorance, to vice or virtue.... The sole feeling it should arouse and transmit is that which derives from the scientifically structured, coldly abstract, plastic phenomenon. Whatever cannot be reduced to a plastic equation, expressive of the laws of me-


• JOSE CLEMENTE OROZCO. FOLLOWERS OF ZAPATA. 1935. LITHOGRAPH, 20/130, 32.5 X 40 CM. COLLECTION OF THE INTER-AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT

BANK, WASHING-

TON, D.C., U.S.A.

chanics, is a subterfuge masking impotence. It is literature, politics, philosophy, or what you will, but it is not painting. When art loses its purity, it becomes denatured and degenerates. It turns into a abomination, and at last it disappears." The critic Berta Taracena writes: "A reevaluation of Orozco is in order...for Orozco is an artist whose Mexicanism can be assigned a place in a line extending into our time from the pre-Hispanic era." Both by their painting and by their public acts, the three artists we have been discussing exerted a strong pressure on art in Mexico. As Mexican critics have recognized, whereas in other countries there were a number of artists who facilitated access to the European avant-garde, Mexico was to all intents and purposes closed to such influence. Except for Surrealism, which constitutes a local tradition—witness the works produced by Julio Ruelas at the end of the nineteenth century—no tendency other than that exemplified by the Muralists was permissible. As a result of this pressure, Rufino Tamayo left the country, and, while Carlos Merida was protected to some extent by the fact that he was Guatemalan, he nonetheless suffered personal alienation. Another result of the pressure exerted by the Muralists was the all-but-total dominance of "Mexicanism." Art was infused with a strongly nationalistic spirit; in subject matter there was great emphasis on folk material. While a number of Mexican artists born during the twentieth century executed murals, none with the exception of Juan O'Gorman (p. 27) was in the same class with the three just discussed. O'Gorman's activity as a muralist dates from 1932, when he did some Mexican landscapes for the library in Azcapotzalco. Next came his surprising frescoes for the Plateresque church of San Agustin in Patzcuaro. His art reached its culmination in his decoration of the

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26 • MEXICAN MURALISM


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MEXICAN MURALISM • 27

• JUAN O'GORMAN. MURAL IN THE GERTRUDIS BOCANEGRA LIBRARY,

FORMER CHURCH OF SAN AGUSTIN, PATZCUARO, MICHOACAN, MEXI-

CO. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF

THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS

ARCHIVE, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A.

exterior walls of the university library in Mexico City (1952). Extending over 3,700 square meters, the murals make use of 12 different types of Mexican stone, coming from all parts of the country. The colors, ranging from the red rock of Guerrero to the pale green stone of Oaxaca, are unfading. Siqueiros protested violently against these murals, calling them "archaic," "backward-looking," and "static." He reproached O'Gorman for accentuating the complex descriptiveness of his indoor murals, particularly those at Patzcuaro and the one entitled The History of Aviation, turning walls into an "illustrated tapestry." In rebuttal, O'Gorman deplored the work Siqueiros had done for the University City as incomprehensible and totally unrelated to the architecture of the buildings in question. The 1952 quarrel between Siqueiros and O'Gorman made two things clearly evident: First, the intransigence of the Muralists, as a school, with respect to any signs of heterodoxy, and, second, the artistic isolation and paralysis that were the ultimate result of that intransigence. One must consider that by 1950 modern art was a well-established presence in other parts of Latin America.


Undoubtedly O'Gorman's complex compositions (the Tribute to Gaudi, The History of Aviation, and, late in his career, the series of Imaginary Flowers) betray influences quite different from those of the "big three" Muralists—artnouveau and Surrealism, particularly as practiced by the German Escher. There is also lively evidence that he had a more learned and refined understanding than his colleagues of the kitsch aspects of folk art and the rich iconography of votive offerings. When he dedicated a work to a hero of the Revolution, as in the case of the Tribute to Francisco Madero done for Chapultepec Castle, he portrays both historical personages and representatives of the people with a delicacy that renders them quite different from the short, chubby figures in Rivera's compositions. The work blossoms with streamers and banners and terminates in a fantastic castle over which floats a balloon in a Germanic sky straight out of Altdorfer. Jose Chavez Morado (b. 1909) painted three notable murals for the Hidalgo State Educational Complex in Santa Julia, and also had a hand in the exterior decoration of the University City in the Mexican capital in 1952. The murals Jorge Gonzalez Camarena (1908-1980) did for the Guardiola Building in Mexico City are highly dramatic and not to be mistaken for the work of any other. In their regard the critic Antonio Rodriguez has said that the figure of Christ is "one of the most terrifying and spectacular in world art." Gonzalez's St. George and Imperialism is a clever updating in which St. George appears as a soldier of the Mexican Revolution, killing the dragon with a shot from a revolver. The name of Alfredo Zalce (b. 1908) is associated primarily with graphics, but in 1930, working in collaboration with Chabela Villasenor, he did a mural in colored cement—a technique unusual for the period—for the country school at Ayotla. In 1936 he worked with Leopoldo Mendez, Fernando Gamboa, and Pablo O'Higgins on a series of murals, the theme of which was the Popular Front, for the Government Printing Office. He surpassed his previous accomplishments in 1948 in his murals for the stairwell of the Michoacan Museum, the Chamber of Deputies, and the Government Palace in Morelia. Fermin Revueltas (1901-1935) began as a Muralist in 1922 at the National Preparatory School, but thereafter pursued a path more his own, concerning himself with color vibrations and the energy conveyed by open spaces. One should mention among the driving forces of the Muralist movement Dr. Atl, and among faithful fellow-travelers Jean Chariot and Xavier Guerrero (1896-1974). The number of artists involved in mural painting bespeaks the power of the movement. It was indeed a national endeavor. When toward the end of the 1930s many artists returned to easel painting, they continued to occupy themselves with folk life and social themes. The aim was clearly descriptive, the spirit was one of social protest. Some of the exhibitions of the period were of considerable interest. In 1937 the Gallery of Mexican Art sponsored the first group show devoted to easel painting. The effect was surprisingly uniform. Tamayo, Siqueiros, Montenegro, Rivera, Fernandez Ledesma, and Cantu each contributed a figure painting, generally frontal and static. Only Tamayo's exuberant Portrait qfOlga is enlivened by a personal touch of license. Even Carlos Merida's oil The Window—a bright rect-

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28 • MEXICAN MURALISM


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MEXICAN MURALISM • 29 •

RUFINO TAMAYO. PORTRAIT OF

OLGA TAMAYO. 1935. OIL ON CAN-

VAS, 113 X 78.8 CM. COLLECTION

OF BERNARD LEWIN, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA, U.S.A. PHOTOGRAPH FURNISHED AND

REPRODUCTION

AUTHORIZED BY THE OLGA RUFINO

TAMAYO

MEXICO CITY.

angle against a dark background—has the same frontal character and repose. There were four tableaux. Julio Castellanos (1905-1947), who had done openly militant murals on the theme "Heaven and Hell" for the Melchor Ocampo School in Coyoacan in 1933, contributed a Dialogue, with emphasis on plastic effects.Jesus Guerrero Galvan (1910-1973) provided a monstruous Nana. The Strike, by Antonio M. Ruiz (1897-1964), is a cold example of "social art," concerned with the lowest class of city dwellers, the artist's usual subject. One of the rare cases in which he turned from this material resulted in his most famous painting, Malinche's Dream, generally classed as Surrealistic. Jose Clemente Orozco's The Pulqueria is an admirable Expressionist work; the name of the bar—"Delirium"— well applies to the frightful aspect of the personages depicted. Also included in this key exhibition was a work by an "outsider," Carlos Orozco Romero (b. 1898), showing a human figure split in two. Magically beautiful in effect, it foreshadows the important Surrealist paintings he was to present at the Ines Amor Gallery in 1941.

AND

FOUNDATION,


The exhibition of Contemporary Mexican Painters put on at the art gallery of the Mexican National University in 1938 provides a backstage glimpse into the problems that the hegemony of Muralism posed for personal expression. The writer Jose Gorostiza prefaced it in a style highly challenging for the time. He asserted that what interested him in the works on view was their "close relationship to the abstract qualities of poetry." He went on to say that, mindful of the ends it pursued, Mexican art would be well advised to seek to graft itself into the development of artistic thought in the western world. With great critical intuition, Gorostiza ventured a definition: "Considered in itself, present-day painting is a form of primitivism. From the viewpoint of classic art, however, it represents a revolution. The whole of modern art should be understood, in C.J.Jung's fortunate expression, as creative destruction. Its worth can be calculated only teleologically, in terms of its future." Among the pictures included in the exhibition, not even Siqueiros's Little Bull shows any of the polemic spirit of mural painting. Indeed, the figures in Little Bull have much in common with the Hunters of the Stratosphere by Carlos Merida (1891-1984). Federico Cantu (b. 1908), Jesus Guerrero Galvan (1910-1973), Maria Izquierdo (1906-1955), and Agustin Lazo (1910-1971) showed themselves artists of substance, painting in a realistic, threedimensional style. The Portrait of the Painter Mario Alonso by Roberto Montenegro (1887-1968) and the Portrait ofChabela by Orozco Romero follow the strongly nationalistic and realistic "hard line" favored throughout Latin America in the '30s. Julio Castellanos and Frida Kahlo represent the Mexican Surrealist trend, to be studied in the next chapter. The latter's admirable composition Four Mexico City Dwellers is characterized by a bold individualism, impossible to classify. There was apparently no problem regarding the two sculptors who were invited to participate in the exhibition, Luis Ortiz Monasterio (b. 1906) and German Cueto (1893-1975), though their work is poles apart, the former being a realist and the latter a Geometric Abstractionist. Twenty years later Mexican art was solidly established in Europe, thanks to the impressive showing it made at the Venice Biennial of 1950. A defensive position, of justification of its existence, was nonetheless taken in the official exhibit of Mexican art that toured France in 1958. "The Mexican artist is a militant combatant," Miguel Salas Anzures wrote; "Art is always a message of hope transmitted from man to man," Jaime Torres Bodet declared. Totally unaffected by the hot competition between European movements in matters of form, Mexico chose to be represented by a group of proud, silent, fetish-like images: The Protest by Francisco Dosamantes (b. 1911), The Indian Annunciation by Raul Anguiano (b. 1915), The Bone by Miguel Covarrubias (1904-1957), Repose by Ricardo Martinez (b. 1918), Prometheus by Orozco, The Devil by Trinidad Osorio (b. 1929), and Indian Girl Bathing by Diego Rivera. Equally remote in time and space from the European art scene were the landscapes included in the exhibit: views of Cuajimalpa by Dr. Atl and San Juan Ixtayopan by Francisco Goitia (1882-1960), The Church of Los Remedies by O'Gorman, and The Cart by Xavier Guerrero. Only the solidly structured landscapes of Angelina Beloff (1897-1967) and Olga Costa (b. 1913) show any influence of Cubism. Joaquin Clausell (1866-1935) had an

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30 • MEXICAN MURALISM


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MEXICAN MURALISM • 31

CANDIDO PORTINARI. RETURN

FROM THE FAIR. 1940. OIL ON CANVAS, 99 X 80 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS,

WASHINGTON, D.C.,

U.S.A.

GIFT OF JOSE GOMEZ SICRE, 1949.

PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

Impressionist intuition remarkable for Latin America; nevertheless his painting The Baths of King Netzahualcoyotl exhibits a rigidity characteristic of Mexican iconography. The permissible touch of Surrealism was provided by Dreams in the Woods by Leonora Garrington, The Eclipse by Orozco Romero, The Fish painted by Juan Soriano, and the mystical atmosphere exuded by Rufino Tamayo's Slumbering Melodies and Cordelia Urueta's The Arrival. The general effect of the exhibition was not diminished by these exceptions, and it was reinforced by the unanimity of social approach evidenced in the work of the graphic artists included in the show. In 1980, while Pablo O'Higgins (1904-1983) was finishing a mural on foreign invasions of Mexico for the diocesan museum of Monterrey, Arturo Garcia Bustos (b. 1926) was painting the history of Oaxaca in the government palace in that city. Siqueiros did not put the finishing touches on his Polyforum until 1974, the year of his death. Mexican Muralism and its derivatives thus continued to flourish, impervious to currents of change coming from abroad. It likewise triumphed over dissident movements at home. Surrealism was acceptable, but the idea of art void of social and historical content, purely aesthetic in func-


tion, which Mathias Goeritz introduced upon his arrival in Mexico in 1949, was decried in the most insulting of terms. "The years 1920-1940 were marked by the appearance in Latin America of a considerable number of artists of first rank," writes the critic Jorge Alberto Manrique. "For the first time work was being produced that meant something on the world scene. Several of these artists are undoubtedly to be numbered among the great creative figures of the century. It is readily apparent, however, that in no other country was there a group of painters so substantial and cohesive as the Mexican Muralist School. Nowhere else were positions so firmly taken or was there such assurance with regard to accepted values. The group feeling, the consciousness of constituting a school, gave a certain coherence to the movement, but in the long run it proved an obstacle to communication with abroad."10 Implicit in this statement are the problems that Mexican Muralism posed for painting in the rest of Latin America. It presented a monolithic front to viewers from abroad. It found its justification in the Mexican Revolution and received financial support from the state. Conditions similarly favorable to large-scale production of mural art were not to be found elsewhere. Artists in other countries received occasional contracts for murals—Portinari (pp. 31, 36) in Brazil, Venturelli in Chile, Pedro Nel Gomez in Colombia, Berdia in Uruguay. Sometimes government officials offered verbal support to painters, as was the case with the writer Jorge Zalamea when he served as Minister of Education of Colombia during the first term of President Alfonso Lopez Pumarejo (1934-38). Occasionally magazines such as the Peruvian Jose Carlos Mariategui's Amauta expressed enthusiasm for mural painting as a social form of art. One must also remember, however, that the thirties—the period in which Mexican mural painting became known abroad—were the period of the worldwide depression that followed the stockmarket crash of 1929. Amid the pressures of dealing with the crisis, little attention could be assigned to art. The influence of the Mexican Muralists was exerted in a number of ways. Of the big three, Siqueiros was the one who had the most contact with the rest of Latin America, owing both to his own mural activity there and to the zeal with which he attempted to establish in other countries artists' trade unions similar to the one in Mexico. The strongest influence on form, however, was that of Diego Rivera. The Rivera model, based on a substructure of cylinders and spheres, exerted an influence on many socially oriented artists of Latin America, from Dario Suro in the Dominican Republic to Antonio Berni (p.41) in Argentina. In addition to its use in murals, it fostered realistic social portraiture, a genre which enlisted the services of a majority of painters, sculptors, and engravers active around 1940. If the '30s were a period of impoverishment for nearly all of Latin America, they also constituted a period in which the area was called to face the challenges of modern times. Attempts were made to achieve economic independence through industrialization. A working class appeared, bringing new problems and pressures, and the middle classes took on a more populist character. While the conditions that brought about the Mexican Revolution did not occur

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32 • MEXICAN MURALISM


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MEXICAN MURALISM • 33 •

• LUIS ALBERTO ACUNA THE THREE GRACES. 1937. OIL ON CANVAS, 116 X 144 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ANTIOQUIA

MUSEUM,

MEDELLIN,

COLOMBIA. GIFT OF THE MINISTRY OF

EDUCATION,

1944.

PHOTO-

GRAPH FURNISHED BY THE ANTIOQUIA MUSEUM.

elsewhere, there were a number of popular movements aimed at obtaining a share of political power, a circumstance that gave room for painting of political intent, generally related to the establishment or consolidation of local socialist or communist parties. The updating of art continued its course. Despite the artists' union's claims of having eliminated aesthetic concerns, one can see in the background of Mexican art the influence of Cezanne and Soutine, as well as Giotto and Piero della Francesca. In other parts of Latin America a derivative type of social art affected the painted image. Sometimes the model was Rivera, sometimes Lhote, sometimes the Picasso of Guernica (1937). In its concern with conveying clear messages to the masses, art tended toward formula, losing much of the spirit of experimentation that would have permitted it to develop new forms of expression. Nevertheless, the break with the nineteenth century was a fact. Social art derived from, or influenced by, Mexican Muralism is exemplified by the work of the following individual artists or groups. The Brazilian Candido Portinari (1903-1962) was nineteen in 1922 when Modern Art Week was staged in Sao Paulo. The spirit of the Brazilian movement was the antithesis of that which inspired the Mexican muralists. (It should be remembered that 1922 was the same year that Secretary of Public Education Jose Vasconcelos put the walls of Mexican public buildings at those artists' disposal.) Given the Brazilian concern for aesthetics and experimentation,


Portinari's work looms up in relative isolation among his compatriots, though from the time of the murals he began for the Ministry of Education in Rio de Janeiro in 1936 he was held to be his country's leading painter. The critic Mario Pedrosa writes: "His attraction to mural painting responds to something deeply rooted in his nature, of much more significance than occasional commissions or other external circumstances." The plastic qualities of the frescoes in the Ministry of Education—simplified forms, cold tonalities, figures choreographed in groups set apart by color zones—are accentuated in the panel The First Mass in Brazil, which Portinari did for the building Oscar Niemeyer designed for the Boavista Bank. Pedrosa considers this to be the summa of Portinari's art, showing "what he can do, what he can't, and what he shouldn't." He began to free himself from the contradictory influences of Picasso and Postcubist abstraction in 1941, when he undertook his frescoes for the Hispanic Foundation in the Library of Congress in Washington, D.C. These constitute the best of his work in the popular vein; his line acquires a baroque freedom, and he favors well-rounded form. In 1949, however, when he painted in tempera a gigantic canvas for the preparatory school in Cataguases (another building of Niemeyer design), the components were once again rigorously structured: figures were organized by groups and use was made of multiple perspective. Portinari was to develop this manner still further in the murals War and Peace which he executed for United Nations headquarters in New York, beginning in 1952. Complementing Portinari's murals are his easel paintings and drawings. These constitute a vast body of work, the best of which are undoubtedly the lyric scenes of rural life in his native Brodosqui and the peasant family groups—in which dead or starving children figure prominently—that he did in the '40s. Emiliano di Cavalcanti (1897-1976), an eclectic in matters of form, shared Portinari's social concerns, but in his case it was more a matter of feeling than a consciously programmed expression of conviction. Di Cavalcanti summed up the elements of his art thus: "I get my love of color and rhythm and my typically Brazilian sensuality from the Rio Carnival; the narrative aspects of my work, suggestive of the novels of Machado de Assis, reflect the city's Sao Cristovao quarter; my political concerns derive from what I learned during the events of May; and I inherit my spirit of adventure from my ancestors who settled in the northeastern states of Paraiba and Pernambuco." Based on folk themes, his painting is sensual, rich in atmosphere, and vibrant with color, and shows a fascination with black and mulatto women. There is a strong contrast between Di Cavalcanti's work and the austere, somber painting of Carlos Prado (b. 1908), who during the '30s depicted with simple directness the wretched existence of Sao Paulo street dwellers. It contrasts also with the cow-dotted landscapes of Campos dejordao painted between 1935 and 1943 by Lasar Segall (1891-1957). Born in Lithuania, he became a citizen of Brazil in 1924 and is a figure of capital importance in Brazilian modern art. Mario Pedrosa is right, however, in saying that Segall was not a truly Brazilian painter, for his most significant work—compositions such as Pogrom, Immigrants on Shipboard, War, Concentration Camp, and The Condemned—deal with European

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34 • MEXICAN MURALISM


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MEXICAN MURALISM • 35 •

HECTOR POLEO. ANDEAN FAM-

ILY. 1944. OIL ON CANVAS 70 X 58.5 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM

OF THE AMERICAS,

OAS,

WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. GIFT OF IBM, 1969. PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

themes. The loneliness and poverty of life in the Brazilian countryside did not escape his keen eye, however, and he did a striking series of drawings of the prostitutes in Sao Paulo's red-light district. In all these works he showed himself an Expressionist of admirable qualities. Socio-political art in Brazil is closely related to domestic developments in that country. In the years from 1917 to 1920 the lower classes of the larger cities were stirred by anarchist agitation. In 1924 a column led by the communist Luis Carlos Prestes began a two-and-a-half-year march, during which it traversed the most poverty-stricken zones of the country, opening the eyes of the people to the evils of the landed-proprietor system. Those evils provoked the "Revolt of the Lieutenants"11 in 1922, echoes of which can be seen in the populist policies of Getulio Vargas, aimed at social improvement and national development, which were incorporated into the constitution of 1934. During this period, artists were torn between the aesthetic nationalism triggered by Modern Art Week (see the following chapter) and the demands of social justice that found expression in the works of Portinari and Di Cavalcanti.


CANDIDO PORTINARI. TWO OF

FOUR FRESCOES IN THE HISPANIC DIVISION OF THE LIBRARY OF

CON-

GRESS, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. TEACHING

THE

INDIANS

(LEFT),

GOLD MINING (RIGHT). PHOTOGRAPH BY DAVID MANGURIAN, REPRODUCED BY PERMISSION OF THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS.

In areas with a strong Indian tradition, Mexican Muralism had a strong catalytic effect. The Indian, who for centuries had been exploited and oppressed, became the protagonist of a self-styled "indigenist" movement. Independence of European aesthetics tended to be a matter of new models for subjects. Jose Sabogal (Peru, 1888-1956) (p.37) had his first exhibit in Lima in 1919, three years before traveling to Mexico, where he established contact with Orozco and Rivera. Sabogal fervently insisted that he was "painting Indians," trying—not very successfully—to explain that the word "indigenist" reflected racist attitudes and nostalgia for the Inca past. However, since the nationalist tide in Peru favored acceptance of the term, he eventually agreed to be known as a "cultural indigenist," thus disclaiming the reactionary implications of the unqualified designation. For 10 years (1933-43) Sabogal served as director of the School of Fine Arts in Lima, active both as a painter and as a theorist, setting his work off from that of the Mexican Muralists by demonstrating a lively interest in the folk arts of his own country. Other Peruvian painters took the same route, among them Apurimak (i.e., Alejandro Gonzalez, b. 1900), Enrique Gamino Brent (1909-1960), Julia Codesido (1892-1979), and Servulo Gutierrez (19141961), who upon his return to Lima in 1940 painted a splendid symbolic work entitled The Andes. The Peruvian critic Mirko Lauer would add to these names that of a painter from the province of Cajamarca, Mario Urteaga (1875-1957), of whom he says: "He emphasized the encounter between the Indian and the country and between the Indian and painting, showing that the Indian cannot be correctly depicted save in the world of his exploiters."

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JOSE SABOGAL.

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MEXICAN MURALISM • 37 •

HUANCA IN-

DIAN. 1930. WOODCUT, 33 X 26.5 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF

THE AMERICAS.

OAS,

WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. ANONYMOUS GIFT, 1976.

All this painting can be understood only as a product of the 1920s, when strikes by urban workers and peasant movements benefited from the antioligarchic coup d'etat of Augusto Bernardino Leguia (president, 1919-1930). At the same time (1926) in the pages of the review Amauta, Jose Carlos Mariategui was calling for "the Peruvianizing of Peru," saying: "We cannot accept as new a type of art that brings us nothing but a new technique. To do so would be to take for real the most misleading of present-day mirages. No aesthetic can reduce artistic labor to a mere matter of technique.... An artistic revolution is not satisfied with victories in matters of form." A few significant dates should be noted: 1927, appearance in Cuzco of the group known as "Resurgimiento" (Resurgence); 1928, founding of APRA (the Revolutionary Alliance of the Peoples of America), whose leader Raul Haya de la Torre proposed a type of revolutionary nationalism in which state capitalism would serve as an alternative to Mariategui's socialism; 1929, establishment of the General Confederation of Workers. These happenings help one to understand the impact "painting Indians" had in Peru and the enthusiasm it aroused there, notwithstanding the fact that Sabogal, the movement's advocate, was an artist of no more than second rank.


CUNDO BERMUDEZ. THE BAL-

CONY. 1941. OIL ON CANVAS, 73.7 X 58.7 CM. MUSEUM OF MODERN ART, NEW YORK, U.S.A. GIFT OF EDGAR

KAUFMANN, JR. PHOTO-

GRAPH FURNISHED BY THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART.

Paraguay enjoyed a brief liberal respite under President Jose P. Guggiari (1928-32), but this was followed by the Chaco War, which began in 1932. Given this perspective, it is understandable that aesthetic concerns should have been swept aside by the tide of political events, and that nationalism was therefore slow to make an appearance in art. The awakening came about with the initiation on February 17, 1936, of a movement that took its name of "Febrerismo" from that month. It made an attempt—fruitless in the event—to promote thought along critical and progressive lines. Amid this unstimulating atmosphere, the painter and graphic artist Andres Guevara (1903-1964) produced work that reveals the unbelievable poverty of the environment. He was active until 1954, the year in which the New Art Group was founded. In the 1940s Paraguay had a population of more than a million. Forty percent spoke only Guarani; 75 percent of the males were illiterate. Olga Blinder (b. 1921), deeply aware of this situation, denounced it in "indigenist" works of a stylized, static character. In other countries of the Indian block, development of "indigenist" art expressive of social criticism was unthinkable. In Bolivia, for example, only in

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• 38 • MEXICAN MURALISM


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MEXICAN MURALISM • 39

• CUNDO BERMUDEZ. THE BARBERSHOP. 1942. OIL ON CANVAS, 63,8 X

53.7 CM. MUSEUM OF MODERN ART,

NEW YORK, U.S.A. INTER-AMERICAN FUND. PHOTOGRAPH FURNISHED BY THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART.

1952 was an end put to the feudal regime of the mine-owning oligarchy. The solitary artist of note was the sculptress Marina Nunez del Prado (b. 1910) who, living in New York from 1940 to 1950, carved figures symbolic of the high plateau country from which she came. Two countries stand out by reason of the complexity of their relationships with Mexican Muralism: Ecuador and Colombia. Ecuador lent the strongest and most consistent support to the renewed interest in painting on Indian themes. Writing of the impact of the Mexican Revolution, the Ecuadorian critic Wilson Hallo stated: "Owing to the similarities between Mexican and Ecuadorian problems, artists such as Pedro Leon, Rendon Seminario, and Camilo Egas developed a concern for treating economic and social development in painting, or, in a few cases, in sculpture." Interacting with the Mexican influence was that of three foreign painters, two of whom—Lloyd Wolf and Jan Schreuder—took up residence in Quito, whereas the third, Hans Michaelson, settled in Guayaquil. Their art at times was polemic to the point of ferocity. A still further factor to be reckoned with was the presence of Victor Mideros (1888-1972). A recognized master, in 1917 he was the prize winner in the Mariano Aguilera Contest. Before


traveling abroad he painted local landscapes and Indian fiesta scenes. In Europe he became a convert to mysticism, and upon his return to Quito he did a huge painting of Our Lady of Mercies. Another artist independent of Mexican influence was Giro Pazmino (b. 1897). He did a number of paintings, but he specialized in designing stained-glass windows for public buildings in Quito, an activity in which Mideros also engaged. From 1924 to 1927 Pazmino was director of the National Center for Fine Arts. For the "indigenist" generation born between 1900 and 1920, the paintings of Mideros and Pazmifio's windows provided a national counterweight to the influence of Mexican Muralism. When the May Salon of Ecuadorian Writers and Artists was inaugurated in 1939, Camilo Egas (1897-1962) had already introduced the Indian into Ecuadorian art, in broad canvases in which magnified and idealized human figures stand out in a broadly rhythmic setting. The Harvest provides a good example of his style. Three of the painters who participated in the 1939 Salon were to become leading exponents of art on "indigenist" themes: Oswaldo Guayasamin (p. 46), Eduardo Kingman, and Diogenes Paredes. Between 1940, the year in which Jose Velasco Ibarra, who had been the leading political figure in the country since 1933, was exiled to Buenos Aires, and 1945, the year in which the famous "Hunger March" took place, Ecuadorian "indigenist" painting took definite shape. The outstanding figure was Eduardo Kingman (b. 1913) (p. 45). In 1939-40 he worked on the Ecuadorian Pavilion at the New York World's Fair, and in 1940 he produced a series of paintings on themes relating to the Spanish Civil War. In 1942 he exhibited at the Capiscara Gallery, the movement's unofficial headquarters, Los abagos, a painting monumental in spirit, in which the suffering of the Indians is conveyed with epic sweep and a strong sense of rhythm. The same qualities can be noted in The Stretchers, in which the encounter between enslaved Indians and an overseer mounted on an enormous horse and brandishing a whip is rendered with great vividness. In these compositions, in Diogenes Paredes' (b. 1915) Earthenware Jugs, in which the figure of the Indian assumes massive proportions, and Dancers of Saquisili by Bolivar Franco Mena (b. 1913) one can see the influence of Diego Rivera's well-rounded subjects. Originality, however, derives from the monumental tone of the compositions and their markedly rhythmic character. Paredes, the founder of a trade union named for David Alfaro Siqueiros, was awarded first prize by the National House of Culture in 1945. Oswaldo Guayasamin (b. 1919) embarked upon a path different from that of his companions, finding inspiration in the devices used by Picasso in Guernica. He produced in 1945 the first of his great cycles, the 103 paintings known as Huacaynan (the Trail of Tears). In 1948 he received the National Prize for Painting and thereafter was considered the leading figure in Ecuadorian art. His social painting reached its high point between 1952 and 1967, in the series The Age of Wrath, based on themes taken from Frantz Fanon's book The Wretched of the Earth. By that time, however—just as in Mexico—the standard line taken by Ecuadorian "indigenist" art had been rejected by the following generation, as represented by Villacis, Tabara, Viteri, and others, whose concern with matters

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40 • MEXICAN MURALISM


of form was to be the main theme of the '60s. Rounding out the picture of Ecuadorian "indigenist" art, let us note the lively works of Pedro Leon Donoso (b. 1894), the caricatures of Galo Galecio (b. 1912), and the "antibourgeois" art of Jose Enrique Guerrero, which in some stages of his career exhibited a solid Postcubist structure. It is more difficult to summarize the influence of Mexican Muralism on Colombia. Strictly speaking, the only artist to show himself a direct disciple of the Mexicans was Alipio Jaramillo (b. 1913)—who had worked in Brazil and Chile with Siqueiros—in the paintings he did in Duco on masonite. At the urging of Jorge Zalamea, then Minister of Education, Ignacio Gomez Jaramillo (1910-1971), Luis Alberto Acuna (b. 1904) (p. 33) and Jorge Elias Triana (b. 1921) went to Mexico in 1936, but none of them practiced "indigenist" art, though Acuna had long painted men and women of the people using a technique similar to Pointillism, and Gomez Jaramillo, who won the National Prize both in 1940 and in 1944, did striking tropical landscapes. According to such critics as Walter Engels and German Rubiano, it was the group of painters, sculptors, poets, and prose writers known collectively as "Bachues" who got modern art off to a start in Colombia. They were most active in the '40s though Ignacio Gomez Jaramillo's Violence in the Jungle dates from 1954 and not until 1961 did Acuna have his first retrospective in Bogota. In that exhibit he presented 40 paintings dating from as far back as 1931 and 11 sculptures done in 1961. Until the ap-

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MEXICAN MURALISM • 41

• ANTONIO BERNI. NEW CHICAGO ATHLETIC CLUB. 1937. OIL ON CANVAS, 184.3 X 300.3 CM. MUSEUM OF MODERN ART, NEW YORK, U.S.A. INTER-AMERICAN

FUND.

PHOTO-

GRAPH FURNISHED BY THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART.


pearance of the Bachues Colombian art had remained faithful to the precepts of the nineteenth century. 1931 was marked by what the sociologist Antonio Garcia has termed "the end of the republic of the gentry." (This was three years after the banana strike and the subsequent acts of repression narrated by Gabriel Garcia Marquez in One Hundred Tears of Solitude.} With the coming of the Liberals to power under Enrique Olaya Herrera, the dominance of the moneyed classes in government, and the modernization produced by post-crisis substitution of domestic products for imports, the way was gradually opened for the introduction of modern art. Nonetheless, it was Ricardo Gomez Campuzano (1893-1982), a landscapist in the nineteenth-century manner, who won First Prize at the National Salon in 1931, whereas Andres de Santa Maria (1860-1945), who was exhibiting at the Bogota School of Fine Arts, had to be defended in a campaign vigorously waged on his behalf by Baldomero Sanin Cano and Max Grille. The great Colombian muralist was Pedro Nel Gomez (b. 1899), who in 1935 entered into a contract with the local authorities in Medellin to execute 10 huge panels for the Municipal Building. These were followed by frescoes for a number of other public buildings, both in Medellin and in Bogota. Nel Gomez's career as a fresco artist can be compared only to that of the Mexican Muralists, but neither in form nor in matters of technique did he show any resemblance to them. He did a number of cycles—on the history of gold work, the village and the family, violence in Colombia, and myths relating to the appearance of life on earth. Despite the monumental character of his frescoes, he never lost his taste for watercolor technique. As a result his work is pictorial rather than descriptive. This is apparent in his modeling of detail, freedom of brushwork, and careful color shading in small areas. The Liberal period continued under the presidency of Alfonso Lopez Purnarejo (1934-38). Progressive measures were taken. The first agrarian reform law was passed in 1936, and that same year the Confederation of Colombia Workers was founded. This cycle did not end until the assassination of the populist leader Jorge Eliecer Gaitan in 1948. The social interest of the Bachues seem to have been kept under good control. Sculptors such as Ramon Barba (18941964), Jose Horacio Betancourt (1920-1959), Jose Domingo Rodriguez (18951965), and Romulo Rozo (1899-1964)12 took as their subjects men and women of the people. However, neither they nor their painter colleagues exhibited any signs of revolt. Only occasionally, and late in their careers, did painters such as Luis Alberto Acuna, Gomez Jaramillo, Gonzalo Ariza (b. 1912), Sergio Trujillo (b. 1911), and Carlos Correa (b. 1912) turn to executing murals. Trujillo did one for the School of Chemistry of the National University, for example, and in 1960 Acufia did an Apotheosis of the Spanish Language. All were primarily easel painters, who sought to impart a taste for modern art to the moneyed-class public via works such as Carlos Correa's Annunciation, exhibited at the National Salon in 1942. The group's basic realism is best seen in portraits done in the 1940s (e.g., Jorge Ruiz Linares' [b. 1922] Portrait of Eduardo Mendoza Varela [1945] and Ignacio Gomez Jaramillo's Double Portrait of 1949). Neocubism, Neopointillism,

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• 42 • MEXICAN MURALISM


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MEXICAN MURALISM • 43

• MIGUEL DIOMEDE. STILL LIFE. 1958. OIL ON CANVAS, 27 X 41 CM. COL-

LECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF

THE AMERICAS, OAS, WASHINGTON,

D.C., U.S.A. PURCHASE FUND, 1959. PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

and Neo-Cezannism distinguish these works from ones such as In the Park by Eugenio Zerda (1878-1945) or the landscapes of Jesus Maria Zarnora (18751949), two holdovers from the nineteenth century. This cautious advance toward modernism, within the limits of ready comprehensibility prescribed by Mexican Muralism, can also be noted in the work of politicized artists in Argentina and Chile during the 1940s. There was some precedent for the treatment of popular themes in Argentina. Winner of the Grand Prize and Gold Medal at the Centennial Exposition, Cesareo Bernaldo de Quiros (1881-1968) painted grandiose baroque narratives peopled with Creole types. Benito Quinquela Martin (1890-1977) won popularity with his landscapes, scenes of the Riachuelo district of Buenos Aires, and depictions of workers in the port area known as the Boca. Eugenio Daneri (18811970) treated the same material in a more sober fashion, with greater pictorial sophistication. All three were descriptive painters, but whereas each of the first two indulged in his own form of idealization, the third was content to show daily life as it really is. The following generation included painters such as Alfredo Gramajo Gutierrez (1893-1961), Gustavo Cochet (1894-1979), Lino Eneas Spilimbergo (1896-1964), Ramon Gomez Cornet (1898-1964), Enrique Policastro (18981971), Horacio Gerardo March (1899-1978), Miguel Diomede (1902-1974) (p. 43), Onofrio Pacenza (1904-1971), Antonio Berni (1905-1981), and Juan Carlos Castagnino (1908-1972), and sculptors such as Jose Fioravanti (18961977), Alfredo Bigatti (1898-1964), Rogelio Yrurtia (1879-1950), Agustin Riganelli (1890- 1949), Jose Alonso (b. 1911), and Luis Falcini (1889-1973). They engaged in thinly disguised realism, unlike painters such as Enrique de


Larranaga (1900-1956), who won first prize at the National Salon in 1936, and Miguel Carlos Victorica (1884-1955), in whose work one can see the influence of Soutine. In politics, 1931 marked the beginning of what Argentine historians call "the decade of infamy."13 As for art, Antonio Berni, later to undergo the influence of the Mexican School, was painting pictures that were clearly Surrealist in inspiration, such as Obsession with the Mystery of Noonday. Gomez Cornet's 1921 exhibit of native types preceded by three years the appearance of the nationalist group that went by the name of Martin Fierro. Its declarations about "our land" and "the Argentine spirit" had artistic repercussion in the battles over the works of Xul Solar and Emilio Pettoruti, as will be seen in the next chapter. By 1940 Berni was the standard-bearer of the new realism. He was considered " a painter of principle." Although he had worked with Siqueiros on murals in Buenos Aires, the panel Berni did for the Theater of the People in 1941 is of a geometric character, quite the opposite of the Mexican artist's style. Largescale oils such asjfujuy (1938), The New Chicago Athletic Club, The Native Band (1939) or the monumental Farmers show Berni's preference for the well-rounded, sharply outlined figures of Diego Rivera. In Sunday Sun (1941) Berni's work shows more of a resemblance to the cityscapes of March and Pacenza—the intentionally commonplace scenes of "neighborhood art." The tendency continued in his murals for the Galerias Pacifico (Buenos Aires, 1946), and culminated in the '60s with two great series of works on folk themes: a cycle on the shanty-dweller Juanito Laguna, done in a combination of painting and collage, and a set of prints dedicated to the seamstress Ramona Montiel. The portraits Berni painted during this period show much resemblance to those done by Gomez Cornet, Daneri, Spilimbergo, and Raquel Forner, and even to the Portrait of Maria Rosa included by Pettoruti in a Postcubist still life of the same name (1941), the hyperrealism of which is worthy of Fortunate Lacamera (1887-1951). In 1942, after painting dramatic scenes of the Spanish Civil War, Raquel Forner (b. 1902) was awarded first prize at the National Salon. The persistence of Argentine art in the minor line of easel painting resulted in a whole gallery of realistic, frontal portraits with round, wide-open eyes, the effect of which is almost Surrealistic in the work of Demetrio Urruchua (1902-1978). Figure in Profile (1947) is a good example of his product. A few works, such as Diomede's exquisite still lifes, might be classed as "chamber pieces." Most artists—painters, sculptors, engravers—were no more than solid craftsmen. One would have to call this the proto-modern era of Argentine art. When European influences, such as that of Lhote on Spilimbergo or of Anglada Camarasa on Raul Mazza, appear, they are greatly toned down, to accord with prevailing taste. The real forward leap was to be taken in the mid forties, toward Geometric Abstraction on the one hand and Surrealism on the other. In 1952, as part of Peron's second five-year plan, the National Museum of Fine Arts organized and exhibited the biggest show of Argentine art up to that date: 519 works, representing 271 different artists. Presiding over the whole were

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44 • MEXICAN MURALISM


EDUARDO

PLACE.

1989.

KINGMAN.

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MEXICAN MURALISM • 45

BIRTH-

OIL ON CANVAS,

133.3 X 99 CM. COLLECTION OF THE INTER-AMERICAN

DEVELOPMENT

BANK, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

two enormous (and anonymous) portraits of the president and his wife, Eva Duarte de Peron. In his preface to the catalogue of the exhibit, Juan Zocchi, the director of the Museum, wrote: "We are living the drama of being 'Argentine' or 'American' without having roots in the aboriginal past. Argentina is like Robinson Crusoe: it has had to do everything for itself, working in isolation, surrounded by international waters. From the viewpoint of our present national makeup, the aboriginal past is dead." We might categorize the Chileans born aroung 1900 as "minor realists," much like their Argentine counterparts. Among them were Dora Puelma (18921972), Maria Tupper (1898-1965), Marta Villanueva (b. 1900), Carlos Ossandon (1900-1977), Hector Banderas (b. 1903), and Ines Puyo (b. 1906). Modern tendencies are to be noted only in the form of variations in brush strokes and discreet alterations of reality. Painting with ulterior intentions can be found only in the work of Marco Bonta (1898-1974). From 1931 to 1945 he taught mural painting and the craft of stained glass at the School of Applied Arts in Santiago. His career took the opposite direction from that of Laureano Guevara (1889-1968), one of the Montparnasse group, founded in 1928, which was to bring the break with the past. Bonta, like Venturelli, dedicated himself entirely to landscape, into which he introduced types to be found among the people—peasants, and individuals living on the margin of society. The sole artist openly influenced by Mexican Muralism was Jose Venturelli (b. 1924). Norberto Berdia (1900-1983) presents a similar case in Uruguay. Both practiced a late type of Muralism, based on reality,


OSWALDO GUAYASAMIN. THE

WHITE

COFFIN.

PHOTOGRAPH

COURTESY OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS ARCHIVE, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A.

but whereas Berdia evolved toward an almost abstract kind of figure painting Venturelli remained a realist throughout his work. Venturelli executed a number of murals in Chile: one for the Alliance of Intellectuals for the Defense of Culture in 1943, and one for the University of Chile in 1950. From 1953 to 1956 he lived in China and painted murals in Beijing. Of a later date are ones he did in Havana. Norberto Berdia worked with Siqueiros when the Mexican visited Uruguay in 1933, but it was only after a sojourn in Mexico in 1945, at which time he studied with Federico Cantii (b. 1908), that he painted a series of murals in Uruguay—for the offices of the newspaper ElPais and the School of Architecture in Montevideo, and for the Hotel San Rafael in Punta del Este. Berdia took up residence for a while in Mexico; he later traveled through Peru, Paraguay, and Ecuador. He produced stylized versions of national types in a Cubistic manner, derived from his master Andre Lhote. Berdia's pictures differ from the ornamental syntheses of native motifs turned out by his contemporary Ricardo Aguerre (1897-1967)—Washerwomen in Portugal, for example. Luis Mazzey (1895-1983) and Carlos Gonzalez (b. 1905) shared Berdia's interest in scenes from the life of the people, peasants, and lower-class types, often incorporating them into landscapes. There is not so much as a breath of social protest in their History of Trade in Uruguay and Work Done by the National Fuel, Alcohol, and Portland Cement Administration, murals less than 20 square meters in area, in which they show the lower classes at work.

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46 • MEXICAN MURALISM


RODRIGO

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MEXICAN MURALISM • 47

PENALBA. NICARA-

GUAN FANTASY. 1946. OIL ON CAN-

VAS, 71.1 X 83.8 CM. COLLECTION

OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS,

OAS,

WASHINGTON,

D.C.,

U.S.A. GIFT OF IBM, 1969. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS ARCHIVE.

These are "narrative murals" in the Mexican manner, but without Mexican fire. Such picture-stories of railroads, mining, agriculture, and communications media are to be found throughout Latin America. The Uruguayan artist with the keenest critical eye and the most highly developed social consciousness was Rafael Barradas (1890-1929). This can be clearly seen from the sketches and caricatures he did in Montevideo before making a definite departure for Europe in 1912. He took up residence in Spain, concentrating on his cycle known as The Magnificent. The strength of these works derives from the magnification of popular types and poetical effects achieved through distortion. Nostalgia for his native city inspired his Scenes of Life in Montevideo, in which his capacity for satire was once again demonstrated. From 1937 to 1941, when he returned to Venezuela, Hector Poleo (b. 1918) (p.35) constituted an exception in the ranks of his contemporaries. He came home to depict types found among the people in paintings suggestive of Mexican influence, though, as the critic Lira Espejo observes, that influence is more apparent than real. The dictatorship exercised off and on by Juan Vicente Gomez from 1908 to 1935 does not explain the lack of interest in social themes exhibited by the country's painters. A more plausible explanation is one of an economic nature. 1909 saw the beginning of the oil boom, and with the granting of large numbers of concessions to foreigners Venezuela found itself overrun by


immigrants who intermarried with both the Negroes and mulattoes of the coastal areas and the Indians of the Andes. In 1928 there was a student uprising against Gomez, and the years 1931-1936 saw the beginnings of what were to develop into the two political parties, Accion Democratica and COPEI, that were later to alternate in power, more smoothly than in Colombia. The social structure remained archaic and land-based, however, and the dictator ran the country like a feudal estate. In 1912 the Fine Arts Circle was founded in Caracas, and this stimulated activity by a number of landscapists. Among them were Rafael Monasteries (1884-1961), Manuel Cabre (b. 1890), Federico Brandt (1878-1932), Elisa Elvira Zuloaga (1900-1980), Edmundo Monsanto (1890-1947), Prospero Martinez (1885-1966), Cesar Prieto (1882-1976), Tomas Golding (b. 1909), and Pedro Arpel Gonzalez (1901-1981). Until 1919, the year in which the Circle was dissolved, landscape dominated the art scene. Three foreign artists who took up residence in Venezuela had considerable influence on local artists. They were Emilio Boggio (1857-1920), Samys Muntzer (Romanian, 1869-1958), and Nicholas Ferdinandov (Russian, 1886-1925). Landscapists, they made their presence strongly felt in Caracas in the years from 1919 to 1921. The greatest of Venezuelan painters, Armando Reveron (1889-1954), was likewise essentially a landscapist. Referring to the period in which the Circle existed, the Venezuelan critic Enrique Planchart wrote in 1948: "Our painters lived in an isolation comparable to that to which Plato assigned poets in his Republic. Contact with the public came about only through a government commission or an occasional acquisition by a member of a very limited minority." With the end of the Gomez dictatorship in 1935, the country burst from its provincial calm into a race for modernization unparalleled in the rest of Latin America. A rich government and a wealthy minority had no use for "art with a message." Given these circumstances, after a brief fling at Surrealism Hector Poleo turned to figurative painting of a decorative nature. During the '40s Francisco de Narvaez (1905-1982) engaged in strongly ethnic painting and sculpture, with emphasis on typically creole models. Later he turned to nonfigurative work. Artists who dared to introduce representatives of the people and other popular elements into landscape were few in number: Pedro Leon Castro (born in Puerto Rico in 1913), Cesar Rengifo (1915-1980), and Gabriel Bracho (b. 1915). The first two broke the idyllic calm of the Circle with depictions of human misery. Bracho painted violently Expressionist views of Mount Avila. In no cases were the artists' intentions fully realized. Central America and the Caribbean should have constituted Mexican Muralism's natural zone of influence. Not only do they lie close at hand, but a succession of dictatorships and coups d'etat produced conditions favoring art of social protest. National liberation movements generally involved a number of social classes, however, and periods of development under legally elected governments were too brief to result in artistic production of importance. There were individual exceptions. We have already mentioned Dario Suro (b. 1917) in the Dominican Republic. The Puerto Rican Lorenzo Homar, (b. 1913) contacted

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• 48 • MEXICAN MURALISM


Reginald Marsh in New York in 1931, and in 1951 went to work for the Division of Community Education back home in Puerto Rico, where Luis Munoz Marin's populist government was interested in promoting art that would have impact on the public. The Guatemalan Enrique de Leon Cabrera (b. 1915) joined the group known as "Los Tepeus" in 1933; he enlivened his landscapes with scenes from the life of the people. The mystic implications of the work of the Haitians Philome Obin (b. 1892) and Hector Hyppolite (1894-1948) reflect the deep-running roots of their country's culture. Francisco Amighetti (b. 1907) produced prints of great vigor in Costa Rica. The Salvadoran Luis Alfredo Caceres (1908-1952) did a long series of narrative paintings in a style that was part primitive and part Postcubist. Jose Antonio Velasquez (1906-1983) painted marvelous views of his home village, San Antonio de Oriente, in Honduras. Rodrigo Penalba (1908-1979) (p.47) reestablished contact with Nicaraguan reality and went on to become the master of the rising generation. His 1949 Rites of Witchcraft among the Indians ofMasaya is a good example of his work. None of the artists mentioned, however, produced a body of socio-political work in the Mexican manner. Cuba is the sole exception in the area. In 1927 a new magazine, Revista de Avarice, appeared. Its principal writers were Juan Marinello, Jorge Manach, and Martin Casanovas, and for three years it promoted public discussion of "the virgin background of America" and "universal aspects of Creole culture." In 1930 Marinello wrote in Revista de Avance: "The search for native elements and the indigenist manner of expression characteristic of much of present-day Latin American art have found no echo among us, owing to our lack of an Indian population and of such literary or artistic monuments as the now-extinct aborigenes might have produced. While the theme of the Negro is worldwide in character, in Cuba it has special significance. The participation of the Negro in Cuban life...provides matter for thought and hope." In works of Mario Carrefio (b. 1913) such as Scenes of Havana (1940) one finds realism but little social aggressiveness. So too with Houses with Figures by Emilio Sanchez (b. 1921), The Confrontation byjosejoaquin Tejada (1867-1943), and Cuban Peasant Woman by Armando Menocal (1863-1942). All reflect the traditional liking for telling a story. In the paintings of Leopoldo Romanach (18621951) and Victor Manuel (Garcia) (1897-1967) and sculptures such as the figures done by Mirta Cerra in 1941, The Creole Woman (1940) by Juan Jose Sicre (18981974), and the works of Alfredo Lozano (b. 1913), one notes an attempt to portray types that evidence the mingling of races without any suggestion of cultural ambivalence. The only artist to engage in openly political painting was Marcelo Pogolotti (b. 1902), who upon his return from Europe in 1930 took to painting working-class scenes in Leger's tubular style. Later he evolved into a Surrealist. Proto-modern painting in Cuba revolved around two figures, neither of whom bore any relation to Mexican Muralism, although they did exhibit a manifest social consciousness. The first of these figures was Victor Manuel, who attracted into his circle artists such as Jorge Arche (1905-1956), the author of realistic portraits and figure paintings; Domingo Ravenet (1905-1969), the sole

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MEXICAN MURALISM • 49


muralist in the group, who decorated the chapel in Martyrs Park in Havana; and Romero Arciaga (b. 1905), whose paintings of modest social intent are done in Victor Manuel's unadorned style. The other polar figure was Mariano Rodriguez (b. 1912). In 1937, after visits to Paris and Mexico, he joined the Free School of Painting and Sculpture headed by Eduardo Abela (1891-1965). There the uncertainties of the generation active in 1942 found expression in excursions into folk themes and modern European trends. The generation represented by Mariano in 1943 was characteristically eclectic. Works such as Cane Cutters by Mario Carreno, who had received training in Mexico in 1936; The Party by Rene Portocarrero (b. 1912); Musicians by Cundo Bermudez (b. 1914) (pp. 38, 39); Mariano's female bathers; the aggressive scenes of labor unrest which Luis Martinez Pedro (b. 1910) did in 1937; and Antonio Gattorno's (1904-1980) Women with Bananas fall into the category of "the universally commonplace." Nonetheless, they represent the best in Cuban painting of the time. Max Jimenez (Costa Rican, 1900-1947) was an outsider, a littleknown prophet of the changes that art would undergo after World War II. A work such as Waiting at Ariguanabo hints at the explosive force of ethnic and cultural cross-breeding. In 1943 an exhibition of modern Cuban art was presented at the Hispano-Cuban Cultural Institute, under the aegis of David Alfaro Siqueiros, who had just executed a powerful Duco mural entitled Democracy in America. A counterpart to this exhibit was provided in the same year by the first retrospective of the work of Amelia Pelaez (1897-1968), covering the years 1927 to 1943. Her work will be studied in the next chapter. Carlos Henriquez (1900-1957), generally classified as an "irrealist," went to extremes in seeking to define Creole types. The Abduction of the Mulatto Woman, Creole Balladeer, and The Burial of the Cuban Peasant Woman are titles indicative of his recurring themes. Depiction of the Cuban peasant—treated dramatically by Abela, with elusive delicacy by Aristides Fernandez (1904-1934), and with power and romance by Henriquez—was a step toward acceptance of the myth of a mulatto society, as invented by Wifredo Lam (1902-1982) in Paris during the '30s and brought back to Cuba in 1943, the year he painted the extraordinary fetish-women of The Jungle. Mexican Muralism lent direct or indirect support to artists who in the years from 1920 to 1950 displayed an inclination to explore social themes, particularly as they involved Indians, mestizos, Negroes, or mulattoes. At the same time, however, another group of artists was seeking to create an atmosphere propitious to a radical change in the academic imagery of the nineteenth century. The language of plastic expression was their primary concern. The way was open for Latin America to join in the work of updating imagery and renewal in matters of form that has been the characteristic of twentieth-century art.

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• 50 • MEXICAN MURALISM


MEXICAN MURALISM • 51

Notes 1

Jorge Alberto Manrique, America Latina en sus artes (Mexico City: Siglo XXI, 1974). Taken from an article by Carlos Fuentes that appeared in La Nacion of Buenos Aires for December 14, 1980. 3 The revived interest in folk elements is also to be noted in the paintings ofjean Chariot (Mother and Son with Masks, 1937), Miguel Covarrubias (1904-1957), Francisco Goitia (1882-1960) Juan O'Gorman (1905-1982), Pablo O'Higgins (1904-1983), Jesus Guerrero Galvan (1910-1973), Frida Kahlo (1910-1954), Jorge Gonzalez Camarena (1908-1980), Maria Izquierdo (1906-1955), Raul Anguiano (b. 1915), Francisco Dosamantes (b. 1911), Jose Chavez Morado (b. 1909), Angel Bracho (b. 1911), Manuel Rodriguez Lozano (18971971), Antonio M. Ruiz (1897-1964), and the sculptures of Mardonio Magana (18661947), as well as others. 4 The conflict between Church and State came to a head in 1926 with the anticlerical measures taken by President Plutarco Elias Calles. There were confrontations between religious rebels whose slogan was "Long live Christ the King!" (hence the name applied to them ofcristeros) and government forces. President-elect Alvaro Obregon died at the hands of a religious fanatic. In 1929 a compromise was reached and armed confrontations ceased. For additional details see James W. Wilkie, "The Meaning of the Cristero Religious War," Revolution in Mexico; Tears of Upheaval, 1910-1940 (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1969). 5 Delfina Flores, Juana Rosas, Ignacio Sanchez, Jose Guadalupe Castro, and Jesus Sanchez, to name but a few. 6 David Alfaro Siqueiros, No hay mas ruta que la nuestra (Mexico City, 1945). I Raquel Tibol, Textos de David Alfaro Siqueiros (Mexico City: UNAM, 1969). 8 David Alfaro Siqueiros, Setenta obras recientes, with a prologue by Angelica Arenal (Mexico City: Institute Nacional de Bellas Artes, 1947). 9 David Alfaro Siqueiros, "Carta a Orozco," Hoy (Mexico City: October 7, 1944). 10 Manrique, op. cit. II The Revolt of the Lieutenants is the name given to the dramatic episode of June 5, 1922, when young officers stationed at the fort in Copacabana rebeled against the government. Federal troops crushed the uprising at once. The insurgents were idealistic members of the middle class who aspired to national renewal. The few who escaped from the fort ("the Copacabana Eighteen") were nearly all shot down on the beach. This was not the end of the matter, however. Both the survivors and their sympathizers came to exert a certain influence that lasted as long as the period of Getulio Vargas (1930-1945). One of them was Eduardo Gomes, who rose to the rank of brigadier in the air force and who was a candidate for the presidency in 1945. See Hubert Herring, The History of Latin America from the Beginning to the Present (New York: Knopf, 1968). 12 It was the 1929 sculpture entitled "Bachue" by Romulo Rozo that gave the group its name. 13 The "decade of infamy" in Argentina began in 1930, when the radical government of President Hipolito Yrigoyen was overthrown by the military in a movement led by General Jose F. Uriburu. It covers the Roca-Runciman Treaty of 1933 and the preferential treatment accorded British enterprises up to 1943. Election frauds kept power in the hands of the military and the old conservative oligarchy. The presidents during this period were Jose F. Uriburu (1930-1932), Agustin P.Justo (1932-1938), Roberto M. Ortiz (19381942), and Ramon S. Castillo (1942-43). The period came to an end in 1943 with the appearance on the political scene of Juan Domingo Peron, a member of the military junta that took over the government in 1943. See Hubert Herring, op. cit.

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2


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THE AVANT-GARDE

IN THE YEARS FROM 1920 TO 1950, AVANT-GARDE TENDENCIES DID NOT loom so large on the cultural horizon as did the realistic trend which, responding in part to the influence of the Mexican Muralists and in part to pressures exerted by the less-favored classes of society, produced at times work of openly social or political intent. The Andean countries, with their strong Indian tradition, and the Caribbean area, where the concept of negritude was making itself felt, were relatively unreceptive to new ideas of European origin. In countries that had received wave upon wave of immigrants, however, the elite prided itself on being "European and universal" in its thinking. There are some interesting parallels and contrasts between the two currents. Modern Art Week took place in Sao Paulo in 1922 (p. 56), the same year that the Mexicans laid the foundations of a new aesthetic with monumental murals they executed in the National Preparatory School in the nation's capital. Articles published in the Mexican review El Machete and the proclamations issued by the union founded by Siqueiros called for artistic action paralleling the Mexican Revolution. The articles that appeared in the Sao Paulo review Klaxon and the numerous pamphlets that Modern Art Week inspired dealt, however, with aesthetic considerations and constituted a call for intellectual discussion. Oswald de Andrade's Pan Brasil Manifesto dates from 1924; Gilberto Freyre's Nationalist Manifesto, from 1926; the manifesto issued by the group centered around the review Antropofagia, from 1928; and the School of Fine Arts directed by Lucio Costa got its start in 1930. However, the intellectual ferment that culminated in Modern Art Week got under way in the years from 1915 to 1920. Long before issuing his manifesto, Oswald de Andrade envisioned the art of the future as a necessary alliance between the European and the Brazilian, and he advised the young "to take their place in our midst; to share in our life; and to draw from the resources offered by the country—from the treasures of the heart and our immediate surroundings— the elements of an art that, paralleling the intense effort we are making to build cities and open up the land, will constitute one of the higher manifestations of our

III

MATTA

ANTONIO

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NEW BLOOD FROM

(ROBERTO SEBASTIAN MATTA

ECHAURREN).

THE VERTIGO OF EROS. 1944. OIL ON

CANVAS, 195.6 X 251.5 CM. MUSEUM OF MODERN ART, NEW YORK,

U.S.A. ANONYMOUS GIFT. PHOTO-

GRAPH COPYRIGHT BY THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART.


national character." Mario de Andrade, the author of the novel Macunaima, wrote to Tarsila do Arnaral, who was then studying in Paris with Andre Lhote: "Tarsila, Tarsila, come home. Give up Gris and Lhote, those promoters of decrepit aesthetics and decadent critical ideas. Turn your back on Paris, Tarsila: come back to the virgin forest, where there is no Negro art, where there are no babbling brooks. The virgin forest exists. I believe in what it represents." At first glance there might seem to be a similarity between the term "decrepit aesthetics" and the writings of the Mexicans; however, the latter's aggressiveness finds no echo in the romantic spirit of renewal that inspired the two Andrades and the most important painter of the period, Tarsila do Amaral. In 1924 the critic Sergio Milliet described her as rejecting story-telling and rhetorical grandiloquence, seeking to achieve by the use of Brazilian elements such as direct light, bold colors, hard lines, and a feeling of weight "a type of painting that is truly our own." He added that her Paulista temperament was expressed in terms of "abstraction and synthesis." Tarsila's most important critic, Aracy Amaral, wrote in 1975: "The phases of her work corresponding to the ideas of the literary groups known by the names Pan Brasil and Antropofagia undoubtedly constitute the high point of her career as a painter, and it is from them that her importance in modern Brazilian art derives." In Brazil, the beginnings of modern painting, sculpture, and architecture are all to be found in the uproar and polemics aroused by Modern Art Week. The premise underlying the work of the painters, sculptors, architects, and musicians who took so lively a part in that event was defined many years later by the writer Ferreira Gullar in these terms "Avant-garde art should spring from an analysis of a given country's social and cultural characteristics, never from advanced ideas imported intact from the developed countries to which they properly apply." In this connection, one should note the importance attributed by Modern Art Week to the Black contribution to culture, and to the significance of the mixing of races and cultures. Tarsila's 1929 composition Abapuru represents a high point in recognition of the ethnic factor, of which the artist availed herself to express her independence of the European avant-garde. At the same time she profited from the novelties the latter had introduced into art. She could never have arrived at her bold distortions and her powerful syntheses, nor could she have achieved her expressive force, had it not been for the examples set by the European Cubists and Expressionists. The work of Tarsila do Amaral (1890-1973) represents a fusion of the avant-garde tendencies of Europe and Latin America. From the time of her adolescence her years were divided between trips to Europe and long sojourns on the plantations of Santa Teresa do Alto, Bela Vista, and Sao Bernardo. In 1920 she settled in Paris for a while, studying at the Julien Academy. Two years later she returned to Sao Paulo, to become one of the Group of Five, whose other members were Anita Malfatti, Menotti del Picchia, and Mario and Oswald de Andrade. Her depiction of the Negro in works from her Pan Brasil and

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• 54 • NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE


Antropofagia phrases—works in which, according to the poet Haroldo de Campos, she attained her highest level of pictorial art— coincide with the illusion of a "return to primal origins" fostered by the European intellectuals of the period. Mario de Andrade's phrase, "We represent the primitive phase of a future perfection" echoes Marinetti's // Negro, certain short stories of Blaise Cendrars (who paid a visit to Brazil), Francis Picabia's review Cannibale, and even the music of Heitor Villa Lobos, who often found inspiration in folk melodies. Tarsila's distortions of the human figure and such notable urban and rural landscapes as Sao Paulo, Shantytown Hill, Brazilian Central Railway (1924), Manaca (1927), and Dead Calm (1929) are stylizations in a manner reminiscent of Leger, but nonetheless entirely her own. Less intellectual than the European Postcubists, she never got away from organic concepts. Her flowers, woods, and animals are as erotic in effect as the sunken breast of her Black Woman of 1923. Hers is a carnal world, of softly yielding forms. By contrast, the works Rego Monteiro (b. 1899) exhibited in Paris in 1928 have a preciseness that foreshadows the apogee ofartdeco, and Girls of Guarantiguetd, Di Cavalcanti's famous 1930 work, leans toward the histrionic in its depiction of a popular theme. Toward the end of the '40s Tarsila made a brief return to the distortions of the phase associated with Antropofagia. In the strange pictures she painted at that time her technique is almost Pointillist. In the '60s she came full cycle by resorting once again to syntheses, rather more two-dimensional than before, but evidencing the same rigorous discipline. Eliseu d'Angelo Visconti (b. Italy 1867-d. Rio de Janeiro 1944) had already shown that pictorial values could be divorced from the narrative content of a work, a lesson which the Modernists were quick to appreciate.1 The establishment of new rules for art in line with the innovations of the European avant-garde was the prime intent of the artists who participated in Modern Art Week. They sought support from the aristocracy, scorning the bourgeoisie, described by Assis Chateaubriand as an "abominable caste." Their great discovery was the "profound originality" of their race. In 1972 the Sao Paulo Institute for Brazilian Studies organized an exhibition called "Brazil: First Modernist Phase, 1917-29." The period in question, which of course included Modern Art Week, was one of investigation and analysis. Getulio Vargas' 1930 revolution against the great landholders resulted in a O o o new Brazil. The aristocracy—which "delighted in saucy experiments and encouraged irreverent phantasies of the imagination" (the words are those of Assis Chateaubriand)—was forced to beat a retreat. Nonetheless, there can be no doubt that Brazil's position of continuing leadership in the arts in Latin America derives from this first Modernist phase, for it was then that the country developed both a strong national consciousness and flexibility in adapting to new aesthetics, gracefully identifying itself with the twentieth century. In Argentina, the avant-garde constituted even more of an elite. The pressure exerted by the generation of realistic artists who dominated the '30s and '40s and the political opportunism of the Peronist regime in the 1950s did not favor artistic novelty. Unlike its counterpart in Brazil, the Argentine avant-garde did

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NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE • 55


• THE MODERNIST MOVEMENT WAS LAUNCHED IN BRAZIL BY MODERN ART WEEK, A FESTIVAL OF MUSIC, LITERATURE, POETRY, PAINTING, AND SCULPTURE HELD IN SAO PAULO IN FEBRUARY 1922.

not seek to exert an influence on the cultural life of the nation as a whole. Separating itself from the masses, its members took on the role of intellectual guerrillas, a role maintained to this day by the avant-garde in Buenos Aires. (Note that we say "Buenos Aires" rather than "Argentina.") The critic Lorenzo Varela writes: "It is the Argentine avant-garde that has brought about modernization of the Argentine mentality. It has created a new vision of the world and of the nation. In short, it has saved the country from degenerating into one vast provincial backwater." The period of radical agitation runs from about 1924 to 1950, the year in which the avant-garde became "institutionalized." In 1949 the Institute for Modern Art was founded. It began activities with a seminar given by Paul Degand, a pioneer of nonfigurative art in France. The institutionalization process was advanced by the establishment of the prizes offered by the magazine Very Estimar and by the critical leadership exercised by Jorge Romero Brest, first as Director of the Museum of Fine Arts and after 1960 as Director for Plastic Arts of the Torcuato di Telia Institute. In La revolution martinfierrista, the critic Cordoba Iturburu wrote that the group identified with the review Martin Fierro was "fully conscious of the goal it pursued, namely achievement of a new mode of expression deriving from Argentine assimilation of European innovations. It wanted to speak the language of the day, but with an Argentine accent. It called for a new type of art, youthful and novel, structured along the lines of the aesthetic and technical experiments of the European avant-garde, but breathing the breath of our country and infused with an Argentine spirit." The gamut run by the Argentine avant-garde is suggested by the names of the artists defended in the pages of Martin Fierro. (Most of the articles came from the pen of Alberto Prebisch, the theoretician of modern trends.) Horacio Butler (1897-1982) returned home in 1933, after studying in Paris with Andre Lhote and Othon Friesz. The critic Damian Bayon has this to say of the quality of his Intimist compositions: "With impeccable technique and unerring taste, Butler conveys a distinctly Argentine feeling of restraint, of unfeigned melancholy, utterly void of pose."2 Pablo Curatella Manes (1891-1962), likewise praised by Prebisch, was much more avant-garde than Butler. He was the first Argentine sculptor to break with the academic tradition, which was far stronger in his area than in that of painting. By the time of his 1926 work Rugby, he was fully independent of the influence of his teacher Bourdelle and was working along the lines of the Cubists. One notes a particular affinity between his compositions and those which Laurens created after 1927, with their flow of movement and curvilinear forms. Articles in Martin Fierro called attention to the originality of the gesso and terracotta compositions of Alfredo Guttero (1882-1932), who returned from Europe in 1927 to found the Plastic Arts Workshop, one of whose frequenters was Raquel Forner. They likewise recognized the pioneering character of the work done by Juan del Prete (born in Italy in 1897). In 1932 he was active in the "Abstraction-Creation" group in Paris, and when he returned home he produced the

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56 • NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE


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NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE • 57

• CARLOS MERIDA. THE NARROW DOOR. 1936. OIL ON CANVAS, 78 X

55.2 CM. PROPERTY OF THE SAMUEL M, GREENBAUM 1989 TRUST, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. PHOTOGRAPH BY WILLIE HEINZ.

first nonfigurative works of art to be created in Argentina—ingeniously varied compositions, always charged with emotion. The magazine enthusiastically hailed the triumphal reception accorded the Uruguayan Pedro Figari (pp. 78, 79) in Paris, contrasting with the noncommittal character of the reaction to his Buenos Aires exhibit of 1921. The most heated campaigns waged by the review were those on behalf of Xul Solar (1887-1963), Emilio Pettoruti (1892-1971) (pp. 59, 60), and Norah Borges (b. 1901). Support of the last-mentioned is only to be explained by her relationship to Jorge Luis Borges, for with the publication of Fervor de Buenos Aires he had provided a poetic image that the Martin Fierro group could set up in opposition to the social concerns of the Boedo group. Xul Solar, like Curatella Manes, stands in the forefront of the Argentine avant-garde. Like the poet Leopoldo Marechal of the "Ode anacreontica a la cafetera Renault," he has a capacity for playing games in a straightforward manner which scarcely occurs elsewhere in Argentine art. The few creative artists who have engaged in playing games have done so on a basis of metaphysical transpositions: the line begun by Macedonio Fernandez with Papeles de recien venido in 1926 continued through Borges to Julio Cortazar. Xul Solar, however, lays his cards on the table for all to see. In creating a "universal language" and a "universal game" he leaped into the unknown, but in doing so he expressed himself in terms that are primarily plastic. The compositions he did between 1917


JOAQUIN TORRES-GARCIA. THE

CONSTRUCT/VIST

SHIP AMERICA.

1943. OIL ON CANVAS, 50 X 75 CM. TORRES-GARCIA MUSEUM, MONTEVIDEO, URUGUAY. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE TORRES-GARCIA FOUNDATION, MONTEVIDEO.

and 1930, in which all kinds of objects can be found floating or moving about, have been rightly compared to those of Paul Klee. There is, however, a profound difference between the two artists. Klee creates poetry in painting through the use of graphic signs: atmosphere, plot, and drawing all correspond to stored-up memories. There is a surprising energy and life to Xul Solar's work. His fetishes, ruins, and inventions are presented not as suggestions but as positive assertions on his part. While Cross-breeding between Men and Airplanes (1935) comes close to Surrealism, it nonetheless escapes that classification. Jorge Luis Borges once wrote that Xul Solar was "the only cosmopolitan man, the only citizen of the universe that I have known." This may explain the difficulty of classifying or labeling him. The development of Emilio Pettoruti follows a more direct line than that of Xul Solar. From 1913 to 1924 he studied in France and Italy, where he established contact with the Futurists and the Cubists. He held his first exhibit in Buenos Aires in 1924, and it gave rise to fierce public debate between the old guard and the new, the latter being vigorously represented in the pages of Martin Fierro. Pettoruti, Juan Gris, and Gino Severini held a joint exhibit at the Galliera Museum in Paris in 1924, and the relation betwen the two European artists and the Argentine was too close for the latter not to be viewed as a derivative painter. Nonetheless he had appreciable qualities of his own, as can be seen in the series of Interiors he did from 1925 to 1935; in the Harlequins he painted off and on from 1926 to 1950 (the 1937 compositions The Last Serenade and The Improviser are, however, reminiscent of the musicians in Harlequin attire that Picasso did around 1918); and the series of Cups painted from 1929 to 1935. One notes in particular

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58 • NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE


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NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE • 59

EMILIO PETTORUTI. MUSIC AL-

BUMS. 1919. INDIA INK ON PAPER,

20.2 X 26.5 CM. COLLECTION OF

THE INTER-AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT BANK, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. PHOTOGRAPH BY WILLIE HEINZ.

the exceptional cleanness of line and coldness of tonality that distinguish the majority of these works. One notes also the small masterpieces of hyperrealism that find a place amid the frozen geometry of compositions such as The Buzzer (1938), Oranges (1944), and The Pears (1945). Pettoruti achieved the happiest fusion of avant-garde and nationalist tendencies to be found in the whole of modern Argentine art in a series of pictures in which sunlight entering a room falls upon a typical still-life grouping (usually a bottle of wine, a soda-water dispenser, and a bowl of fruit). The most significant works in this series were executed during the '40s: Noon (1941), Study of Sunlight (1942), Intimacy (1942), Winter Sunlight (1943), Pampas Sunlight (1944), Blank Book (1944), Centerpiece (1944), and The Guitar (1948). Never has the "neighborhood" aspect of Buenos Aires been better expressed than in these compositions, with their crystallization of sunlight and perfect articulation of illuminated forms. There has been insufficient study of this great period in Pettoruti's career and its consequences for modern Argentine art. The list of artists upon whom Pettoruti has left his stamp is an impressive one: Fernando Catalano (b. 1883), Fioravanti Bangardini (b. 1906), Armando Ghiesa (b. 1907), Norberto Gresta (b. 1929), Pedro Dominguez Neira (b. 1894), Amelia Fiora, Ernesto M. Scotti (1901-1957), Jorge Soto Acebal (b. 1891), Orlando Pierri (b. 1913), Vicente Forte (b. 1912), Francisco Fornieles (b. 1909), Jorge Edgardo Lezama (b. 1921), German Leonetti (b. 1896), Febo Marti (b. 1919), and Alberto Peri (b. 1929), to name but part. The works these artists were doing around 1956 reflect not only Pettoruti's abstract, simplified treatment of his subjects but the subject matter itself: a window, its frame, light, an open book, a fruit dish, fruit, a pitcher. During the twentieth century the art stage in Argentina has been largely occupied by a chorus of figures of second rank. Few among


• EMILIO PETTORUTI. THE LAST SERENADE.

1937. OIL ON CANVAS,

195.6 X 129.5 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. GIFT OF IBM, 1985. PHOTOGRAPH BY WILLIE HEINZ.

those painting along abstract lines have achieved true individuality. Vicente Forte may be the exception. Pettoruti did what others did not: he educated the public to accepting abstraction as a legitimate form of present-day expression. In 1939, 15 years after the launching of Martin Fierro, the Orion Group appeared in Buenos Aires, antedated, however, by the work of the first Argentine Surrealist, Juan Batlle Planas (1911-1966). The most important segment of Batlle Planas' work dated from the years 1938 to 1945. It came out in series, under titles such as Paranoic X-rays, Noics, and Number Mechanisms. Although, as Aldo Pellegrini says, his "Tibetan" series has "phantasmagoric figures submerged in an atmosphere that closely suggests Tanguy," Batlle Planas is a highly original painter. It is from figures such as those in his 1941 work The Message that later Argentine

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60 • NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE


Surrealism descends. Pellegrini correctly observes that, rather than being merely Surrealistic, the Orion Group "represents a neoromantic spirit infused with elements of eccentricity." The definition fits the work of Luis Barragan (b. 1914), Vicente Forte (b. 1912), Ideal Sanchez (b. 1916), and Orlando Pierri (b. 1913), who along with others constituted the Orion Group. Argentine Surrealism took on new life with the appearance of the Boa Group in 1950. It was founded by the poet Julio Llinas as branch of the Paris circle known as "Phases." Although this European affiliation was to have very different consequences, which will be examined in the next chapter, it was the presence of Batlle Planas that is most strongly to be felt in developments in Argentine Surrealism from Roberto Aizenberg (b. 1928) on. The third path to the modernization of art in Argentina was opened up by the appearance in 1944 of the first and only issue of the review Arturo. Its founders—Carmelo Arden Quin (born in Uruguay in 1913, but active in Buenos Aires from 1938 on), Edgard Bayley, and Gyula Kosice (a Czecho-Hungarian, born in 1924, who was taken to Buenos Aires in 1928)—were all disposed to do away with figurative art, but the group soon split over matters of aesthetic principle into the movement known as Concrete Art Invention, founded by Tomas Maldonado (b. 1922), and the Madi Art Movement led by Gyula Kosice. In 1949 Raul Lozza (b. 1911) split off to form a further movement, known as Perceptism. Like the European coteries from which they derived, the Argentine groups indulged in theorization about what the new art should be. The Inventionist Manifesto, the Perceptist Manifesto, and the declarations issued by the Madi group concurred in exalting the self-contained values of painting and sculpture. The Madists also made a vague, confused appeal for "a humanity struggling for a classless society," while Perceptism called upon painting to exercise its true social function by reintegration into "muro-architecture." Although the whole of the generation born around 1923 benefited from the pioneering efforts of the previously mentioned groups—without them it would be difficult to imagine the pictorial accomplishments of an Alfredo Hlito (b. 1923) or a Kenneth Kemble (b. 1923)—the most striking advances were made by the new sculptors: Libero Badii (b. in Italy in 1916, moved to Argentina in 1927), Noemi Gerstein (b. 1910), Julio Gero (b. in Hungary in 1910), and Enio lommi (b. 1926). Two special cases in sculpture are those of Alicia Penalba (19131982) and Sesostris Vitullo (1899-1953). Taking different roads, in Paris they executed totem-like compositions that in some cases are quite similar in effect, Vitullo's work anteceding that of Penalba by 15 years. Finally there was Lucio Fontana (1899-1968). He began as a figurative sculptor of finely conceived works. Presented at the national salons, they won him first prize in 1944. In 1947 he took up residence in Milan and there founded the movement known as Spatialism, aimed at the creation of "illusory space" through real perforation of a painted surface. In his White Manifesto, issued in Buenos Aires in 1946, Fontana had already ceased to distinguish between painting and sculpture, calling his compositions "spatial concepts."

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NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE • 61


The works produced toward the end of the '40s by Fontana and by the Madi group (which was to persist until the late '50s) facilitated Argentina's incorporation into the international current of Geometric-Constructivist art. Max Bill, Andre Bloc, Vasarely, and Pevsner, whose time was divided between Paris and the United States, and Pietro Dorazio in Rome constituted a veritable international of nonfigurative art. In Latin America aggressively avant-garde positions, aimed at radical tranformation of local art, were taken only in connection with the project for the exterior decoration of the Central University of Venezuela, which the architect Carlos Raul Villanueva brought to completion in 1952, and by the Madi group. It paved the way for later experimentation with kinetic art and "breaking out of the frame." (All this, it should be noted, had previously been envisioned by the Russian Constructivists.) "Representational art belongs to the past" one reads in Madi texts. "The first objective is to take all paintings down off their walls and to dynamite all statues." All this led to a hypertrophy of the avantgarde in Buenos Aires. As a result, works such as Juan del Prete's 1932 string collages and Pettoruti's Portrait of Maria Rosa no longer had a bomblike effect at lifeless national salons, seeming rather to exemplify the only path art could now take. During the period that now concerns us—from 1920 to 1950—the third country to possess an organized avant-garde was Mexico. In this case it was composed of Surrealists. At first their most vigorous supporter was the critic Luis Cardoza y Aragon, who had frequented the French Surrealists during his 1930 stay in Paris. When Andre Breton came to Mexico in 1938, he greeted him thus: "In Breton I salute Revolution! Not, however, this or that particular revolution, with its bovine disciplines and dogmatic idiocies." It was Cardoza y Aragon— born in Guatemala like Carlos Merida (pp. 57, 66)—who took the most balanced view both of the great achievements of the Mexican Muralists and of their unquestionable shortcomings. In his words of welcome to Breton, he was setting Surrealism up in opposition to the single track of politically inspired Muralism. Immediately after signing, along with Diego Rivera and Leon Trotsky, the "Manifesto for an Independent, Revolutionary Art" (1938), the French poet exalted the figure of Frida Kahlo (p. 63), describing her as a "bomb with a ribbon around it." In 1940 a Surrealist exhibit was held at the Ines Amor Gallery in Mexico City. Its organizers in Mexico were Wolfgang Paalen (1905-1959) and Cesar Moro; in Paris Andre Breton played a corresponding role. The local painters who participated were Carlos Merida, Frida Kahlo (1910-1954), Diego Rivera, Antonio Ruiz, Agustin Lazo, Roberto Montenegro (1881-1968), and Manuel Rodriguez Lozano. All this made Surrealism an object of discussion and controversy, particularly among poets and other writers. The reservations expressed by the group known as Contemporaries, especially Cuesta y Villaurrutia, Cardoza y Aragon's withdrawal from the movement, Octavio Paz's adherence to it, and the illustrations Tamayo (pp. 64, 65) did for the poet Benjamin Peret's book^4zV mexicain3 tended to situate Surrealism in the realm of literature. However, in the plastic arts one notes the increasing importance of Rufino Tamayo (1899-1991), and a group of women: Cordelia Urueta (b. 1908), Frida Kahlo,

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• 62 • NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE


FRIDA

KAHLO

• 63

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NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE

SELF-PORTRAIT

DEDICATED TO LEON TROTSKY. 1937.

OIL ON CANVAS, 70.2 X 61 CM. NA-

TIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS, WASHINGTON, D.C.,

U.S.A.

GIFT OF THE HONORABLE CLARE

BOOTHE LUCE. PHOTOGRAPH FURNISHED BY THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF WOMEN IN THE ARTS.

Leonora Carrington (born in England in 1917), and Remedies Varo (19131963), born in Spain, who came to Mexico with her husband Benjamin Peret in 1942. Certain internal factors must be taken into account, such as the importance of Julio Ruelas (1870-1907), whose fantastic paintings were first studied with the care they deserve by the critic Ida Rodriguez Prampolini. There were also external factors, such as the arrival from France of Antonin Artaud, who was later to publish a book entitled Aupays des tarahumaras;4 the arrival of Paul Eluard in 1949; and the appearance in that same year of Prometeus, a review edited by Francisco Zendejas and illustrated by Leonora Carrington. The most important elements in Mexican Surrealism, however, derive from the life of the people, with its colorfulness, liveliness, fantasy, black humor, and continuous awareness of death. All these lie at the root of the work of Rufino Tamayo, particularly the compositions executed between 1930—when he freed himself from the strong influence exerted by Torres-Garcia (pp. 58, 75, 76, 77) and his sharp slices of organized reality (see The Alarm Clock, 1928)—and 1945, when he entered into a period of more nocturnal, starry compositions, more closely attuned to the uni-


• RUFINO TAMAYO. ANIMALS. 1941. OIL ON CANVAS, 76.5 X 101.6 CM. MUSEUM OF MODERN ART, NEW YORK,

U.S.A.

INTER-AMERICAN

FUND. PHOTOGRAPH FURNISHED BY THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART.

verse. In the extraordinary series of works dating from 1945 to 1960, figures are bathed in a chromatic atmosphere of rare intensity. It was in the years from 1926 to 1938 that Tamayo's compositions gradually took on a character of their own, distinct from the work of the Muralists. When Tamayo journeyed to New York for the first time in 1940, he was halfway to attaining what Octavio Paz was to call "the constellation offerees" that would permit him to view the world as an interplay of appeals and responses, sustained by trust in ubiquitous energy. No other artist has expressed so well in pictorial terms the mythical thought that the Romanian philosopher Mircea Eliada explained as existence within a "living, articulate, significant cosmos." In 1950 the mysterious, cryptic character of that cosmos is admirably reflected in Sleeping Melodies and Cosmic Maternity. In compositions such as his 1952 Tribute to Our Race one can perceive the special flavor imparted to Tamayo's work by his continuing bond with folk art. Between 1950 and 1960, as Octavio Paz puts it, Tamayo, "discovered the old formula of consecration."5 His painting, based in a bipartite, cosmic vision of sun and moon, becomes a vast metaphor. In his murals one can note the steps in his development from sign language to metaphor: 1933, mural for the National School of Music; 1938, mural for the National Museum of Anthropology (an object lesson in how a revolutionary message can be conveyed without sacrificing pictorial values); 1954, murals for Sanborn's in Mexico City; 1956, mural entitled America in the Bank of the Southwest in Houston, Texas; 1957, mural entitled Prometheus, Rio Piedras, Puerto Rico. These enormous compositions, though designed to go

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64 • NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE


RUFINO TAMAYO.

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NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE • 65

CARNIVAL

1941. OIL ON CANVAS, 112.3 X 84.4 CM.

THE PHILLIPS COLLECTION,

WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. PHOTO-

GRAPH FURNISHED BY THE PHILLIPS COLLECTION.

on walls, are generally painted on movable frames. They evidence none of the Renaissance concepts of mural art that characterize the works of the Mexican School. They are to be read indirectly, in a figurative sense, without the assistance of any code for interpreting their Surrealist intent. Unlike Frida Kahlo, for example, Tamayo has no recourse to code. Kahlo's work, like that of Carrington and Varo, is inner-directed: physical pain, madness, or fantasy provide keys for reading on an individual basis. Tamayo goes beyond individual codes. What Cardoza y Aragon calls his "transfigurations" are in reality structures in which sensations are combined with forms capable of conveying them—structures that possess universal validity. Tamayo's work betokens on the one hand a carnal relationship with Mexican history and the Mexican people, as for example in the Glorification of^apata (1932) and the Monument to Juarez (1935), and on the other hand an elevation of daily life to a sacred plane by mythical-poetic Surrealist invention. The Mexican picture in the period under study is completed by the figure of Carlos Merida. Born in Guatemala in 1891, by 1929 he was established in Mexico. His style, marked by symbolic transpositions and decorative syntheses of rhythmic intent, provides a bridge to pre-Hispanic art. His career in Mexico had


• CARLOS MERIDA. STORMY PURPLE: TEXAS SKIES SERIES. 1943. OIL ON CANVAS, 61 X 50.5 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. PURCHASE FUND 1960. PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

its origin in a modest task assigned him in 1934 by the Secretariat of Public Education's School of Dance. He was charged with making a study of some 160 native dances, some of prehistoric origin, and with seeking to clarify their ritual character and place them in their proper setting. This called for small-scale pictorial work, often of a merely descriptive character, such as the series he did in stencil. However, it led later, in 1950, to two different types of artistic activity on Merida's part. First there were easel paintings, generally in casein on parchment, in which flat geometric shapes are delineated in lively, rhythmic relationships with one another: Dances (1949), The Moon and the Deer (1951), The Three Totonac Kings (1951). Then there were the mural decorations he did in mosaic for the Benito Juarez Housing Project in Mexico City in 1952 (The Four Suns, Mexican Legends)] for the hall of the Reinsurance Building in Mexico City; and the mural in Venetian mosaic, dedicated to the mestizo race, which he did for the Municipal Building in Guatemala City in 1956. The whole of Merida's effort has been dedicated to a delicate task of recuperation: there is his research into the artistic ground regained by mestizo and Creole craftsmen during the colonial period, his investigation of Maya codices and featherwork, his laborious use of amatl paper and paper made of maguey fiber. His persistence in "chamber" composition stands in sharp contrast to the enthusiasm of the Muralists for mighty orchestration. When attacked by Siqueiros on this subject he chose to maintain silence. He

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66 • NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE


was well acquainted with Walter Gropius, Moholy Nagy, and Josef Albers, having worked with them in 1941 and 1942 at Black Mountain College in North Carolina. He himself, however, practiced a "mestizo" form of abstraction. While Argentina, Brazil, and Mexico constitute the three main areas of innovation during the period under study, certain individuals already recognized as forerunners of things to come stood out elsewhere: in Cuba there were Wifredo Lam (1902-1982) and Amelia Pelaez (1897-1968) (p. 68); in Chile, Roberto Matta (b. 1912) (pp. 52, 71); in Venezuela, Armando Reveron (18891954) (pp. 72, 73); and, in Uruguay, Joaquin Torres-Garcia (1874-1949). The need to defend Latin America's artistic independence of Europe and the United States has led critics (for good aesthetic reasons) to promote these artists to the point of creating a Latin American art boom—one that preceded the 1970s boom in Latin American literature by a good 10 years. In art as in literature there was excessive concentration on a few key figures. Other artists, who were perhaps less systematic in their production but nonetheless authored works of importance, were ignored. This injustice can be remedied. A reevaluation of the artists involved in the boom should take into account the context in which each worked to such brilliant effect. Their importance as inventors of a Latin American visual repertory—similar to the accomplishment of their European and United States colleagues—will not be diminished thereby. It was they who gave the measure of Latin America's capacity to "create images" and who reestablished in the twentieth century the continuity of a culture that did not come into existence in 1900 but that extends from pre-Hispanic times to our days. There are occasional breaks, splits, or interruptions brought about by outside forces, but the tradition is ever ready to assert its existence and its individuality. Amelia Pelaez established her presence in Cuban painting early in her career, by participating in the 1927 exhibition organized by Revista de Avance. From 1927 to 1934 she lived in Europe, studying with Alexandra Exter, one of the most original and multifaceted figures in Russian Constructivism. In 1938 she accepted the prize of the National Salon in Havana—an award that had already been offered her three years earlier. In 1940 and 1941 she spent a whole year traveling and sketching in California. Between 1946 and 1949 further trips took her to Mexico and Europe, whither she did not return until 1966. Throughout her travels, however, Amelia Pelaez remained spiritually a woman of Havana, seated on a high-backed, cane-bottomed Louisiana plantation chair, in a plant-filled patio or a room into which light filtered through stained-glass windows and half-open Venetian blinds. Lam traveled in 1923 to Spain to study at the Madrid School of Fine Arts. He did not return to the Antilles until 1941, when some 300 intellectuals— among them Breton, Claude Levy-Strauss, and Victor Serge—were transported to Martinique, where they were placed in an internment camp. It was 40 days before Lam was able to obtain his release and go to Havana. Lam was no neophyte in matters of modern art. Picasso took him under his wing in 1938 and sponsored an exhibit of his work in Paris; a year later the two of them had a joint

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NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE • 67


AMELIA PELAEZ. THE HIBISCUS.

1943. OIL ON CANVAS, 115.5 X 89.5 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS,

OAS,

WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. GIFT OF IBM, 1969. PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

exhibit in New York. Lam established a base in Cuba in 1942, but until 1965, when he took up more or less permanent residence in Albisola Mare, Italy, he traveled constantly, mingling the civilized life of Paris and New York with excursions into the realms of myth and magic, such as the six months he spent in Haiti in 1946, soaking up voodoo, and the trip he made to the depths of Mato Grosso 20 years later. The writer Alejo Carpentier has carefully brought out the relationship between Amelia Pelaez's work and certain architectural features of Havana, notably the fretworked wooden partitions and the stained-glass fanlights that separate galleries from patios and soften the brilliant sunlight streaming in from outside. The Colombian painter Beatriz Gonzalez has refined this idea, explaining that the fanlights with their wooden separations and the large color areas they divide are conducive to abstraction in a way that church windows with their narrow leads and fragmentation of color for descriptive purposes are not. Pelaez's sedentary existence in her Franco-Cuban residence in La Vibora brought her into daily contact with color zones and arabesques, and this visual experience is reflected throughout her work and in her rare public utterances, just as are her

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68 • NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE


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NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE • 69 •

• WIFREDOLAM. THE JUNGLE. 1943. GOUACHE ON PAPER MOUNTED

ON CANVAS, 239.4 X 229.9 CM. MUSEUM OF MODERN ART, NEW YORK,

U.S.A. INTER-AMERICAN FUND. PHO-

TOGRAPH FURNISHED BY THE MUSEUM OF MODERN ART.

contacts with the Postcubists and her European apprenticeship. Her intent was to develop an art full of life, endowed with the natural splendors of everyday existence. The critic Adelaide de Juan writes: "Her zealous search for 'national' elements is manifested in the '40s by fixation on certain details: interiors, furniture, stained-glass windows, and screens." Thanks to the still lifes she painted for over 30 years "the soursop, the mammee, the pineapple, the mango, the banana, the sweetsop, and the star apple were incorporated into our painting," the same critic observes. After a period of painting extraordinary fruit-like men and women in 1942 and 1943, in 1943 Wifredo Lam produced his masterpiece, The Jungle. It bears a certain relationship to the explosion of fruits and vegetables in Amelia Pelaez's work, but whereas she used them for decorative purposes in his case the intent is erotic and reflects his well-known fetishistic tendencies. The work of both artists is of a repetitive nature, as befits its origins in myth. Myth, according to the semiologist Jakobson, tends toward the invariable and finds its strength in unilateral visions that permit a high degree of concentration and focalization. Pelaez explores the world about her. Lam, owing to his combination of Chinese and mulatto ancestry, is imbued with an Afro-Oriental culture that is expressed in a religious syncretism that lends an extraordinary supernatural force to all his


work. As the writer Fernando Ortiz says, it was inevitable that he would produce "symbols of erotic effect." The capital importance of The Jungle in contemporary art derives from its accumulation of totems, the intricate interweaving of figures and background, and the interaction between rounded shapes and the flat wall of the tropical selva. Of equal importance is the abyss that this composition creates between European and Latin American Surrealism. Lam makes use of African masks that closely resemble those in The Young Ladies of Avignon, but, whereas for Europeans they served a merely intellectual purpose, for Lam they exemplified a mythical concept possessed of genuine meaning. In contrast with the work of the European Surrealists, there is no open space in the compositions of Pelaez and Lam. Seemingly affected by agoraphobia, Pelaez fills every nook and cranny with lines and colors, and Lam locates the fetishes he painted from 1950 on in a sort of anti-space, an amniotic fluid on which they feed and in which they move. If we compare the work of Amelia Pelaez with that of the Matisse of the odalisques and thereafter, we note that in Matisse the arabesque is a side feature, offsetting the color zones, whereas in Pelaez it devours and asphyxiates everything. The splendor of these two artists' achievement greatly outshines that of their fellows, but the work of Fidelio Ponce de Leon (1895-1949) cannot be neglected in a consideration of the avant-garde. Unlike Amelia Pelaez, he never moved from Havana. His first exhibit there marks the beginning of the history of modern Cuban painting. With his erratic vision and his use of thick impasto, Ponce, like the Colombian Andres de Santa Maria, is a transition figure between the last of the Postimpressionists and the first representatives of new things to come. In both cases, the artist's avant-garde spirit takes the form of complete disdain for reality. Forms disappear as the painting dissolves into an unbridled orgy of color. In their concentration on paint for paint's sake, they were unsystematic, and this doubtless weakens their compositions. However, in their revolt against the tyranny of visible reality, they showed themselves heralds of the future. The sudden appearance of Roberto Matta (b. 1912) had an electrifying effect on Chilean painting. In 1925 the Montparnasse Group had broken with academic tradition, proclaiming its enthusiasm for the new tendencies then being manifested in Paris. In turn it was rejected by what the critic Antonio Romera has called "the Generation of '40." None of the artists in either of these two groups—neither Luis Vargas Rosas (1897-1976), the leading light of the Montparnasse Group, nor Manuel Ortiz de Zarate (1886-1946) or Camilo Mori (1896-1974)—produced more than pale updatings of Cezanne or Lhote, much less interesting than the highly skilled, freely Impressionistic canvases of their predecessors Juan Francisco Gonzalez and Pablo A. Burchard. Matta not only reacted against the Generation of'40 but also managed to resist the patronage offered by Andre Breton, avoiding the repertory of the Parisian Surrealists. In the inner landscapes he presented at the International Surrealist Exhibition in Paris in 1938 space is charged with a dizzily electrifying tension that is one of the most original creations of the century. An "antisystem" of concentric lines, spirals, transparent planes, floating objects, bulbs, and sprouts

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70 • NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE


MATTA

ANTONIO

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NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE • 71

(ROBERTO SEBASTIAN MATTA

ECHAURREN).

HERMALA II. 1948. OIL ON CANVAS,

114,2 X 146 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS,

WASHINGTON, D.C.,

U.S.A.

GIFT OF THE WORKSHOP CENTER

FOR THE ARTS, WASHINGTON, D.C., 1957. HEINZ,

characterizes the works which followed, such as The Disasters of Mysticism and The Heart of Man (1942), a high point being reached with The Vertigo of Eros (1944). After the extraordinary explosions and fragmentations incorporated into the compositions he did during the '50s, he arrived at a more reasonable degree of disorder in the 1956 mural he painted for UNESCO, The Doubts of Three Worlds. The retrospective exhibit of his work held at the Museum of Modern Art in New York in the following year established him as the greatest of Latin American Surrealists, notwithstanding the fact that he had been expelled from the Surrealist movement in 1948. No one else has shown his capacity for exploring the unconscious and the subconscious and for inventing a dream world that has no basis in literature. (The Belgians Magritte and Delvaux are his precise opposite in this respect.) He reached a degree of psychic automatism that permitted him to serve as his own medium. The energy discovered by Matta infuses a large part of the work of his Chilean contemporaries. The tension and dynamism he imparted to space take on dramatic profundity in the compositions Enrique Zanartu executed during his best period (1950-1960); produce magic effects in the work Pablo A. Burchard did at the same time; are handled with everyday confidence in the somewhat disorderly pieces turned out by Carmen Silva; and even leave traces in the 1960

PHOTOGRAPH

BY

WILLIE


• ARMANDO REVERON. COCONUT TREES. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS ARCHIVE, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A.

Reincarnations of Enrique Castro-Cid. Although Matta never abandoned his animated treatment of space—as is evidenced by the extraordinary illustrations he did for Arthur Rimbaud's Une saison en enfer in 1978—the visit he made to Cuba in 1963, the work Grimau, the Powers of Disorder (1964), and the trips he made home to Chile in 1971, 1972, and 1973 during the Allende administration changed the direction of his work. In the enormous panels done as illustrations for the novel El gran burundu-burundd ha muerto by the Colombian writer Jorge Zalamea (1975), for political reasons he was obliged to resort to more concrete and visible forms than in his previous "germinations." In Autoapocalypse, painted for the Fiat offices in Bologna in 1976, and in the "Odyssean" series of 1977, figures loom larger, though they continue to be moved by a convulsive, destructive force into continuous collisions from which their sole protection is their invariable transparency. Although the matter does not relate to the period now under consideration, it is important to emphasize the definite influence Matta had on the U.S. artist Arshile Gorky in 1939, and on the future Abstract Expressionists of the School of New York. America was not forgotten in his works. The Inscapes of the 1940s, inspired by Mexican volcanoes, show that the presence of the Andes that loom over Santiago had accustomed him to landscapes of limitless sweep. Unlike Matta, who always had a surrounding circle, the Venezuelan Armando Reveron (1889-1954) lived a life of solitude. 1912 is famous in the history of Venezuelan art as the year the students at the School of Fine Arts went on

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72 • NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE


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NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE • 73

• ARMANDO REVERON THE CAVE. 1919. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF

THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS ARCHIVE, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A.

strike and the Fine Arts Circle was founded. It was also the year in which Reveron traveled on a government scholarship to Spain, staying in Europe until early 1915. The leading participants in the First National Salon (1913) then dominated the artistic scene in Venezuela. Tito Salas carried on the academic tradition, while Edmundo Monsanto (1890-1947) was trying to make an opening for landscape painting. The members of the Circle wrought little change in the environment, which was enlivened only by the arrival of the Romanian Samys Muntzer (1869-1958) and the Russian Nicholas Ferdinandov (1886-1925) in 1916 and by the return of Boggio in 1919. In the latter year, influenced by Ferdinandov's vivid blues, Reveron painted one of the masterpieces of his first period, The Cave. Muntzer's short, rapid brushstrokes are reflected in another important work, The Baths ofMacuto. It was not until 1921, however, when Reveron made his permanent move to Macuto, near La Guaira on the Venezuelan coast, that he began to paint in the hallucinating manner that is responsible for one of the most independent and original bodies of work to be found in the whole of Latin American art. The critic Alfredo Boulton6 has divided Reveron's development into a series of periods, the "white period" of the years 1925-1932 being characterized by compositions done in a "milky monochrome." The critic assigns Reveron's masterpieces to the "sepia period," initiated in the year 1938, when the artist took to painting in brown tempera on burlap coffee sacks, using


an almost Pointillist technique. The encounter with the light of the seacoast, according to Boulton, produced "so powerful and disconcerting a shock that the painter completely forgot all he had seen and done before and completely transformed his palette." Boulton's insistence on the overwhelming nature of this experience provides the best key for understanding a work of visual genius that has no like. It is not to be explained by Reveron's use of halftones, or touches of white set off by the reddish, greenish, and yellowish pigments he usually used. It is not to be explained by the rapidity with which he captured images, as if on film struck by light. Neither is it to be explained on a personal level, by his fits of depression that bordered on madness and led him to take up a savage existence a la Robinson Crusoe, or by speculations on his difficulty in relating to the real world of sex and the life-size dolls he made for himself. It is impossible to say whether his was a case of intuitive consciousness of color in the atmosphere, of sensitivity to its visual aspects and technical genius in capturing it in paint, or whether it was a case of conscious and premeditated development, over a period of years, of an appreciation of light that could be gained only in the Caribbean area. Reveron's first exhibit, organized by the painter Alejandro Otero and the writer Juan Liscano, took place in Caracas in 1949 at the Free Art Studio. It served to confirm once and for all both his genius and his extravagance. The truth of the matter is that no other painter in Latin America took the course followed by Reveron. Starting with certain factual liberties taken by the Impressionists, he leaped to making notes in paint of the visual disorder that light can effect. In the overpowering brilliance it reaches along the coast, light both dissolves and creates images. The painting of light can be carried no further. Reveron's work in this respect resembles the series of waterlily paintings Monet did at Giverny, as the writer Mariano Picon Salas acutely observes. An artist such as Reveron could have no followers, contrary to the case with the UruguayanJoaquin Torres-Garcia. In 1952, two years before Reveron's death, a new stage in Venezuelan art was ushered in by the return of Alejandro Otero (b. 1921) from Paris and a start on the decoration of the University City, an outstanding feature of which was the acoustical ceiling executed that year by Alexander Calder for the Auditorium. Construction of the University City had begun earlier, in 1944, under the direction of the architect Carlos Raul Villanueva (1900-1975). The "Venezuelan subconscious" that Picon Salas identified in the work of Reveron was outflanked and neutralized by Vasarely and Pevsner. The founding of the Theseus Association in 1927 marked Uruguay's entrance onto the stage of modern art. Stimulated by the critic Eduardo Dieste, a group of properly innovative painters held at the headquarters of the Friends of Art in Buenos Aires an exhibit that was hailed for its avant-garde character and the break it made with the past. The exhibitors included Carmelo de Arzadun (1888-1968), a disciple of Anglada Camarasa, and Jose Cuneo (1887-1977), a painter of outstanding merit. That same year Cuneo returned to Europe. (His previous visits included one in 1911 when he studied in Paris with Anglada

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74 • NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE


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NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE • 75 •

• JOAQUIN TORRES-GARCIA COSMIC MONUMENT. 1938.

WORK

BY THE ARTIST IN ROD6 PARK,

MONTEVIDEO, URUGUAY. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS ARCHIVE, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A.

Camarasa.) He then became acquainted with the work of Chaim Soutine, which was to have a striking influence on his later compositions, particularly the ones that make up the astonishing "moon" series. Up to that time he had used a technique involving relatively orderly color planes, in a manner suggesting Gauguin. This he abandoned for a much more expressive impasto and a deliberate use of diagonals and curves that impart dramatic movement to the composition. In this style he painted the thatch-roofed earthen houses of the Uruguayan peasant, with great moons shining through small breaks in stormy skies, producing effects of mysterious beauty that at times recall the violent romanticism of the American Albert Pinkham Ryder. The critic Jose Pedro Argul writes: "He deals openly with the problem of the infinite in landscapes of planetary sweep; the endless abyss of sky conveys the anguish of the beyond. His poetic moons were inspired by the poetry of Julio Herrera y Reissig, some of whose verses served as the preface to Cuneo's first exhibit of this series."7 Garmelo de Arzadiin won the gold medal at the National Salon in 1941; Cuneo in 1942; and Torres-Garcia in 1944, the year he published his masterwork Universalismo constructivo (Universal Constructivism). The fact that styles as diverse as those of Cuneo and Torres-Garcia could exist side by side suggests the lively character of the Uruguayan art scene at that time. The period was one of economic prosperity and political stability. The former derived from the climate of forced saving and the excellent market for Latin American products during World War II. The latter was due to the dominance in politics of the faction of the Colorado Party led by Luis Batlle


JOAQUIN

CONSTRUCT/VIST

TORRES-GARCIA. COMPOSITION.

1943. OIL ON CANVAS, 68.6 X 76.8 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS,

OAS,

WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. GIFT OF NELSON ROCKEFELLER, 1963. PHOTOGRAPH BY WILLIE HEINZ (ABOVE). COMPOSITION. 1931. OIL ON CANVAS, 114,6 X 89.5 CM. HIRSHHORN MUSEUM AND SCULPTURE GARDEN, SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, WASHINGTON, D.C. GIFT OF JOSEPH H. HIRSHHORN, 1972. PHOTOGRAPH BY LEE STALSWORTH (BELOW).

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76 • NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE


NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE • 77

Berres, who was president from 1947 to 1951, and of the party in power from 1954 to 1958. It carried out a socialist policy acceptable to the nationalistic middle class.

return to Uruguay in 1934 and his death in 1949. He was the son of an Uruguayan mother and a Catalan father, and when they moved back to Barcelona he accompanied them. He was then 17. His training in art was entirely European, and his early work as a muralist shows a strong link with Catalan art nouveau. Good examples are the 1913 wall painting he did in Barcelona for the Central Library and the Hall of St. George in the Chamber of Deputies building. The works he exhibited at the Dalmau Galleries in the same city in 1917 showed a capacity for synthesis and orderly structure that was thenceforth to be his basic characteristic. From 1919 to 1928 Torres-Garcia led a wandering life, traveling from Barcelona to Paris, then to New York, and after that back to Italy and France. All the while he was engaged in threefold activities: easel painting, the manufacture of painted wooden toys, and illustration of design books. In 1928, having been rejected at the Paris Autumn Salon, he transferred his allegiance to the Salon of Independent Artists. A year later he took a stand with the Neoplasticists in strong opposition to the vague lyricism and lack of definition characterizing the work of the Surrealists. In 1930 he and the critic Michel Seuphor founded the group known as "Cercle et Carre" (Circle and Square), together with the review of the same name. A year afterward the group dissolved and its members joined the ranks of "Abstraction-Creation." Torres-Garcia maintained a place apart, and in 1931-1932 in the course of 12 months he held four exhibits in which the concept of Universal Constructivism was clearly present: if nature submits to a certain order, it is possible to visualize the unifying

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In a climate favorable to cultural debate, the figure of Joaquin TorresGarcia (1874-1949) assumed extraordinary importance in the years between his

laws that rule the cosmos. Torres-Garcia carried this half-philosophic, half-

aesthetic idea to Madrid, where he founded the Constructivist Art Group. In

CREATIVE

TORRES-GARCIA WAS BOTH A ARTIST

1934 he returned to Montevideo for good, and at the age of 60, after an absence

THEORIST,

IN DISSEMINATING HIS

AND

AN

ART

of 43 years, he undertook a series of activities that were to make of him unques-

IDEAS HE RELIED NOT ONLY ON HIS

tionably the outstanding figure in Uruguayan art and the leading mentor of the

WORKSHOP BUT UPON PUBLICA-

Latin American art scene. He expounded his theories in more than 600 lectures.

TIONS

He published a number of books: Estructura (Structure, 1935), La tradicion del

REMOVEDOR.

hombre abstracto (The Tradition of Abstract Man, 1938), and, most notably, Universalismo constructive) (Universal Constructivism), which was issued in Buenos Aires in 1944. He did murals, executing the Cosmic Monument for Rodo Park in Montevideo in 1938, and he painted personally seven of the 34 mural panels in the Colonia Saint Bois8, the remainder being the product of his studio. His teaching was imparted at the Workshop he founded in 1944 and in the pages of the review Removedor, which served as a platform for his ideas. The Workshop acquired a mystique without parallel in other countries. TorresGarcia considered himself a realist, saved from the banalities of naturalism by his passion for "geometry, order, synthesis, construction, and rhythm." Statements

SUCH

AS

THE

REVIEW


PEDRO

FIGARI.

THE MARKET

PLACE. CA. 1935. OIL ON CANVAS. 38 X 60.3 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS,

WASHINGTON, D.C.,

U.S.A.

GIFT OF THE BANK OF THE REPUBLIC OF URUGUAY, 1950. PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

made later by disciples such as Gonzalo Fonseca and Julio U. Alpuy agree that his teaching was methodical and drew from life and reality its strongly Utopian flavor. According to the Uruguayan critic Juan Flo, the Utopia for which TorresGarcia sought was the creation from scratch of an all-but-anonymous type of art, suggestive of the cosmic rites of civilizations such as those of the pre-Columbian Indians. Pointing out the visible ideograms that appear in the artist's work, the critic Angel Kalenberg declares that Torres-Garcia was a pioneer in the area of plastic structural grammar and the real inventor of "qualitative linguistic" concepts. Only the evangelic fervor of his teaching can explain the closeness with which the score of talented and sensitive artists enrolled in the Workshop mimicked his modes of expression. His influence can be felt on artists as far removed from Uruguay as the Americans Gottlieb and Nevelson (as the U.S. critic Jacqueline Barnitz has noted) and the Guatemalan Roberto Ossaye. The imitative character of the work produced by even the most important members of the Workshop is not here pointed out as a defect. Despite the sensitivity displayed by Torres-Garcia in drawing his compartments and filling them with signs, the system was unduly rigid and the Workshop introduced the required amount of variety. Augusto and Horacio Torres, Alceu and Edgardo Ribeiro, Gonzalo Fonseca, Francisco Matto Vilaro, Jonio Montiel, Anhelo Hernandez, Manuel Pailos, Jose Gurvich, Julio U. Alpuy, Jorge Visca, and others carried on the tradition of the Workshop after the master's death. The graphic signs appearing in works which Jose Gamarra (b. 1934) did in the 1960s reflect the influence of Torres-Garcia's mysterious petroglyphs, though the younger artist had never come into contact with the elder.

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78 • NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE


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NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE • 79

PEDRO FIGARI. COUNTRY IDYLL.

CA. 1935. OIL ON CARDBOARD, 35 X 50.2 CM. COLLECTION OF THE

INTER-AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT BANK, WASHINGTON, D.C.,

U.S.A.

PHOTOGRAPH BY WILLIE HEINZ.

The intentionally avant-garde stand which Torres-Garcia took implied an abrupt break with "normality." In his Seventh Lesson (1947) the artist exclaimed: "Normality! How horrible it seems to a person engaged in abstraction, who admits only flat surfaces, distorted to fit the demands of the construction he has in mind, who acknowledges no restrictions of any kind upon his freedom to create." Pedro Figari (1861-1938) was not concerned with the outward appearances of reality, but with the truth that underlies it. Jules Supervielle has termed his works "a poet's recollections of childhood." The characteristics that give them their feeling of playfulness and spontaneity—color without shadow, the rococo lines of his arabesques, the apparent lack of method in his distortions—are the product of long speculation on aesthetics. Figari's 1912 book^4r^ estetica e ideal (Art, Aesthetics, and the Ideal) shows him to be a Positivist and Spencerian, with a personal enjoyment of a certain type of Postimpressionism exemplified in the works of Bonnard, Vuillard, and Roussel, which Figari saw for the first time in Milo Beretta's collection in Montevideo. Figari's adherence to Positivism was in line with the general tendencies of Latin American thought in the nineteenth century, when the attempt was made to find a biological explanation for spiritual forces, differing from the explanations offered by Idealism. Putting into practice his confident belief in art as a universal form of action, he did 3000 paintings on cardboard in the 17 years following his first exhibit in Buenos Aires in 1921. He took an equally optimistic view of history and tradition, as is evidenced by his choice of themes—scenes of everyday life during the colonial period, the life of the Blacks in the city and of the gauchos in the countryside. While the repertory


would seem to fall into the area of folklore, nothing could be farther from its tranquil, conservative spirit than Figari's dynamic, constantly inventive work. He had a unique manner of painting Negro themes. As Angel Rama writes, it derives from his interest in a model of behavior whose naturalness, lack of restraint, and free enjoyment of folkways showed the positive side of the human conduct of "the illiterate, who do not lose sight of the true path and follow their instincts closely, rubbing elbows with reality." The energy engendered by community existence, which provides the sole environment in which man can live life to the full, is not diluted by Figari's warm, rich impastos. The joy and sensuality generated by his use of color serve but to reaffirm it. Self-portrait with Wife, which Figari painted in 1890 when his career as a magistrate was fully on the ascendant, gives clear indication that his style is not the product of visual naivete, as is the case with so-called primitive painters, but corresponds to a preconceived intent to paint with freedom, but still within certain bounds. As with all great artists, this implies that he had worked out a certain method for himself. It included the use of colors and tonalities similar to those of Pierre Bonnard, and a horizontal concept of space. City and folk dances, country scenes, groups of people, even an attempt at history painting such as the undated Assassination ofQuiroga—all, without exception, are horizontal in structure and either flat in effect or convey very little sense of depth. Figari's chronicle of Montevideo is presented in a horizontal sequence, like the frames of a motion picture, and should be seen in order to appreciate its true meaning. The plastic freedom of Figari's work, like that of the Venezuelan Reveron, represents an individual act of artistic renovation. Figari goes much farther than Bonnard, for while the Frenchman provided in fragmented color notations a freely interpreted chronicle of bourgeois society at the beginning of the century, Figari invents his chronicle, free of all dependence on a model. Description becomes a gratuitous act; Figari engages in painting for its own sake. This was an achievement that most artists of Latin America were not to realize for another half century.

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80 • NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE


NEW BLOOD FROM THE AVANT-GARDE • 81

Notes The Modernists formed a brilliant elite. The sculptor Victor Brecheret (1894-1955) was the first in Latin America to break away from the idea that a monument necessarily implies figurative representation. Anita Malfatti (1896-1964) was the most notable of the painters to take part in Modern Art Week; as an Expressionist she was often the equal of the Europeans. There was Tarsila do Amaral. There were architects: Gregori Warchavchik (1896-1973), the first in Brazil to design a building in the International Style (1927); Lucio Costa (b. 1902); and Oscar Niemeyer (b. 1907). Painters like Waldemar da Costa (b. 1904), Cicero Bias (b. 1908), and Yolanda Mohaly (bom in Hungary, 19091979) opened the way for abstraction. Regina Graz was a pioneer in the field of decorative arts. Roberto Burle-Marx (b. 1909) is the greatest landscape architect in Latin America. Menotti del Picchia (b. 1892), Ismael Nery (1900-1933), and Antonio Goncalves Gomide (1895-1967) engaged in various types of Cubism. Antonio Bandeira (1922-1967) made striking use of symbols. Oswaldo Goeldi (1895-1961) and Livio Abramo (b. 1903), whose woodcuts and lithographs set off a great burst of activity in the field of graphics, were almost alone in not seeking to establish new rules for art. 2 Damian Bayon, Adventura pldstica en Hispanoamerica (Mexico City: Fondo de Cultura Economica, 1974). 3 Benjamin Peret, Air mexicain (Paris: Editions Arcanes, 1952). 4 Antonin Artaud, Au pays des tamhumams (Paris: Fontaine, 1945). A poet, essayist, stage director, and actor, Artaud (1886-1948) traveled to Mexico in 1936 and spent several months living among the Tarahumara Indians in the Sierra Madre. He learned from them the rituals of peyote, by which he was much impressed. 5 Octavio Paz, Tamayo (Mexico City: UNAM, 1958). 6 Alfredo Boulton, La obra de Armando Reveron (Caracas, 1966). ' Jose Pedro Argul, Proceso de las artes plastic as del Uruguay (Montevideo: Barreiro y Ramos, 1975). 8 In 1974 the frescoes were removed from the walls at Saint Bois, restored, and mounted on movable frames. In 1978, while on exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art in Rio de Janeiro, they were destroyed by fire.

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1


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IV

OF CHANGE

THE EARLY 1950s SAW A BLOSSOMING OF ARTISTS THAT COULD NOT HAVE been imagined in the previous period. Till then, the elements of modern plastic language had been provided by a mere handful, exceptional in their intuition, working in isolation. Suddenly the stage that had been held by a few solo performers was crowded with a vast chorus. Whereas Reveron had been an outsider in Venezuela, and Torres-Garcia had single-handedly led the way to modernism in Uruguay, the scene was now occupied by some 400 artists of relatively equivalent quality. Economic and political factors as well as ones of a cultural nature contributed to this explosion of activity. A number of inter-American exhibitions stimulated contact among artists from different countries and an appreciation of one another's work. The inauguration of the Sao Paulo Biennials in 1951 was the capstone of a series of events that had been initiated with the opening in 1947 of the Assis Chateaubriand Art Museum in Sao Paulo. This was followed in 1948 by the establishment of the Modern Art Museum of that same city and in 1949 by the founding of the Modern Art Museum of Rio de Janeiro. The Biennial constituted the first significant forum at which the work of Latin American artists could be contrasted and compared on an international scale. The energy with which Brazilian artists shook off the outmoded avant-garde notions of the 1920s, evolving toward tachiste Abstract Expressionism or Neoconcretism furthered, moreover, the modernizing trend set in motion by the Madi group in Argentina in the 1940s. Little by little artists of various countries took up the challenge of modernism. The manifesto of "The Dissidents," a Venezuelan group headed by Alejandro Otero, dates from 1950. A year later the Venezuelan architect Carlos Raul Villanueva called upon a number of artists to decorate the new University City of Caracas. This was the first monumental ensemble of art and architecture conceived in Latin America. (Brasilia, planned by the architects Lucio Costa and Oscar Niemeyer, was proclaimed capital of Brazil in 1960 by President Kubitschek.) Villanueva enlisted the services of artists of international renown,

•

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DECADES

ALEJANDRO OBREGON. CATTLE

DROWNING IN THE MAGDALENA

RIVER, 1955. OIL ON CANVAS, 158,6 X 126.1 CM. MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS,

HOUSTON, TEXAS, U.S.A. PHOTOGRAPH FURNISHED BY THE MUSEUM OF FINE ARTS.


such as Calder (who designed the ceiling of the main auditorium, executed in 1952), Arp, Laurens, Pevsner, Leger, and Vasarely. They set a tone that was immediately recognized by the local artists who collaborated in the project: Manaure, Vigas, Barrios, Oramas, Lobo, Gonzalez Bogen, Narvaez, Otero, Valera, Soto (p. 108), Poleo, Arroyo, Carreno, and Salazar. The "Group of Eleven" appeared in Havana in 1953. The New Art Movement of Paraguay was launched in 1954. The Praxis group was formed in Nicaragua in 1963. The great centers—Buenos Aires, Rio, and Sao Paulo in the south, and Mexico City in the north—were no longer totally dominant in art novelties. The United States recognized the significance of the activity to the south. At the 1956 Caribbean Exhibition in Houston, a Colombian, Alejandro Obregon (pp. 82, 127), won first prize with his Cattle Drowning in the Magdalena River. The Pittsburgh International of 1958 was the first to invite a substantial number of Latin Americans to participate. On that occasion awards went to the Brazilians Mabe (p.95), Piza, Grassmann, Di Prete, Lemos, and Maria Bonomi; to the Mexican Jose Luis Cuevas; to the Nicaraguan Armando Morales (p. 117); and to the Guatemalan Rodolfo Abularach (p. 125). The 1959 "South American Art of Today" show held in Dallas, Texas, constituted something like a statement of principles by contemporary Latin American painters. Most of the participants in these group shows were born between 1920 and 1925. In contrast with the preceding generation, they were decidedly open and international in outlook. They were no longer content with the the three traditional forms of expression: portraits, still lifes, and (largely urban) landscapes, discreetly updated with a few modern touches. Painting and sculpture advanced from the level of adaptation to that of invention. In order to understand this leap forward one must take into account not merely the work of the so-called pioneers but also that of a number of other artists who, though less well known, nonetheless contributed to the flowering that took place in the 1950s.1 Thanks in part to them, artists born between 1920 and 1930 were able to defy the salons and reject the conservative criteria of the bourgeoisie. No longer content with passive storytelling, they gave standing to more indirect and symbolic modes of expression, advancing to the limits of art without specific meaning. The acceptance by timid and uninformed provincials of looser, more complex standards for judging art represented the real beginning of modernism in Latin America. The outward expansion lasted 10 years and took a parabolic course. The culmination was reached in 1966 with the presentation in New Haven, Connecticut, of the show "Latin American Art since Independence." Organized by the critic Stan ton L. Catlin, it was without doubt the most significant overview of Latin American art held to that date. Previously the first Kaiser Biennial had taken place in Cordoba, Argentina, in 1962, and in 1965 the critic Thomas Messer had organized another roundup, which he entitled "The Emergent Decade," aimed at bringing together the most brilliant leaders of the moment. In that same year Jean-Clarence Lambert, the director of Opus International, pre-

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84 • DECADES OF CHANGE


sented the first large-scale collective exhibit to be seen in Europe, "Latin American Art in Paris." Including abstractions, collages, and the many facets of kinetic art, it reflected the scene fairly correctly. Lam, Matta, Tamayo, and Alicia Penalba presided over a heterogeneous sampling which nonetheless succeeded in covering the developments of the '50s. In 1963 the Institute of Hispanic Culture presented in Madrid an exhibition entitled "Art of Spain and Latin America," with a full cast of artists. The only absentees were Szyszlo (p. 94) and Jose Luis Cuevas, who boycotted the exhibition in protest against the Franco dictatorship. A large number of the artists represented had been launched on the international stage during the 1950s by the Visual Arts Division of the General Secretariat of the Organization of American States (formerly known as the Pan American Union), headed by the critic Jose Gomez Sicre. In 1966, with his advice, a Latin American show drawn from private collections was organized for presentation at the University of Puerto Rico. It ran the full continental gamut, including Fernandez Muro, Grilo (p. 89), and Polesello (p. 97) from Argentina; Pacheco (p. 92) from Bolivia; Grassmann, Mabe, and Piza from Brazil; Botero (pp.115, 126) and Manzur from Colombia; Lam, Bermudez, Pelaez, and Portocarrero from Cuba; Poveda from Costa Rica; Matta from Chile; Tabara (p. 93) from Ecuador; Abularach from Guatemala; Cuevas from Mexico; Morales and Arostegui from Nicaragua; and Julio Rosado del Valle from Puerto Rico. The Latin American Exhibition of Drawing and Printmaking organized in 1967 by the Cultural Division of the Central University of Venezuela may be considered the last in a continuous round of group shows. On that occasion one could note a change in direction toward techniques more in accordance with concerns that had manifested themselves during the '60s: a preoccupation with quality and meaning; a well-conceived pride in belonging to communities distinct from those of Europe and the United States; and rejection of imitation of the models the latter provided. The boom that took place from approximately 1950 to 1967 resulted not only from a new concept of the artistic phenomenon but also from political and economic changes that shook Latin America out of its age-old languor. The change in concept was naturally related to events in Europe and the United States, where the three trends of the moment were Abstract Expressionism, to which Informalism may be linked; Neogeometry and kinetic art; and figurative painting of a symbolic character. The Latin American Abstract Expressionists were rather timid in taking up the challenge of U.S. Action Painting, which, as exemplified in the major works of Kline, Pollock, and Rothko, typified not merely an aesthetic principle but also a moral order. An artist such as the Peruvian Ricardo Grau had less difficulty in adjusting to the experience of the European tachistes, rooted primarily in an aesthetic hedonism that is clearly evident in the work of Mathieu. Informalism drew directly upon Spanish groups in Barcelona and Madrid, headed by Tapies and Millares. Certain situations resulted from circumstance: the convergence in Informalism that occurred in

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DECADES OF CHANGE • 85 •


Caracas at the beginning of the '60s could never have come about without the presence of the anthropologist Jose Maria Cruxent, nor could the Neoconcretist explosion have taken place in Brazil without the example of Max Bill's work. A single Latin American artist, the Argentine Kenneth Kemble (b. 1923) produced works of large dimensions, realizing that a radical change of scale was of fundamental importance for the new effort. It was only with the appearance of Noe, Maccio, De la Vega (p. 123), and Deira (p. 122) that one again encounters—once more in Argentina—compositions of large format, the aggressiveness of which derives more from the European group known as COBRA (i.e., Copenhagen.5russels-^4msterdam) than from the New York School. Neogeometry and kinetic art likewise have obvious roots in Europe. The Argentine Le Pare (p. 101) and the Venezuelan Soto worked there side by side with local artists. In 1960 Julio Le Pare (b. 1928), Horacio Garcia Rossi (Argentine, b. 1929), and Francisco Sobrino (Argentine, b. 1932), joined the "Visual Art Research" group of F. Morellet, Joel Stein, and Yvaral. Their ranks were soon enlarged by other Argentines: Hugo Demarco (b. 1932), Marta Boto (b. 1925), Gregorio Vardanega (b. 1923), and Luis Tomasello (b. 1915). The Venezuelan Jesus Soto (b. 1923) worked at the level of Vasarely; later Carlos Cruz-Diez (Venezuelan, b. 1923) (p. 109) was active in the same area of optical research as Agam. None of this effort represented a significant change in scale, or adoption of the monumental proportions favored by the U.S. Minimalists. U.S. sculptural tendencies were taken up and refined by two Colombians, Edgar Negret (b. 1920) and Eduardo Ramirez Villamizar (b. 1923) (p. 113). It was a Mexican, Mathias Goeritz (born in Germany in 1915), who promoted Minimalist ideas in the mid '60s. The connection with Europe remained lively and unbroken, but the teacher-pupil relationship of previous generations was no longer maintained. The new artists picked and chose from what Europe had to offer, with a view to different combinations. Some were purely formal, as in the case of the Neogeometrists and the kinetic artists. In the case of figurative artists, however, there was a substantial alteration of content. It was only natural that they should engage in revision of the European and U.S. repertory, with a view to recycling it in local terms. In the '50s and '60s, figurative painting was not just one more possibility open to the artist. There had been a profound renewal in that mode of expression. Instead of "applying makeup to reality," as painters, sculptors, and graphic artists had done previously, they now engaged in development of a broadly symbolic language and the creation of richly complex visual and interpretive codes. It is important to recognize another important change that had come about. During these new decades there was no longer talk of nationalism: "indigenist" and "nativist" art was no longer in fashion. "Dependency" was the great subject of debate. The topic was first seriously addressed by sociologists and economists, and was then taken up by art critics, who by that time were no longer

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• 86 • DECADES OF CHANGE


moonlighting poets and prose-writers, but full-time professionals. The subject of dependency was closely linked with that of "identity." The search for the latter reached dramatic proportions following the Bandung Conference of 1955, at which the concept of the Third World was formulated. It began to be seen that the existence of a Latin American art with characteristics of its own was a real possibility, rather than empty rhetoric. Connections began to be established between existing works with a view to providing evidence that would substantiate this theory. Third World solidarity and the drive for cultural autonomy were favored by political events of the time. Four Latin American dictators fell in five years—the Argentine Peron in 1955, the Colombian Rojas Pinilla in 1957, the Venezuelan Perez Jimenez in 1958, and the Cuban Batista in 1959. The political mobility of the period stimulated an important social change, astutely noted by the French historian Pierre Riado: the rise of the middle classes to political power. In the early years of the century only in Argentina and Uruguay had politics been the province of the bourgeoisie. In the continual military takeovers that characterized the period now under study, officers of middle-class origin tended to look out for the interests of the group from which they came, breaking the grip traditionally held by the oligarchies. In cases of somewhat different nature, such as the Peruvian revolution led by General Velasco Alvarado or the action taken by General Torres in Bolivia—not to speak of the militia takeovers resulting from armed revolution in Cuba and Nicaragua—the oligarchies were pushed aside and concentrations of political and economic power were dissolved. The middle classes supported the military to the extent that it favored their interests and repressed with iron hand all protest by the dispossessed majority, its university-student spokesmen, and the urban guerrillas that sprang up following the radicalization of Cuba. Characteristics of the middle classes that came to power varied from country to country, but one was shared by all: fear of social revolution. The military coups that took place from 1959 on met with acceptance in that they constituted a shield against that fear. During the 1950s then, artists found their clientele in a newly expanded middle class, which battened on the ruin of the oligarchies. In the 1960s they confronted the dilemma of choosing between freedom and fear, between democracy and dictatorship.

Abstract Expressionism

In the mid '50s abstract tendencies in Latin America reflected less international fashion than the "persistent impulse" to engage in subjective expression of which the U.S. critic Dore Ashton wrote. Whereas in the United States Action Painting and the like were supported by powerful galleries and critics who kept careful watch over their artists' development, in Latin America abstraction tended to reflect a desire on the part of the artist to give free rein to emotions and sensations. Vacant spaces, color patches, and random brushstrokes were justified as

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DECADES OF CHANGE • 87 •


expressions of spiritual force. There is therefore a persistent poetic note in Latin American abstraction; it characterizes both individuals and groups. The Argentine circle constituted in 1960 by Sarah Grilo (b. 1920), Miguel Ocampo (b. 1922), Jose Antonio Fernandez Muro (born in Spain in 1920, active in Argentina from 1938 on), Clorindo Testa (b. 1923), and Kazuya Sakai (b. 1927) was pushed by enthusiastic reviews from the critic Jorge Romero Brest and supported by the Museum of Fine Arts. The artists had their individual characteristics: Grilo had her letters and graphic signs; Testa, his spotted spaces; Fernandez Muro engaged in Informalist heraldry; Sakai manifested a geometric leaning later to be developed along frankly decorative lines. Nevertheless, all exhibited the same cultural sensitivity and a similar desire to enrich the painted surface by freeing it from "story-telling." However great the resemblance of Ocampo's large, calm forms to hills or bodies at rest, one can discern in his work, even as in that of his companions, a determination to replace literal meaning by gentle lyricism. Later arrivals on the Argentine scene showed more of a disposition to assert their individual personalities—Mario Pucciarelli (b. 1928), Victor Chab (b. 1930) during his dark period, Alberto Greco (1931-65), and Josefina Miguens (b. 1932). The "impulse" was no longer expressed in lyric terms but manifested itself in forms that were at one and the same time ingenious and romantic. At about the same time Mexico was producing Abstract Expressionists of strong but varying personality. Lilia Carrillo (b. 1930) took a poetic and confident approach to the painted surface; the work of Manuel Felguerez (b. 1928) (p. 90), first characterized by graphic signs and flecks of great sensitivity, later evolved toward hard-edge abstraction; Vicente Rojo (born in Spain in 1932, came to Mexico in 1949) made use of color-signs and color-language to produce the most persuasive and coherent body of nonfigurative works in the country. The Russian Vlady (born in 1920, came to Mexico in 1942), Gilberto Aceves Navarro (b. 1931), Edmundo Aquino (b. 1939), Rodolfo Nieto (b. 1937), and Arnaldo Coen (b. 1940) gave the painted surface a value of its own. Pedro Coronel (b. 1923) was a pioneer in this area; his flat arabesques and daring textures linger unforgettably in the memory. Roberto Donis (b. 1934), whose spirit is akin to that of the U.S. painter Rothko, engaged in elliptical painting involving two color planes. Central America provided good examples of Abstract Expressionism, the Panamanian Alfredo Sinclair (b. 1915) being a pioneer in the line. Although his fellow countrymen Guillermo Trujillo (b. 1927), Manuel Chong Neto (b. 1927), and Antonio Alvarado (b. 1938) never turned completely from figurative painting, they made free use of vaguely flecked backgrounds and loose brushstrokes, purposely designed to blur the clarity of the image. Such indulgence in indefinite elements was not to be found in Guatemala, however. The abstract paintings done in the early '60s by Luis Diaz (b. 1939), Efrain Recinos (b. 1932), and Roberto Cabrera (b. 1939), go back to ancient native sources, as do the works of the Nicaraguan Cesar Izquierdo (b. 1937). They are characterized by violence not exempt of romanticism and textures approach-

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88 • DECADES OF CHANGE


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DECADES OF CHANGE • 89 •

SARAH GRILO. MOTIF IN BLUES

NO. 5. 1955. OIL ON CANVAS, 65,7

X 81.5 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, WASHINGTON, D.C.,

OAS,

U.S.A. PUR-

CHASE FUND, 1957. PHOTOGRAPH BY WILLIE HEINZ.

ing relief. The work of Rodolfo Mishaan (b. 1924), on the other hand, shows clearly defined color planes and a magical shading altogether counter to the rigidities of Geometric Abstraction. In Nicaragua, during the '60s Armando Morales (b. 1927) concentrated on slight shifts of irregular forms, making austere use of color. The powerful undercurrent of abstraction later surfaced in the work of Rolando Castellon (b. 1937), who sought gropingly for an interweaving of forms. The creation, reconstruction, and interweaving of forms characterize painting in the Andean region, which also shows a strong pre-Hispanic influence. This we observe in the sectioned structures of Maria Luisa Pacheco (19191982), with their unexpected angles, and in the intricate compositions of Alfredo La Placa (b. 1929) and Alfredo Da Silva (b. 1936). In the work of their fellow Bolivians Maria Esther Ballivian (b. 1927) and Oscar Pantoja (b. 1925), on the other hand, we find a more flowing use of color and occasional ventures into chromatic improvisation. Pantoja's compositions tend to be centripetal, Ballivian's centrifugal. It was the Ecuadorians who most persistently sought a return to pre-Hispanic origins, via abstraction. Faced by the aesthetic challenge of Oswaldo Guayasamin (b. 1919), Anibal Villacis (b. 1927), Enrique Tabara (b. 1930), Oswaldo Viteri (b. 1931), Theo Constante (b. 1934), and Juan Gamilo Egas


MANUEL FELGUEREZ. PAINTING

NO. 19. OIL ON CANVAS, 70 X 80 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, WASHINGTON, D.C.,

OAS,

U.S.A. PUR-

CHASE FUND, 1960. PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

(b. 1935) produced in the late '50s "wall-art," complementing the wall textures of the Spanish Informalists—with whom Tabara had studied—by graphic signs, collages, arabesques, and objects of Ecuadorian folk art of obvious or implicit cultural significance. By incorporating the humble creations of present-day Indians into surfaces worked in relief, they brought about one of the great moments in Ecuadorian art. The totem-like figures that impart an electric spark to the compositions of Fernando de Szyszlo (b. 1925) are of his own invention, but nonetheless evoke in elegiac tones the fate of the vanquished pre-Columbian Indians. Szyszlo had a decisive influence on the art of his native Peru in the 1960s as can be noted in the work of Venancio Shinki (b. 1932), Enrique Galdos Rivas (b. 1933), and Arturo Kubotta (b. 1932). He also influenced the Puerto Rican Luis Hernandez Cruz (b. 1936). Abstract Expressionism seemed well suited to artists of the Andean area. Chromatic atmosphere, which reached a maximum of expressiveness in the work of Rufino Tamayo and had taken its most dramatic form in the compositions of Szyszlo, was used with dazzlingly magic effect. Sensual in character, it does not lose materiality even when cosmic ideas are suggested. It bears no relation to the electric charge of the Chilean Malta's work. It is a special atmosphere, archaic and rooted in reality. Its effects were felt in Cuba, where it enriched the work of Raul Milian (b. 1914), Rafael Soriano (b. 1920), and later Raul Martinez (b. 1927) and Fayadjamis (b. 1930), when they appeared on the Cuban art scene

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90 • DECADES OF CHANGE


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DECADES OF CHANGE • 91 •

• TOMIE OHTAKE. UNTITLED, 1968.

OIL ON CANVAS. 138,5 X 113 CM.

COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. GIFT OF THE ART-

IST, 1988. PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

in 1960. In Colombia, if it had a restraining effect on the lively, romantic imagination of Alejandro Obregon (1920-1992), it benefited Nirma Zarate (b. 1936) and Maria Teresa Negreiros (born in Brazil in 1930, active in Colombia from 1964 on). Whereas in the regions of strong pre-Hispanic culture painting aimed at creation ofe m o t i o n t h r o u g h evocation ofthe p a s t , in Brazilthe appeal was m o r e to the senses. A number of artists of Japanese origin—Tomie Ohtake (b. 1913, arrived in Brazil in 1936) (p. 91), Tikashi Fukushima (b. 1920, moved to Brazil in 1940), Manabu Mabe (b. 1924, came to Brazil in 1934), Kazuo Wakabayashi (b. 1931, came to Brazil in 1961)—were much in evidence at the Sixth Sao Paulo Biennial (1961). Rejecting Concretism, they made forceful use of color, freely applied in patches recalling Japanese calligraphy, of textured surfaces, or of strange, purposely irrational planes. The pioneer work of Ibere Camargo (b. 1914), with its violent explosions of color, comes close to that of the European COBRA movement, as does that of Flavio Shiro (b. 1928). The delicate but firm transgressions against geometric precept into which Mira Schendel (b. 1919) entered, along with the cosmic landscapes of Danilo di Prete (born in Italy in 1911, moved to Brazil in 1946), strengthened an antiabstract tendency that


MARIA LUISA PACHECO.

COM-

POSITION. 1960. OIL ON CANVAS, 122 X 152 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS,

WASHINGTON, D.C.,

PURCHASE FUND,

1960.

U.S.A. PHOTO-

GRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

received valuable support from the critic Mario Pedrosa. The sculptures of Nicolau Vlavianos (born in Greece in 1929, moved to Brazil in 1960) and Cacipore Torres (b. 1932) increased confidence in material, gesture, and emotion. Abstraction in Brazil was largely a matter of poetic improvisation. In the case of the Mexican Luis Lopez Loza (b. 1939), the Bolivian Hugo Rojas Lara (b. 1936), and the compositions which the Venezuelan Elsa Gramcko (b. 1925) painted toward the end of the 1950s, freedom was manifested in a loose relationship among fragments. Gramcko was later to lay her stress upon textures. Abstraction in Venezuela led to Informalism, with the constitution in Caracas in 1960 of the strongest group to represent that trend in all of Latin America. Maruja Rolando (1923-1970), Oswaldo Vigas (b. 1926), Angel Hurtado (b. 1927) (p. 96), Angel Luque (b. 1927), Teresa Casanova (b. 1928), and Manuel Espinoza (b. 1937), while sticking to their individual aims, engaged in common experimentation with collage, employing a variety of materials. It was in this period, for example, that Alejandro Otero (b. 1921) did his series of old letters on wood. Other facets of this activity are represented by the gesturalism of Francisco Hung (b. 1937), which later underwent spectacular development, the ever-anarchic brushwork of Luisa Richter (b. 1928), and the fierce counterimages of Regulo Perez (b. 1929). The delicate graphics of Marieta Bermann (b. 1917) and the wire reticulations of "Gego" (Gertrude Goldschmidt,

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92 • DECADES OF CHANGE


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DECADES OF CHANGE • 93 •

• ENRIQUE TABARA. SUPERSTITION. 1963. OIL ON CANVAS, 130.5 X 130.5 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, WASHINGTON, D.C.,

OAS,

U.S.A. PUR-

CHASE FUND, 1964. PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

born in Germany in 1912, in Venezuela from 1939 on) likewise profited from the freedom of technique and procedure permitted by the Venezuelan enthusiasm for Informalism. Agustin Alaman (born in Spain in 1921, came to Uruguay in 1955), Jorge Damiani (b. 1931), and Giancarlo Puppo (born in Italy in 1938, came to Uruguay in 1957) engaged in experiments with materials and color that liberated Uruguayan art from the straight]acket of Torres-Garcia's little rectangles, though the change was not radical. The product of the Cuban Agustin Fernandez (b. 1928) lies on the border between nonfigurative art and painted textures. His world of blacks, grays, and earth tones—most unusual in Abstract Expressionism—verges on the erotic, although no image is ever clearly discernible. Like the previously mentioned painting of Fernandez Muro and the reliefs of Rodolfo Krasno (Argentine, b. 1926), these endeavors foreshadowed the future appearance of objects-as-art and object-pictures, without however falling into the purposeful vulgarities of Pop Art. Abstract Expressionism had many indirect repercussions. A number of important painters and sculptors availed themselves of its devices to free their work from the burden of meaning. One can note in this regard the freedom in brushwork and use of materials of Roser Bru (born in Spain in 1923, came to


FERNANDO DE SZYSZLO.

NACAURI II. 1964 ENCAUSTIC CANVAS,

158.4

X

129.5

HUAON CM.

SOLOMON R. GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM, NEW YORK, U.S.A. GIFT OF THE NEUMANN FOUNDATION, CAS,

VENEZUELA,

1966.

CARAPHOTO-

GRAPH BY DAVID HEALD FURNISHED BY THE SOLOMON R. GUGGENHEIM FOUNDATION, NEW YORK.

Chile in 1939), the flexibility with respect to form of the Cubans Hugo Consuegra (b. 1929) and Jose Bermudez (b. 1922), the "anamorphoses" of Enrique CastroCid (Chilean, b. 1937), the "lands" of Ricardo Yrarrazabal (Chilean, b. 1931), the gesturalism of the "Phases" group in Argentina perceptible in compositions of Rogelio Polesello (b. 1939) and Marta Peluffo (b. 1931), the imaginary landscapes of the Venezuelans Hugo Baptista (b. 1935) and Mateo Manaure (b. 1926), and the objects included in masses of color by Cynthia Villet-Gardner (b. 1934) of Barbados. At the same time, sculpture—which had stagnated in statues of heroes and other public monuments—managed an escape into the liberty won by nonfigurative painting. Argentina provided a leader in this line, Libero Badii (b. 1916). It should also be remembered that late in their careers Noemi Gerstein (b. 1910) and Alicia Penalba (b. 1913) engaged in Expressionist sculpture of a nonfigurative type. Maria Juana Heras Velasco (Argentine, b. 1924) and Lia de Bermudez (Venezuelan, b. 1923) executed sculptures free of figurative and geometric commitment, but they showed less energy than the Cubans Agustin Cardenas (b. 1927) and Rolando Lopez Dirube (b. 1928), the last mentioned distinguished for the variety and dynamism of his concepts of form in space. Frans Krajcberg (born in Poland in 1921, moved to Brazil in 1948), was a great pro-

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• 94 • DECADES OF CHANGE


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DECADES OF CHANGE • 95 •

• MANABU MABE. AGONY, DETAIL. 1963. OIL ON CANVAS, 189 X 189 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM

OF THE AMERICAS,

OAS,

WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. GIFT OF FRANCISCO NHO,

MATARAZZO

GEL HURTADO.

moter of experiments in space concepts. The Peruvian Alberto Guzman (b. 1927) and the Venezuelan Pedro Briceno (b. 1931) operated on a calmer plane. A highly original form of aesthetic expression developed in Latin America during the late '60s consisted of works woven of fiber, cord, wire, and other materials. Notable figures in this area are those of Olga de Amaral (Colombian, b. 1932) (p. 98), the Brazilian Myra Landau (b. 1926), and the Mexicans Carmen Padin (b. 1930), and Marta Palau (b. 1930), as well as that many-sided artist Feliciano Bejar (b. 1920). Amaral worked in the best modern textile tradition, but her art achieved full realization when she turned to the humblest of materials, imparting to her work a strong telluric feeling. The Mexicans were bolder and more varied in their efforts, making use of beads, glass, plastics, and feathers. Significant among the liberating effects that abstraction had on Latin American art were the variety—at times approaching chaos—and spontaneity of the works produced. In the United States abstraction drew upon the national romantic tradition to achieve an effect of well-orchestrated modernism, and it was soon devoured by the implacable demands of the market. Though the products can be grouped by affinities, Latin American Expressionism sprang up spontaneously everywhere. It cannot be viewed as a link in a chain, unlike the situation in Europe, where Monet's waterlilies and Matisse's "condensation of sensations" led inevitably to the painting of surfaces unrelated to images of reality. It is true that Abstract Expressionism was imported into Latin America from abroad, but artists profited primarily from the freedom it brought to get away from salon painting and the need to reflect ambient reality. Gains are to be measured in terms of techniques, atmosphere, the strongly defended idea that a

SOBRI-

1964. PHOTOGRAPH BY AN-


• ANGEL HUK1ADO. SIGN IN SPACE. 1962. OIL ON CANVAS, 152 X 193 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, WASHINGTON, D.C.,

OAS,

U.S.A. PUR-

CHASE FUND, 1976. PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

painting's value is independent of extraneous considerations, the introduction of imagination into sculpture, and a great rebirth of graphic art, to which attention will be given in the next chapter. Rarely did artists go to extremes. Scrap iron— an extreme in sculpture—found few enthusiasts. Among them were the Mexican Manuel Felguerez (b. 1928), who used it most notably in his murals for the Diana Theater in Mexico City; the Colombian Feliza Burztyn (1934-1982), who caused a great stir in her country with several series of works of strong impact, especially the one termed "hysterical," dating from the early '60s; and the Venezuelan Victor Valera (b. 1927), who gave new value to metals, rust, and rivets in a huge sculptural project that he eventually abandoned in favor of kinetic art. Viewed from the perspective of almost 30 years, Abstract Expressionism can be perceived as a shake-up of the existing order and a leap into the dark. Corning after the orderly avant-garde movement of the 1940s in Argentina and paralleling the Brazilian Concretism of the late 1950s, it represented a great gamble on Latin American art's ability to win a place of its own on the international stage. Proper account should be taken of its intensity and its underlying characteristics in establishing the difference between "reflected" modernism and "conditioned" modernism.

Neogeometry and Kinetic Art While it was the Argentine Madi group, centered around the review Arturo, that in 1944 first experimented with geometric forms and Concrete art, the most important work in this area was done by Brazilians. Abraao Palatnik

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• 96 • DECADES OF CHANGE


ROGELIO POLESELLO

ON MAGENTA.

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DECADES OF CHANGE • 97

ORANGE

1961. OIL APPLIED

ON CANVAS WITH AIRBRUSH, 139,7

X 161.8 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS,

WASHINGTON, D.C.,

PURCHASE

FUND,

1961.

U.S.A.

PHOTO-

GRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

(b. 1928) was the real pioneer in the field with his "kine-chromatic apparatuses" of 1949. The "Rupture" movement led by Waldemar Cordeiro (1925-1973) and Luis Sacilotto (b. 1924) dates from 1952. The "Front" group, the leading members of which were Lygia Pape (b. 1929) and Decio Vieira (b. 1922), was active from 1953 to 1955. The modulated surfaces of Lygia Clark (b. 1920) were produced from 1956 to 1958. Amilcar de Castro (b. 1920) planned huge Minimalist sculptures in 1957, the same year that the Mexican Goeritz was working with large-scale simple forms. This manifold activity, which has as its background the spectacular flowering of modern Brazilian architecture in the '50s with the planning of Brasilia by Lucio Costa and Oscar Niemeyer, was given literary expression by the poet-critic Ferreira Gullar's 1959 "Neoconcrete Manifesto." "Neoconcretism," he said, "was born of the need to express the complex reality of modern man within the structural language of the new plastic art. It denies the validity of scientific and positivist attitudes in art. It restates the problem of expression, incorporating the new 'verbal' dimensions characteristic of neofigurative Constructivist art.... We do not conceive of a work of art as a 'machine' or an 'object,' but as a quasi-corpus, in other words an entity whose reality is not confined to the external relations of its elements. It is an entity that can be discovered by analysis, but can be fully captured only by a direct, phenomenological approach." This manifesto is one of the most intelligent texts produced by


OLGA

WALL.

DE AMARAL.

1970.

WOVEN

HORSEHAIR

AND

WOOL, 550 X 200 CM, COLLECTION OF THE LA TERTULIA MODERN ART MUSEUM, CALL COLOMBIA. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS ARCHIVE, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. REPRODUCTION AUTHORIZED BY THE ARTIST.

Latin American criticism in endeavoring to define the ontological differences that may exist between Latin American manifestations that are apparently similar to the works of Mondrian and European Goncretism. In 1960, Helio Oiticica (b. 1937), the youngest figure in Neoconcretism, proposed the idea of "penetrables." The 1958 Neoconcrete Ballet of Lygia Pape and her 1960 Unity of the Planetary System by no means exhausted the inventive spirit of the group. Dynamism and joyfulness characterize the work of Lygia Clark, being admirably expressed in her "animal" series. A constant revolutionary, right up to her Cannibal Slime of 1975, Clark spurred the large number of artists who practiced, or were influenced by, Neoconcretism to never-ending invention. Among the forerunners of Brazilian Neogeometry were Alfredo Volpi (born in Italy in 1896), whose famous pennants for street festivals anticipated the production of an art that, though disciplined, was constantly in motion. Inventive movement and discipline likewise marked the work of another pioneer, Franz Weissmann (born in Austria in 1914, moved to Brazil in 1924) as well as the compositions of Ivan Serpa (1923-1973), the "polyvolumes" of Mary Vieira (b. 1927), and the paintings of Milton Dacosta (b. 1915). Though Dacosta was not an adept of Neoconcretism, he nonetheless benefited from its insistence on invention, as did—and with more seductive results—Carlos Scliar (b. 1920). The influence of the movement is also to be felt in the famous white sculptures of Sergio de

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• 98 • DECADES OF CHANGE


EDUARDO

MAC

ENTYRE.

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DECADES OF CHANGE • 99

SIX

FORMS IN TWO CIRCUMFERENCES. 1966.

OIL AND COMPASSES

CANVAS, 144.7 X 179.6 CM.

ON COL-

LECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS, WASHINGTON,

D.C., U.S.A. PURCHASE FUND, 1967.

PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO,

Gamargo (b. \930)(p. 100), the forceful and highly original paintings of Tereza Brunet (b. 1928), and the works of Abelardo Zaluar (b. 1924). It can even be found to some extent in the works of Odetto Guersoni (b. 1924), which border on Op Art, and the articulated movement in great planes of the compositions of Arcangelo lanelli (b. 1922). Neoconcretism, as developed both in Sao Paulo and Rio, created circumstances favorable to the endeavors of artists such as the sculptor Yutaka Toyota (born in Japan in 1931, moved to Brazil in 1958); Ivan Freitas (b. 1932), with his light-and-movement compositions; Marilia Kranz (b. 1937), whose work is of great importance; and Massuo Nakakubo (b. 1938), with his highly original hard-edge compositions. Even the work of lone Saldanha (b. 1921), in the period in which she painted bands on bobbins and pieces of sugar cane, and the later atmospheric compositions of Lydia Okumura (b. 1948) evidence at one and the same time respect for geometric concepts and a playful will to break their bonds. It is important to note that in all of these innovations—breaking the bounds of the frame, fusions of time and space, incorporations of movement, new uses of space, and energizing of surfaces—there was none of the cold rationality that marked the work of the Bauhaus artists in Germany or the Dutch movement known as De Stijl. Neoconcretism laid such a solid base for further exploration in the geometric area that it opened the way to the kinetic experiments of the 1970s. In 1972, no less than 92 artists working in light and movement exhibited at the first Eletrobras Salon. Another positive feature of Brazilian Neoconcretism was its strongly national character. It developed along perceptibly different lines in Sao Paulo and Rio, but it never sought to impose itself elsewhere or to identify itself with European or


• SERGIO DE CAMARGO. COLUMN. 1967-1968. MARBLE, 141.5 X 28 X 22.8 CM. HIRSHHORN MUSEUM AND SCULPTURE GARDEN, SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION,

WASHINGTON,

D.C.,

U.S.A. GIFT OF JOSEPH H. HIRSHHORN, 1972. PHOTOGRAPH FURNISHED BY THE HIRSHHORN MUSEUM AND SCULPTURE GARDEN.

U.S. developments. Neither artists nor critics gave any thought to a conflict between internationalism and localism. The critic Frederico Morais recalls that, upon the occasion of the International Exhibition of Concrete Art in 1960, its organizer, Max Bill, who emphasized the "end of the tachiste deluge," expressed "amazement at the intuitive character of the Brazilian Concrete compositions." Quite the opposite was the case with the geometric and kinetic artists in Argentina. Two principal groups were formed in 1960. Although Julio Le Pare arrived in Paris in 1958, only two years later did he organize the Visual Art Research group, including the artists that have already been mentioned. In 1961 it had an exhibit at the Denise Rene Gallery, which, with the assistance of the critic Frank Popper, was to become the center for the promotion of kinetic art. Light theaters, bands of light and sound, and ingenious mechanisms and apparatuses of all sorts are typical of the first, best-known, and most significant phase in the ca-

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100 • DECADES OF CHANGE


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DECADES OF CHANGE • 101

• JULIO LE PARC. INSTABILITY. 1963, WOOD, PLASTIC, AND ALUMINUM,

79.6 X 79.6 X 9.8 CM. HIRSHHORN MUSEUM AND SCULPTURE GARDEN, SMITHSONIAN

INSTITUTION, WASH-

INGTON, D.C., U.S.A. GIFT OF JOSEPH H. HIRSHHORN, 1966. PHOTOGRAPH

FURNISHED

BY

THE

HIRSHHORN MUSEUM AND SCULPTURE GARDEN,

reer of Le Pare, who, however, did not attain the level of pure invention reached by his compatriot Gyula Kosice (b. 1924). Like the rest of his group, he never went beyond a clever programming of effects of light and movement. All these artists were good, solid experimenters, more scientific than intuitive in their work; their compositions were worked out mechanically, rather than derived from sudden flashes of inspiration. The "chromoplastic atmospheres" that Tomasello turned out at the time relied on physical effects and the reflections of light from small cubes attached to white surfaces. It was also in 1960 that the critic Ignacio Pirovano applied the name "Generative Art" to the work of a group originally led by Miguel Angel Vidal (b. 1928) (p. 102) and Eduardo Mac Entyre (b. 1929) (p. 99), who were later joined by Ary Brizzi and Carlos Silva (both born in 1930). "In Generative Art," they said, "an optical sequence is produced by evolution of a given form, such as a circle, a square, or a step. By consecutive shifts of the form, either in the same direction or in opposite directions, a perfect generative development is produced." In light of their declarations and work, they can be linked to the Op Art movement. U.S. influence, and the simultaneous launching of Op Art and Pop Art during a period of great prosperity, when works of art were produced and distributed en masse, had a decided impact on Argentine Generative Art. 1960 was a crucial year for Argentina as regards developments in the geometric area. It was the year of the inauguration of the Plastic Arts Section of the Torcuato Di


• MIGUEL ANGEL VIDAL. EQUILIBRIUM. 1975. ACRYLIC ON CANVAhS, 100 X 100 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS,

WASHINGTON, D.C.,

PURCHASE FUND,

1975.

U.S.A. PHOTO-

GRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

Telia Institute in Buenos Aires. The director, the critic Jorge Romero Brest, steered his country's art in the direction of technological advance and avantgarde experimentation to such good effect that Argentine Op Art and Pop Art all but parallel their U.S. models. The geometric movement in Argentina—whether aimed at optical effects or expressed in hard-edge terms—had a numerous following. Notably faithful to geometric concepts was the sculptress Maria Simon (b. 1922); her "box-spaces" have complex "inside-outside" relationships. Juan Mele (b. 1923) with his diagonals and Mercedes Esteves (b. 1939) with her horizontals produced works of great semantic richness. Raquel Rabinovich (b. 1929) moved from highly lyrical geometric concepts to corridors and enclosures made up of transparent plates. Her work resembles that of Kasmer Fejer (born in Hungary in 1923, moved to Brazil in 1929). The sculptors Claudio Girola (b. 1923), Enio lommi (b. 1926), Enrique Torroja (b. 1934), and Davite (b. 1911) produced freely geometric constructions or experimented with effects of movement and direct or reflected light. The success they achieved lent great prestige to efforts in such lines. Note should next be taken of the brilliant generation of painters born between 1931 and 1939, in whose work the geometric tendency regained strength and balance. Its members were Cesar Paternosto (b. 1931), Margarita Paksa (b. 1933), Eduardo Rodriguez (b. 1934), Armando Durante (b. 1934), Gabriel Messil (b. 1934), Antonio Trotta (b. 1937), Alicia Orlandi (b. 1937), Carlos Salatino (b. 1939), and the previously mentioned Mercedes Esteves (b. 1939). Accompanying it were the sculptors Alejandro Puente (b. 1933), Victor Magarinos

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102 • DECADES OF CHANGE


(b. 1934), and Rogelio Polesello (b. 1939), who alternated between work in two dimensions and work in three—the most significant career development of the 1960s. A place apart should be assigned to the work of Julian Althabe (19111975), a true forerunner of the purist inclination to simplification, and to Marcelo Bonevardi (b. 1929) (p. 104). Bonevardi's compositions, like the sculpture in relief of the Uruguayan Gonzalo Fonseca (b. 1922), evidence a somewhat different approach, akin to Torres-Garcia's Constructivism. He tended, however, toward the creation of objects that can stand on their own, albeit strongly impregnated with archaisms. The prize awarded to Julio Le Pare (b. 1928) at the Venice Biennial in 1966 marked a high point of recognition for these geometric and kinetic artists, whose creative power was duly acknowledged by the critic Damian Bayon at the same time that he stressed the rational character of their work. On the occasion of the exhibition the Buenos Aires Museum of Fine Arts organized in 1964 under the name "Instability," he termed them "creative artists who make use in their work of geometric shapes, transparencies, and glitter, artists for whom new materials, capable of producing new effects, serve as vehicles of expression."2 To all one might apply the famous words of the Mexican writer Alfonso Reyes: they made an entrance on the international stage, but, owing to the cultural pressures exerted by the milieu and the singular nature of their individual personalities, they found themselves in a state of "involuntary independence." The work of geometric artists in the rational-decorative line was unfailingly marked by perfection of craftsmanship, a virtue required by their visual mode of expression. Once Mathias Goeritz (b. 1915) had stirred the Mexican milieu to life in the 1950s, Mexican geometric art developed similar characteristics. The Satellite City Towers that Goeritz planned in conjunction with the architect Luis Barragan date from 1957 and 1958. They marked the first step in the propagation of geometric art "after long decades of figurative and subjective trends," as the Peruvian critic Juan Acha recognizes. It is true that the pioneer work of Carlos Merida had set a standard for Mexican art in his period, but it had no repercussion, probably because of its "chamber work" quality, whereas Goeritz's public activity and his early adherence to Minimalism were to have a decisive influence on younger generations. The publication in 1977 by the National University of Mexico of El geometrismo mexicano, written by Jorge Alberto Manrique, Ida Rodriguez Prampolini, Juan Acha, Xavier Moyssen, and Teresa del Conde, gives clear evidence of the official recognition the movement had attained. From the time of his arrival in Mexico in 1949, Goeritz engaged in a didactic effort, introducing industrial design into the country as the basis of visual education. In 1953 he produced a work he called the ElEco Experimental Museum, a dramatic piece of architecture featuring a metal serpent four and a half meters high. It was with the Satellite City Towers, however, that his driving force came to be fully recognized. Varying between 37 and 57 meters in height, the five triangular-based towers, painted white, red, and yellow at the time of their con-

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DECADES OF CHANGE • 103


MARCELO BONEVARDI.

TRAP.

1975. CONSTRUCTION OF DIVERSE MATERIALS, 66 X 55.9 CM. PHOTOGRAPH

FURNISHED AND REPRO-

DUCTION AUTHORIZED BY MARYANNE MARTIN/FINE ART, NEW YORK, U.S.A.

struction, established a scale that was adopted by the architect Fernando Gonzalez Cortazar in The Great Gate (1969) and other similarly monumental ensembles. Nevertheless, in the chronological development of the geometric movement, Mexico was 20 years behind the times. Only the work of Helen Escobedo (b. 1936) was destined to be of influence. One of her most representative sculptures, Gates in the Wind, dates from 1968, as does Monument 18 of Jorge Dubon (b. 1936). Juan Luis Diaz (b. 1939), who executed a huge sculpture for INFONAVIT in 1972, can be considered in the context of this chapter, though his work belongs more to the 1970s than to the preceding decade. The chronological dislocation of the Mexican geometric movement can be attributed to the persistence of Muralist and Surrealist tendencies. During the 1950s the only dissidence admitted was a lyrically inclined Abstract Expressionism and an Expressionist type of figurative painting which was considered to derive from Orozco. In reality the number of artists was relatively small. This may be explained by the fact that the demands of the middle class were satisfied by the

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104 • DECADES OF CHANGE


work of the Muralists. Modern art in Mexico had to make its way between a visible indifference for anything unlike Rufino Tamayo and the overwhelming respect for traditional forms evidenced by official entities such as the Museum of Modern Art, the National Institute of Fine Arts, and the Institute for Aesthetic Research. Just as in politics, continuity rather than break has been the characteristic of Mexican art. Even the work of Cuevas, which constitutes the extreme in rebellion, derives from the admirable drawings of Orozco. The generation represented by Felguerez, Carrillo, and Von Gunten lived "climatically" in the shade of Tamayo. It is possible that if Mathias Goeritz had never come to Mexico, the Mexican geometric movement would never have undergone the development it knew in the '70s, to be examined in the next chapter. Gunther Gerzso (b. 1915) (p. 106) brought no new technique or method to Mexico, merely a personal vision of the world; there was no reason for him to exert a transforming influence on the country's art. (An echo of his systems of disguise and his handling of spaces and planes can be perceived only at the end of the '70s, in the work of the Salvadoran painter Roberto Galicia.) The originality of his treatment of the painted surface, which vacillates between severity and the poetic vision of spaces filtered through planes, is markedly effective in Papantla Landscape (1955) and Lab-na (1959). When the critic Luis Cardoza y Aragon said of his painting that "it represents nothing, but still conveys meaning," he made clear the difficulties of reading this subtle work. Direct narration, which prevailed in the work of the Muralists, is discarded; symbolic suggestion is fostered. Far re-

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DECADES OF CHANGE • 105

FANNY SANIN. ACRYLIC NO. 3.

1976. ACRYLIC ON CANVAS. 111.8 X 213.5 CM, PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF THE ARTIST.


GUNTHER GERZSO. SOUTHERN

QUEEN. 1963. OIL ON MASONITE, 46.7 X 61 CM. PHOTOGRAPH FURNISHED AND REPRODUCTION

AU-

THORIZED BY MARY-ANNE MARTIN/ FINE ART, NEW YORK, U.S.A.

moved from Gerzso, whose work is characterized by calm control and attention to minute detail, a much younger artist, Fernando Garcia Ponce (b. 1933), was the only Mexican painter to view the relationship between color patch, plane, texture, and space as an emotional conflict, often expressed in violent terms. Resemblances between Argentina and Venezuela tend to be superficial, though once again we find cases of "involuntary independence." Artists of both countries enthusiastically identified themselves with Paris and European tendencies. In Venezuela the leaders of the international trend were the painter Aimee Battistini (b. 1916) and the critic J.M. Guillen Perez. In his Historia de lapintura en Venezuela, the critic Alfredo Boulton writes: "The new freedom with regard to materials used and work created was brought to Venezuela by a number of artists who had attended Monsanto's classes and who found themselves in Paris from 1945 on. In 1950 they constituted the group known as 'The Dissidents.' This group was the first to make use of heterogeneous material—such as Ruben Nunez's wires—and drew upon abstraction to create forms and to pose visual and structural problems, at times of great linear formality. They took as their guide the stylistic concepts of the outstanding representatives of those tendencies, who lived in France."3 The points brought out by Boulton constituted the principal characteristics of the group: experimentation with form and materials, and assimilation to international trends in kinetic art. From 1955 to 1960 Alejandro Otero (b. 1921) painted 75 "color-rhythms," to which special feeling was imparted by the subtle interplay of colored stripes. A like effect was produced by

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• 106 • DECADES OF CHANGE


Jesus Soto (b. 1923) in his "double sculptures": wire shapes in the foreground stand out against a striped background. The optical illusions thus achieved surpassed in inventiveness similar efforts made at the same time by the Hungarian Vasarely, and a little later by the Israeli Agam. In the late '60s Carlos Cruz-Diez (b. 1923) produced other types of optical illusions, which he called "chromoscopes," "chromo-kinetic environments," and the like. These and the "holokinetic" works of Ruben Nunez (b. 1930) parallel scientific research in the area of optics. It was in Paris that the artists met and identified problems, though their works may have been executed elsewhere. To the names already mentioned should be added those of Carlos Gonzalez Bogen (b. 1920); Mateo Manaure (b. 1926), active in the geometric line in the late '50s; and the sculptors Victor Valera (b. 1927) and Omar Carreno (b. 1927). Among the less derivative, more personal experiments with rhythm produced in the '50s should be mentioned Victor Valera's series of small circles, the interconnecting planes of Luis Guevara Moreno (b. 1926), and the Duco-on-wood compositions of Ramon Vazquez Brito (b. 1927) with their interrupted horizontals. The first works in the kinetic line produced by Juvenal Ravelo (b. 1931) date from 1965. In the 1950s the painting of Mercedes Pardo (b. 1922) resembled that of the Argentine Sarah Grilo. The work of both in turn showed similarities to the freely structured compositions of the Frenchmen Esteve and De Stael. In the late '60s, however, Pardo's work exhibited new inspiration and exceptional breadth, as she treated color zones in the hard-edge manner. Otero and Soto also underwent a healthy evolution toward large-scale public sculpture, with the former's Solar Deltas and the latter's "penetrables." These constituted not merely novel visual experiences but also provided a new type of relationship between the artist and his public. The work of foreigners residing in Caracas served decidedly to strengthen geometric and kinetic tendencies. Mention has already been made of Gego and Marcel Floris (b. 1914). Other names are those of Gerd Leufert (b. 1914 in Lithuania, came to Venezuela in 1959) (p. 110), Nedo (born in Italy in 1926, moved to Venezuela in 1950), and Paul Klose (born in Denmark in 1914, moved to Venezuela in 1955). Leufert won the National Prize for Painting in 1965, after producing hard-edge works of great perfection and educating the eye of the Venezuelan public by patient labor in the area of graphics. Gego alternated between almost mathematical precision and spontaneity in her wire compositions. Nedo executed relief-painting in white, with textural additions of a linear type. Floris came late to geometric composition, in the mid '60s, but thereafter created highly expressive works of an elliptical nature. The dean of this group was Narciso Debourg (b. 1925), who began his constructive experiments in Paris in 1951 and has continued them to the present. The flowering of kinetic art in Venezuela was directly related to the emergence of a powerful middle class, vastly enriched by the oil economy. The demand of this class was for symbols of development and high technology—its expectations of the future. Kinetic art was supported on the one hand by this new

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DECADES OF CHANGE • 107


JESUS SOTO. HURTADO SCRIP-

TURE, 1975. WOOD, PAINT, WIRE, AND NYLON, 102.8 X 171.7 X 46 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. PURCHASE FUND, 1975.

PHOTOGRAPH

HURTADO.

BY ANGEL

class and on the other by the state, which held a similar vision of a modern country on the go. In the '50s and '60s kinetic art played the same role in Venezuela that Mural art had played in Mexico in the '20s and '30s: it was the aesthetic image of the country that the ruling classes wished to impart. The geometric trend of the '50s offered a means of identification with an international movement that neutralized local influences and eliminated the possibility of conveying messages other than those of a visual character. It was natural that it should find its greatest development in "open-door" countries, receptive to currents from abroad, primarily Argentina and Brazil, and to a smaller degree in the less populous countries of Uruguay and Chile. Although artists in other countries were attracted by the possibilities of geometric art and felt the desire to identify with international trends, in "closed-door" areas in which tradition counts for much, such as the Andean region, the Caribbean, and Mexico, they never constituted a dominant group. In Uruguay and Chile the geometric trend was just one of a number of possible artistic choices. In Uruguay emphasis on structure was stimulated by the experiments of the Workshop founded by Torres-Garcia in the preceding decade. One of the Neogeometric leaders was Manuel Espinola Gomez (b. 1921).

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108 • DECADES OF CHANGE


CARLOS

CRUZ-DIEZ.

CHROME NO.

965.

1978,

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DECADES OF CHANGE • 109 •

PHYSIOMIXED

TECHNIQUE, 100 X 150 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS,

OAS,

WASHINGTON,

D.C., U.S.A. PURCHASE FUND, 1978. PHOTOGRAPH BY WILLIE HEINZ.

In 1949 he organized a group named for the painter Carlos F. Saez, who had lived from 1878 to 1901. The group included Juan Ventayol (b.1915); Washington Barcala (b. 1920), whose work straddles Abstract Expressionism and Neogeometry; and the printmaker Luis A. Solari (b. 1918). Their work evidenced a broad range of escape from Torres-Garcia's quadrangles, though Augusto Torres (b. 1913) in his painting of the 1950s, Lincoln Fresno (b. 1917), and Americo Sposito (b. 1924) long kept the master's teachings alive. In 1956 the Uruguayan Concretists, whose movement had been founded in Montevideo the year before, were represented at the Museum of Modern Art in Sao Paulo by works of Maria Freire (b. 1919) and Jose Pedro Costigliolo (b. 1902). Neogeometry was revitalized by the work of Nelson Ramos (b. 1932). At the Kaiser Biennial held in Cordoba, Argentina, in 1960, his tridimensional geometric objects showed him to be the artist most closely in tune with international trends. Another figure of rank was the painter Miguel Battegazzore (b. 1931), who showed himself familiar with the optical experiments in vogue abroad. Enrique Medina Ramela (b. 1935) and Freddy Sorribas (b. 1938) found a firm basis for expression in Neogeometry. So did Yamandu Aldama, who, like Nelson Ramos, belonged to the "Talent" group. With his refined works, defined in great blocks, the sculptor Alfredo Halegua (b. 1930) made a strong contribution to Neogeometry. The critic Jose Pedro Argul notes that the "Nineteen Artists of Today" show in 1955 represented a "strong stand for modernism." It was on this occasion that a number of the artists just mentioned made their debut and defended their work in public, breaking with the Torres-Garcia tradition. The renewal in


GERD LEUFERT.

TIRIMA.

1966.

ACRYLIC ON CANVAS, 250.2 X 149.5 CM. COLLECTION OF THE MUSEUM OF ART, RHODE ISLAND SCHOOL OF DESIGN, U.S.A. NANCY SALES DAY FUND FOR MODERN LATIN AMERICAN ART. PHOTOGRAPH BY CATHY CARVER FURNISHED BY THE MUSEUM OF ART, RHODE ISLAND SCHOOL OF DESIGN.

Uruguayan art was favored by the rise of the Blanco party to power in 1958. This made the country more receptive to ideas from abroad. Healthy confrontations at the national level during the '60s were provoked by certain salons that gave rise to discussion and polemics—the one organized in 1960 by the critic Maria Luis Torrens for the Center for Arts and Letters sponsored by the newspaper El Pats, and the General Electric Salon presented in Montevideo in 1964. However, the subsequent economic crisis and the political polarization of the country brought about by the establishment of the National Labor Confederation and— after 1962—the activities of the Tupamaro guerrillas led to a gradual fall-off in artistic creation during the latter part of the decade. In Chile modernization of painting and sculpture coincided with the free rein given to capitalism by the Alessandri regime in 1958, as a result of which the country was swept by an illusion of energy and dynamism. The group known as "Rectangle" was formed in Santiago in 1955 and presented three shows between

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• 110 • DECADES OF CHANGE


GEGO

(GERTRUDE

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DECADES OF CHANGE • 111 •

GOLD-

SCHMIDT), ENVIRONMENTAL AERIAL STRUCTURES. 1972. IRON AND NY-

LON ROPE, 18 X 17.5 X 22 M. OUTDOOR INSTALLATION, SOFIA IMBER

MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART, CARACAS,

VENEZUELA.

PHOTO-

GRAPH FURNISHED BY MACCSI.

that date and 1962, when the first international "Form and Space" exhibition took place. In it Argentines and Uruguayans participated, as well as local artists of geometric persuasion. Ramon Vergara Grez (b. 1923), Miguel Cosgrove, Francisco Perez, Robinson Mora, Claudio Roman, Elsa Bolivar, and Carmen Piemonte (born in 1932, she did not join the group till 1969) were the principal practitioners of a type of Neogeometric painting marked by precision and discipline. Vergara Grez, the leader of the movement, explained that "confronted by the inconsistencies of mood and dramatic anecdote, artists rebelled against fleeting sensations... They conceived of plastic-functional structures that would symbolize their own essence." He went on to assert that the group's Neogeometric art, based on relations between forms, was nonetheless subjective: "The relation between the forms we conceived and between those forms and plastic space is affective." He makes this statement despite the fact that the group contained painters whose work was oriented toward optical effects, such as Matilde Perez (b. 1920). Emilio Hermansen (b. 1917) was a true pioneer in this line, producing rigidly geometric astral images. The contribution of sculpture was by no means inconsiderable. The great structures of Marta Colvin (b. 1917), with their junctures and openings, are not far from the monumental concepts of pre-Hispanic archi-


lecture. For her part, Lily Garafulic (b. 1914) imparted a value all her own to nonfigurative forms. In Ecuador, Peru, and Colombia, the fate of Neogeometry was linked to the understanding individual artists had of form. In Ecuador it was Manuel Rendon (1894-1980) and Araceli Gilbert (b. 1914) who first broke with local tradition and its strong attachment to "indigenist" realism. In 1944 Araceli encountered the shock of nonfigurative art at Amedee Ozenfant's studio in New York. His stay there awakened an interest in planes and the interrelation of forms, and thereafter he engaged in Neogeometric painting marked by strong conviction. These concepts were not taken up again until the generation born in the 1930s came on the scene: Luis Molinari (b. 1929), Estuardo Maldonado (b. 1930), and Mauricio Bueno (b. 1939) had some difficulty finding room for serialist works or ones aimed at optical effect in an environment that was dominated by Abstract Expressionism. The same feeling of alienation with respect to the milieu—easily understood in the case of one characterized by strong pre-Hispanic influence— can be noted in the kinetic and cybernetic works of the Bolivian Rudy Ayoroa (b. 1927), in the painting of his compatriot Walter Terrazas (b. 1928), and in the three-dimensional compositions of the Paraguayans Laura Marquez (b. 1929) and Carlos Colombino (b. 1937) dating from the late 1960s. It can also be felt in the painting of the Peruvians Giro Palacios (b. 1943), Gaston Garreaud (b. 1934), Carlos Davila (b. 1935), Jaime Davila (b. 1937), and Milner Cajahuaringa (b.1932), who were perfectly integrated into the Neogeometric international. The Peruvian Jorge Eielson (b. 1923), however, adopted quipus (pre-Hispanic knotted cords) as a means of modern visual expression, and created works to which they lend significant weight. Their value derives not from the mere presence of the quipus but from the capacity Eielson showed for reviving a lost form and assigning it a place in Neogeometry. Renewal also characterized the extraordinary work of Lika Mutal (born in The Netherlands, came to Peru in 1968). Mutal's monumental sculpture, with its great blocks of heavy materials, belongs to the '70s, however, as do the reliefs intelligently executed in local woods by the Puerto Rican Luis Hernandez Cruz, already mentioned in connection with the Abstract Expressionism deriving from the work of Tamayo and Szyszlo at the end of the '50s. Three Central American artists produced important works during their Neogeometric phases: Constancia Calderon (Panamanian, b. 1937), Margot Fanjul (Guatemalan, b. 1931), and Luis Diaz (Guatemalan, b. 1939). Their positions with respect to the trend have varied greatly. Constancia Calderon, an award winner at the Central American competition held in El Salvador in 1967, has always exhibited a tendency to escape from the rigidity of Neogeometry by affective disadjustments in structure, similar to those in the work of her compatriot Manuel Adan Velazquez (b. 1934). After experimenting with several avantgarde extremes, in the 1960s Margot Fanjul settled down to sculpture and painting, the former marked by precise, well-articulated forms, the latter by lozenges of color suggestive of those to be found in the embroidered shifts worn by Guate-

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• 112 • DECADES OF CHANGE


malan women. Luis Diaz was another experimenter, showing great talent in his handling of figurative, Neogeometric, and Conceptual compositions. Victor Vaskestler (Guatemalan, b. 1927) preceded the others in showing an interest in self-sufficient Neogeometric work, to take the place of traditional figurative compositions. In Colombia, too, the Neogeometric tendency constituted an exception, but in the late '50s and during the '60s it was cultivated by such strong personalities as to represent a viable alternative to the figurative efforts of the majority. In 1953 the sculptor Edgard Negret (b. 1920) presented a group of "Thirteen Recent Sculptures," which, despite their figurative associations, already evidenced the talent for simplification and confidence in the use of sheet metal that were thereafter to constitute the basis of his art. At the Modern Art Salon sponsored by the Bank of the Republic in 1957, Eduardo Ramirez Villamizar (b. 1923) exhibited solemn, impeccably executed works characterized by a precise balance between color planes and inner variations in form. At the same salon Negret presented a project for a public sculpture, Column in Commemoration of the Massacre, in which for the first time he evidenced interest in work for the urban setting. Compositions by both artists were later set up in public in Bogota. There was only one forerunner of Neogeometric painting in Colombia: Marco Ospina (1912-1983). Only in the generation born around 1930, represented by Omar Rayo (b. 1928), David Manzur (b. 1929), and Carlos Rojas (b. 1933), does one again find a taste for combinations and syntheses of sharply defined forms. Rayo took optical experimentation as his province and has contin-

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DECADES OF CHANGE • 113 •

• EDUARDO RAMIREZ VILLAMIZAR. MECHANICAL COMPOSITION. 1957, OIL ON CANVAS, 100 X 200 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. PURCHASE FUND, 1959.

PHOTOGRAPH

HURTADO.

BY ANGEL


ued in that line to this day. David Manzur's Neogeometric work has suffered interruptions of a poetic nature. As for Carlos Rojas, at the end of the '60s he engaged in sculpture in the Minimalist vein, but in the following decade he shifted to painting marked by horizontal bands of color suggestive of Andean textiles. Fanny Sanin (b. 1938) (p. 105) first practiced a discreet form of Abstract Expressionism; only in the 1970s did she turn to painting simply structured chromatic variations, based on relationships between verticals and horizontals, which are nonetheless rich in effect. One may note as a sort of appendix to painting in this line the work of a group of tapestry designers. Two were Brazilian: Jacques Douchez (b. 1924) and Norberto Nicola (b. 1930). For a long period of years they engaged in highly inventive geometric design, producing tapestries of excellent quality that hold a place of distinction in Brazilian Concretism. The Colombian Marlene Hoffmann (b. 1934) first exhibited her tapestries, in which geometric planes are combined to powerful effect, in 1963 at the Museum of Modern Art in Bogota. The tapestries of geometric design presented in 1971 by the Costa Rican Lola Fernandez (b. 1926) are superior to her usual Abstract Expressionist compositions. From the overall Latin American viewpoint, Neogeometry was closely linked to the problem of dependency on outside influences. Optical and kinetic experiments represented a deliberate effort to escape from the Latin American milieu. The sole exception was constituted by Brazilian Concretism, which sought to make a "carnal" appeal to its public. Whatever the attitude, however, the tendency was to identify modernity with international tendencies in art. Toward the end of the 1960s, however, in the worldwide aspiration to new life styles, the pendulum swung in the other direction and emphasis was laid on the region as the environment best suited to invention and creative activity. Neogeometry constituted as it were an island of calm in the stormy seas of those days.

Symbolic Figuration

"The real avant-garde is to be found in realism," Fernando Botero declared in 1958, when his Tribute to Mantegna won the National Prize for Painting in Colombia. The same view might have been expressed by any one of 150 Latin American painters, sculptors, and graphic artists who viewed with mistrust the advances of the European and U.S. avant-gardes. In 1954 the English critic Lawrence Alloway launched the term "Pop Art," the characteristics of which were enumerated by the painter Hamilton, who went on to prepare the environmental composition he called $11 a ($he). In 1957 the Frenchman Yves Klein presented his "blue anthropometries." A year later the U.S. artist Allan Kaprow came out with "happenings," such as An Apple Shrine. Divided into six parts,it ran for 18 hours, participation by the public being one of its essential elements. From 1961 to 1964 the Leo Castelli Gallery in New York actively promoted Pop works, such as Oldenburg's The Street and Andy Warhol's Dick Tracy series. Declarations

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114 • DECADES OF CHANGE


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DECADES OF CHANGE • 115 •

FERNANDO BOTERO. CAMERA

DEGUSPOSI: TRIBUTE TO MANTEGNA II. 1961. OIL ON CANVAS, 231.7 X 259.8 CM. AND

HIRSHHORN

SCULPTURE

MUSEUM

GARDEN,

SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, WASHINGTON, D.C.,

U.S.A. GIFT OF JO-

SEPH H. HIRSHHORN, 1966. PHOTO-

GRAPH BY JOHN TENNANT FUR-

NISHED BY THE HIRSHHORN MUSEUM AND SCULPTURE GARDEN.

by Pop artists were published in Time and Life. The road to consumer-product art let to the "Prospect" exhibition presented in Diisseldorf toward the end of the '60s. The Franco-Swiss Jean Tinguely invented a painting machine; the Italian Piero Manzoni exhibited packaged excrement; while Martha Jackson presented in New York "New Media - New Forms," anti-museum art offered in opposition to, and contradiction of, the art establishment. Paradoxically all this invaded the establishment institutions—galleries, museums, and cultural centers. It was not a question of artistic renewal or of a break with precedent, within a logical process of change. It was simple out-and-out rejection, an accelerated pursuit of anything that constituted novelty. No longer did artists make pictures to hang on the wall. In the words of the critic Michel Ragon, they had become as much of an anomaly as the art of Sumer. The next step was represented by the "artist without art," defined—or rather un-defmed—in the '60s as the post-artistic artist. The U.S. critic Harold Rosenberg was alone in having a clear vision of the situation. According to him, despite the great illusions engendered by new forms of creation, the individual arts, however conditioned they might be by the pressures of cultural change or the example of particular artists, had never been so indispensable as then to both individuals and society. With their accumulation of vision, their discipline, and their inner conflicts, Rosenberg said, painting or poetry or music provide a medium—perhaps the only one—for active individual self-development.


ANTONIO SEGUI. LA-LA FELIZA

MARU. 1963. OIL ON WOOD, 83.5 X 68.9

CM.

COLLECTION OF THE

HIRSHHORN MUSEUM AND SCULPTURE GARDEN, SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. GIFT OF JOSEPH H. HIRSHHORN, 1966.

PHOTOGRAPH

STALSWORTH

BY

LEE

FURNISHED BY THE

HIRSHHORN MUSEUM AND SCULPTURE GARDEN.

Faith in art as an integral system activated through contemplation, deteriorated to such an extent that it was thought antiquated and dangerous to give voice to it. Critics joined artists in the same race, and artists fell into the trap laid for them by the media. The aesthetics of obsolescence consumed their works and their performances. Latin American figurative artists active in the 1950s weathered the world situation well. That situation became known to the public to the extent that art— or whatever replaced it—became the object of commentary by the media. Shock art, the "art of nothingness," the "art of obscenity," and the bloody rites of which there were a number of victims came to be considered news items. The transformation of art as a system into a mechanism for public exhibition resulted from a wave (not merely French but worldwide) that reached its greatest height in May 1968, amid illusions that it was possible to achieve a radically different world in which the artist born of middle-class revolution would simply disappear. With the failure of efforts toward radical change, expressions of rebellion were

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• 116 • DECADES OF CHANGE


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DECADES OF CHANGE • 117

ARMANDO MORALES. WOMAN

ABOUT TO RETURN. 1972. OIL ON CANVAS, 102 X 81 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS,

OAS,

WASHINGTON,

D.C., U.S.A. PURCHASE FUND, 1972.

PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

quickly absorbed by museums, galleries, and specialized reviews. In Latin America, as we shall see in the last chapter, the illusions of 1968 were dissipated in restatements and redefinitions of traditional forms. Extreme positions were viewed from a distance, and only late and to a limited degree—and hence paradoxically—did artists partake of them. In the course of the '50s, however, the furious revolt against tradition served as a stimulus to figurative artists in efforts to preserve imagery. Realism did indeed constitute the avant-garde, and it manifested itself in many forms. For the sake of guidance, it can be classified as fantastic realism, synthetic realism, expressionistic realism, and hyperrealism. The objects favored by Pop Art resemble, but do not really fall into, the last category, being foreign to its intent. It would be unjust to view the attachment to traditional media that had been abandoned in world art capitals as failure to participate in the cultural


BENJAMIN CANAS. KAFKA: LET-

TERS TO MILENA,

1976.

OIL

WOOD PANEL, 61 X 61 CM.

ON COL-

LECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. PURCHASE FUND, 1976. PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

scene. Latin American artists practiced realism during this period as a matter of choice. They were fully conscious of their opposition to the avant-garde in vogue abroad. While they made no specific statements to this effect, and had few critics on their side (Marta Traba, with her theory of "the culture of resistance"; Aracy Amaral, with his theory of "a continent under cultural occupation"), artists felt, and responded to, the need for maintaining continuity with what had gone before. Their behavior constituted recognition that art was in a state of transition and that it must of necessity undergo change, but that, at the same time, it could not afford to lose contact with the public (i.e., society) which is not to be ignored. Thanks to this behavior on their part, there was no alienation between artists and the public, such as occurred in the United States and in Europe, where the various manifestations of nonart were rejected by the public at large, becoming no more than spectacles for a handful of the initiate. Promoted by the media, artists became celebrities; interest was transferred from their work to their personalities. (Andy Warhol is a case in point.) The like did not occur in Latin America, since it lacked the requisite promotional network. By their moderation, Latin American artists ensured that the new language of art, reflective of local cultural manifestations, existing political and economic conditions, and differing ways of life, would remain comprehensible to the

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• 118 • DECADES OF CHANGE


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DECADES OF CHANGE • 119 •

MARISOL ESCOBAR. THE MER-

CHANTS. 1965. WOOD AND OTHER MATERIALS, 185 X 119.3 X 184.7 CM. COLLECTION OF THE SOFIA IMBER MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART, CARACAS,

VENEZUELA.

PHOTO-

GRAPH COURTESY OF MACCSI.

community. During this figurative period emphasis was laid on meaning and professionalism. The attempt was made to enhance the value and complexity of meaning, whereas in European and U.S. nonart meaning was neglected or utterly forgotten. The renewed interest in professional skill favored training in drawing and engraving, which were to flower and come into renown in the subsequent period. In the event the avant-garde's endeavors to reintroduce art into life by extreme measures proved vain. Latin American artists sought to achieve the goal by emphasizing a symbolic language comprehensible to the public. If such a language, rich in semantic values, could achieve common currency, then art could once again be identified with life, serving the people's need for artistic creation at the professional level, higher than that of folk art. The Mexican critic Ida Rodriguez Prampolini rightly holds that, beginning with Surrealism, irreality has gained such ground that every formal device that departs from literal representation tends to engender it. The fact that both artists and public seek for, and accord recognition to, irreality necessarily implies that they find it appealing. It provides nourishment for dreams and myths—the


strong element of the subconscious that runs through Latin American societies. In a line which we may term fantastic realism, Argentina provides a full complement of artists, though their numbers are a bit difficult to determine owing to the "dispersion-of-Surrealism phenomenon" noted by the Argentine critic Aldo Pellegrini. At the exhibition held at the Torcuato Di Telia Institute in Buenos Aires in 1967, Pellegrini grouped together numerous artists whose fantasy, expressed either as a pictorial concept or as an approximation to Pop Art, corresponded to the "purely inner model" advocated by Andre Breton. The demands of this inner model were met with an exactitude impregnated with mystery by Roberto Aizenberg (b. 1928), Miguel Caride (b. 1920), Noe Nojechowitz (born in Poland in 1929, came to Argentina in 1933), Zoravko Ducmelic (born in Yugoslavia in 1923, came to Argentina in 1955), and Juan Carlos Liberti (b. 1930) in their landscapes and figure paintings. Toward the end of the '60s the graphic artists of the GRABAS group—Delia Cugat (b. 1930), Pablo Obelar (b. 1930), Sergio Camporeale (b. 1937), and Daniel Zelaya (b. 1938) showed similar sleight of hand in transformations of reality. Fernando Maza (b. 1936) with his large-scale letters in landscapes, Mildred Burton with her fiercely ironic figures, and Antonio Segui (b. 1934) (p. 116) in the photo-portraits he did in the '60s broadened to some degree the area of inner vision. Irreality took the form of disquieting atmosphere surrounding the figures of Vechy Logioio (b. 1933), in the horizontal landscapes of Hilda Crovo (b. 1933), and in the violent ambience characterizing the work of Lea Lublin (b. 1929). The generic attraction of Surrealism manifested itself rather differently in the box-machines painted by Osvaldo Borda (b. 1929) and in the overlapping, interwoven, or cut-off organic forms found in the compositions of Juan Carlos Langlois (b. 1926) and Julio H. Silva (b. 1930). Somewhat similar to their work are the later paintings of Brian Nissen (Mexican, b. 1939). While the violence of the crude figure paintings of Jorge de la Vega (1930-1971), Jorge Demirjian (b. 1932), and Raul Alonso (b. 1923) obviously derives from Expressionism, the seductive influence of Surrealism is evidenced in the mingling of basic elements. The note of falseness appears continuously in the work of the participants in the previously mentioned exhibition at the Torcuato Di Telia Institute. It was conveyed to the public by the paintings of Marta Peluffo (b. 1931) and Erik Ray King (b. 1935), the Camembert cheese boxes of Alberto Heredia (b. 1924), and the polyester figures on ladders produced by Juan Carlos Distefano (b. 1933), whose singular oeuvre vacillates between Expressionism and Surrealism. Other works in the line of irreality are the figures in landscapes painted and sketched by Oscar Mara (b. 1935), the false mirrors of Hector Borla (b. 1937), and the reliefs of Gloria Prioti, which, like many of the three-dimensional works of the '60s, are closely akin to the everyday prosaicness of Pop Art. Among those working in this same line was Aldo Paparella (1920-1977), one of the most uninhibited talents in Argentina. In the paintings, sketches, boxes, and environments he turned out at this time he showed himself fully involved in relating art

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120 • DECADES OF CHANGE


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DECADES OF CHANGE • 121 •

• JACOBO BORGES. THE SHOW HAS BEGUN. 1964. OIL ON CANVAS, 178 X 198 CM. FUNDACION "GALERIA

NACIONAL," CARACAS, VENEZUE-

LA, PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF

THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS ARCHIVE, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C.,

U.S.A. REPRODUCED BY PERMISSION

OF THE FUNDACION "GALERIA NACIONAL, CARACAS.

to daily life. Likewise akin to Pop Art was the Informalism practiced by Luis Alberto Wells (b. 1939); Mario Pucciarelli (b. 1928), who won the Di Telia Prize in 1960; and Alberto Greco (1931-1965). It was Wells who, together with Segui, headed the "Destructive Art" group in 1961. It never lived up to its title, but persisted in painting. The admirable watercolors of Guillermo Roux (b. 1929), with their ambiguous images and artificial atmosphere, constitute another Argentine contribution to irreality. Variants of fantastic realism can be found throughout Latin America during this period. In Central America and the Caribbean islands cultural isolation and Indian and Negro influences rendered irreality readily acceptable. The eyes sketched or painted by Rodolfo Abularach (Guatemalan, b. 1933) seem to explore the great beyond; the atmospheric compositions of Elmar Rojas (Guatemalan, b. 1937), and the petrified figures of Efrain Recinos (Guatemalan, b. 1932) are similarly weighted with mystery. The Dominican painters Fernando Pefia Defillo (b. 1928), Ada Balcacer (b. 1930), Domingo Liz (b. 1931), and Aquiles Azar (b. 1932) readily avoided reality, the political side of which was represented up to 1962 by the dictatorial Trujillo regime. It is not surprising that the "Proyecta" group formed in 1968 emphasized above all the artist's right to freedom. Cuba had an ongoing Surrealist tradition, thanks to the work of Mario Carreno (b. 1913), Felipe Orlando (b. 1911), and Rene Portocarrero (b. 1912). Carreno gradually evolved toward an openly European form of Surrealism, similar to the work of Magritte. While Orlando's paintings resemble those of the Frenchman Dubuffet, they lack neither originality nor sarcasm. The paintings of


• ERNESTO DEIRA. VERONICA. 1964. OIL ON CANVAS, 114 X 146 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. GIFT OF THE ARTIST, 1964, PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

Portocarrero's "city" period seem the product of hallucination. Cuban Surrealism was further developed and diversified by Emilio Sanchez (b. 1921), Jorge Camacho (b. 1934), and Angel Acosta Leon (1932-64), whose style featuring astonishing organic machines was quickly taken up by Raquel Lazaro (b. 1917). During the '60s the leading personality in modern Nicaraguan art, Armando Morales (b. 1927), who had previously practiced abstraction, rediscovered the human figure, under the influence of the metaphysical painting of the Italian De Chirico, although in his case the background was provided by the vast expanse of Lake Nicaragua. The tin-can-encrusted tables and the contradictory spaces of Alejandro Arostegui (b. 1935) had a great impact on the artists who frequented the Tagiie Gallery in Managua. The series of owls painted by Orlando Sobalvarro (b. 1943) were a stroke of invention indicative of a complex talent. The most important person in Latin American fantastic painting was Benjamin Cafias (Salvadoran, b. 1933) (p. 118). His morbid world of monsters was depicted with a preciseness that rendered it far more horrible than the universe of madness and death sketched by Jose Luis Cuevas (Mexican, b. 1934), or the agitation and deformity of the figures drawn by Nelly Freire (Argentine, b. 1933), Julio A. Zachrisson (Panamanian, b. 1930), and Marcelo Grassmann (Bra-

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• 122 • DECADES OF CHANGE


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DECADES OF CHANGE • 123 •

• JORGE DE LA VEGA. HISTORY OF THE VAMPIRES. 1963. OIL AND COL-

LAGE ON CANVAS, 162.5 X 130.9 CM, MUSEUM OF ART, RHODE IS-

LAND SCHOOL OF DESIGN, U.S.A. NANCY SALES DAY FUND FOR MOD-

ERN LATIN AMERICAN ART. PHOTOGRAPH BY CATHY CARVER.

zilian, b. 1925). Although there is a strong Expressionist element in the work of all those just mentioned, fantastic invention provides the dominant note. To understand the compositions, one must do as Alice did: step through the lookingglass and accept the impossible as real. As noted in the previous chapter, Mexico has a strong Surrealist tradition, which has found a variety of expressions. Pedro Friedeberg (born in Italy in 1937, came to Mexico in 1940) engaged in the creation of fantastic objects, a line which was to be taken up in the following decade by Xavier Esqueda (b. 1943). Olga Donde (b. 1935) shifted from fantasy to eroticism. At the end of the '60s, Ricardo Martinez (b. 1918) went to the ultimate extreme in effects of irreality obtained by artifices of illumination and an almost supernatural condensation of painted atmosphere. Similarly excellent representatives of the trend were Rafael Coronel (b. 1932) and Francisco Corzas (b. 1936). Others who entered into the game of challenging reason were Fernando Ramos Prida (b. 1937), whose work recalls children's drawings, and Alfredo Castaneda, who made use of double vision and reversals of normal situations. Fantastic realism was energetically exploited by a number of artists scattered throughout Latin America. Toward the end of the '60s Nemesio Antunez (Chilean, 1918-1993) painted a series of imaginary beds moving along roads in Chile. At the same time he produced a group of large-scale, nightmare-like urban ambiences in which man is reduced to a dot. Another Chilean, Rodolfo Opazo


(b. 1935) was a Surrealist par excellence: flat figures and empty, silent spaces constitute a vast panorama of the subconscious. Figures painted by Myrna Baez (Puerto Rican, b. 1931) are apparently realistic, but she surrounds them with a highly suggestive atmosphere of tensely eloquent solitude. When the Venezuelan Jacobo Borges (b. 1931) (p.121) made his debut at the Sao Paulo Biennial of 1957, his work evidenced a terribilitd akin to the aggressively mocking tone of the "Whale's Roof group, whose spirit in turn resembled that of Colombian "Nothingness" and the Mexican "Plumed Horn" circle. In the 1970s, after a long period of inactivity, he took up a more "Proustian" mode of expression, indulging in ellipses and double images—a mixture of dream and reality. In some respects these works resemble the suggestive compositions of the Peruvian Hermann Braun (b. 1933) and the later painting of the latter's compatriot Rafael Hastings (b. 1945), whose soft, cottony highlights recall those of Borges. Chromatic atmosphere also provided a way out for the Colombian Luciano Jaramillo (b. 1938), an artist of great critical gifts and mordant vision. The Peruvian Tilsa Tsuchiya (b. 1936) and the Colombian Jim Amaral (b. 1933) constitute cases apart. The former painted with the perfection of a Persian miniaturist erotically entwined figures of Indian origin, whereas Amaral created a surprising series of small-scale, tormented compositions sexual in inspiration. The Peruvian Fabian Sanchez (b. 1935) first presented his metal sculptures and montages at the Sixth Paris Biennial (1969). His strange beings constructed from sewing-machine parts constitute a true "sculpture of poverty" at the level of the unconventional machines of Tinguely or Takis; they represent one of the most successful inventive moments in Latin American art. In opposition to the excesses, ironies, criticisms, and disfigurations of fantastic realism we find synthetic realism, which emphasized economy of means and fusions of forms, rather than dissolutive irreality. In the landscapes of a number of artists active in the years between 1950 and 1970 there is a visible intent not only to describe a given space but also to provide an element of lyric surprise. Good examples are furnished by the Brazilians Tomaz lanelli (b. 1932) and Cybele Varela (b. 1943), and the Argentines Mario Crenzans (b. 1932) and Josefina Robirosa (b. 1932). In the case of the last-mentioned, the normality of the landscape is frequently broken by strong touches of fantasy. These are four delicate artists whose work is more airy and elusive than that of the Venezuelan Carlos Hernandez Guerra (b. 1939), whose long horizontal landscapes show greater liveliness and more touches of the unexpected. Direct spiritual descendants of these landscapists born after 1940 were the Argentines Americo Castilla and Hugo de Marziani, the Puerto Rican Francisco Colon (b. 1941), and the Colombian Alvaro Marin (b. 1946). Another type of synthetic realism emphasized the outline of form. This was practiced by the Mexican Arnaldo Belkin (b. 1930), in whose work images underwent ingenious rearticulation; by the Haitian Herve Telemaque (b. 1937), who resembles the Italian Adami but is even bolder in his outlines; and by the Venezuelan Margot Romer (b. 1938). Romer's treatment of some themes is not

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• 124 • DECADES OF CHANGE


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DECADES OF CHANGE • 125

• RODOLFO ABULARACH. ARTEMIS.

1979. OIL ON CANVAS, 121.9X152.4

CM, PHOTOGRAPH BY WILLIE HEINZ REPRODUCED BY PERMISSION OF THE ARTIST,

far removed from Pop Art. Basically, however, she has a passionate concern for a brutal definition of color areas emanating from urinals and banners. The extraordinary sculptural syntheses of Marisol Escobar (Venezuelan, b. 1930) (p. 119) also relate to Pop Art, but she is highly original in her manner of turning images into blocks, which she then combines with flat, realistic painting. Slipping quietly toward irreality, like Fernando Botero she separates herself from the remainder of her contemporaries. Color effects suggestive of light diffracted by a prism mark the figure paintings of the Peruvian Teresa Burga (b. 1939). Gilberto Rebaza (Peruvian, b. 1939) combined geometric and realistic forms in a manner all too reminiscent of Armando Morales. The semigeometric figures of Leoncio Saenz (Nicaraguan, b. 1935), and the combination of flat colors and violent masses practiced by Vilma Pasqualini (b. 1930), a Brazilian whose work resembles that of the English Pop artist Allen Jones, demonstrate the enormous number of possible variables between Postcubism and Pop Art. Expressionist Realism is clearly identifiable. It was well suited to the shocks and anxieties of the day. The disorder and aggressiveness to be noted in those decades was not a reflection of the contradictions and crises of European and U.S. art but a clear recognition of the region's own capacity for aggressiveness. In Argentina this began to manifest itself in the distortions of Maccio, Noe, De la Vega, and Deira, when they were promoted by the Di Telia Institute. Other artists redefined Expressionism in individual terms. Carlos


• FERNANDO BOTERO. MONA LISA AT THE AGE OF TWELVE. 1959. OIL AND TEMPERA ON CANVAS, 211 X 195.5 CM. MUSEUM OF MODERN ART, NEW YORK, U.S.A. INTER-AMERICAN

FUND.

PHOTOGRAPH FUR-

NISHED BY THE MUSEUM OF

MOD-

ERN ART.

Alonso (b. 1929) manifested his dissidence at the 1963 exhibit in the Bogota Museum of Modern Art, in sketches and collages that anticipate the unusual richness of resources of which he later availed himself in his 170 illustrations for the edition of the Divine Comedy sponsored by Olivetti in 1966. In 1960, Antonio Berni (of whom mention was made in Chapter 1) reappeared on the scene with a remarkable series of collages recounting the story of Juanito Largo, a dweller in the shantytowns surrounding Buenos Aires. Eduardo Giusiano (b. 1931) developed a nonaggressive line of Expressionism, based on disadjustments of color and brushstrokes. The hard line was asserted in the painting of Carlos Gorriarena (b. 1925), who depicted society and authority in a brutally grotesque manner, also to be noted in the painting of Oscar Smoje (b. 1939). Smoje, however, is closer to the violent caricature of the English painter Francis Bacon. The sculptures ofjuan Carlos Distefano tend to depict the world as a prison and place of torment. Expressionist shock reaches its climax in the baroque oeuvre of Ezequiel Linares (b. 1927). Chile produced an Expressionist generation notable for the high quality of its work and its conviction in transmitting a message. Outstanding examples

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• 126 • DECADES OF CHANGE


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DECADES OF CHANGE • 127 •

• ALEJANDRO OBREGON. THE WAKE.

1956, OIL ON CANVAS, 140 X 175

CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, WASHINGTON, D.C.,

OAS,

U.S.A. PUR-

CHASE FUND, 1957. PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

are provided by the paintings ofjose Balmes (b. 1927), Gracia Barros (b. 1927), and Eduardo Vilches (b. 1932), and the notable work done by Roser Bru (born in Barcelona, Spain, in 1923, came to Chile in 1939) both in painting and in graphics. After the dramatic fall of the Allende regime in 1973, all tended toward a type of Expressionism in keeping with the somber climate of ongoing events. In the sculptures ofjuan Egenau (b. 1927) bodies are as it were rearticulated and clad in armor. In this same line of convulsive Expressionism are the monstrous figures of Felix Arauz (Ecuadorian, b. 1935), Antonia Eiriz (Cuban, b. 1929), and the Colombian Norman Mejia (b. 1938), who won the National Prize for Painting at the 1965 Bogota Salon with a masterpiece entitled The Horrible Chastising Woman. Quite different are the Expressionist figures of the Colombians Alejandro Obregon (1920-1992) and Fernando Botero (b. 1932). Obregon transformed the vast expanses of landscape into geometric symbols of his country. His series of paintings of condors, volcano-condors, and bull-condors, among which one finds masterpieces such as Chimborazo: Dawn in the Andes, have an epic sweep unequalled in Latin America. Going to a different extreme, in the late '50s Botero depicted the authorities and myths of bourgeois society, mordantly yet tenderly, in a gallery of gigantic portraits, overwhelming in their effect, Enrique Grau (b. 1920) (p. 128), Juan Antonio Roda (b. 1921), Jorge Elias Triana (b. 1921), and Carlos


ENRIQUE GRAU. BOY WITH UM-

BRELLA. 1964. OIL ON CANVAS, 102 X 112 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C.,

U.S.A. PUR-

CHASE FUND, 1971. PHOTOGRAPH BY WILLIE HEINZ.

Granada (b. 1933) worked along more conventional lines. The high points of their Expressionism are to be found in the series of Philips done by Roda in 1963, the huge baroque figures executed by Grau at about the same time, and the later aggressive compositions of Granada, which show a debt to the Englishman Francis Bacon, an artist who was to have a lively influence on the next generation. Women made significant contributions to Expressionism in its multifaceted manifestations. There were for example the Uruguayans Teresa Vila (b. 1931) and Lily Salvo (b. 1928); the Colombians Freda Sargent and Emma Reyes (b. 1919), who painted striking heads, landscapes, and fruits; and the distinguished landscapists Joy Laville (Mexican) and Luisa Richter (born in 1928 in Germany, came to Venezuela in 1955). Often Expressionism served but as an accent, imbuing the image with additional energy and meaning. Such was visibly the case with the paintings of the Panamanians Desiderio Sanchez (b. 1929) and Guillermo Trujillo (b. 1927), the Guatemalan Roberto Cabrera (b. 1939), the Mexican Juan Soriano (b. 1920), and the Dominican Pablo Giudicelli (b. 1921), and with the sculptures of Cornelis Zitman (born in The Netherlands in 1926, came to Venezuela in 1946), Joaquin Roca Rey (Peruvian, b. 1923), and the Chilean Raul Valdivieso (b. 1931). On the other hand, the macerated figures appearing in the relief paintings of Alberto Gironella (Mexican, b. 1929) (p. 129), Roger von Gunten (Mexi-

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• 128 • DECADES OF CHANGE


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DECADES OF CHANGE • 129

• ALBERTO GIRONELLA. THE GLUTTON. 1958, OIL ON CANVAS, 100.5X

80.5 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART

MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C.,

U.S.A. PUR-

CHASE FUND, 1959. PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

can, b. 1933), and Hermenegildo Sabat (Uruguayan, b. 1933) bespeak a certain ontological disorder. In a science-fiction vein, which was to be taken up in the '60s by the Argentine Raquel Forner, the Venezuelan Alirio Rodriguez (b. 1934) sought to convey visions of man's cosmic fate using an improvisational technique close to finger painting. His work and the pantheistic eroticism of the Mexican Francisco Toledo (b. 1937) show the difficulty of delineating clearly the area of Expressionist Realism. The many-sided nature of Expressionism is further demonstrated by the cautious fashion in which Luis Guevara Moreno (Venezuelan, b. 1926) explored the world of harrassed personages he discovered in the '60s, and the fierce eroticism of Leonel Gongora (Colombian, b. 1932), whose work precedes by two decades the dissonances of the European "ultravanguard." In a few rare cases, Latin American works executed between 1950 and 1970 approximate the hyperrealism that manifested itself in the United States in the close-ups produced by certain Pop artists, with their blown-up detail and clear resemblance to the techniques and products of advertising. In Latin America, realism in all its forms evidenced an interest in objects of daily life,


CLAUDIO

BRAVO.

MYSTICAL

PACKAGE. 1967. CHARCOAL, CONTE CRAYON, AND INK ON PAPER, 74.8 X 110.2 CM. PROPERTY OF THE SAMUEL

M.

GREENBAUM

TRUST, WASHINGTON, D.C.,

1989 U.S.A.

PHOTOGRAPH BY WILLIE HEINZ.

which constitutes an old Hispanic tradition, running in Spain from the still lifes of Zurbaran through the works of Antonio Lopez Garcia. This interest is clearly evident in the painting of the Chilean Claudio Bravo (b. 1936) (p. 130) and the Colombian Santiago Cardenas (b. 1937), despite the close relationship between some of the latter's compositions and paintings by Oldenburg. It is slightly less evident in the paintings the Chilean Ernesto Barreda (b. 1929) did during the 1960s. The Argentines Jose de Monte (b. 1929) and Ricardo Garabito (b. 1930) showed themselves perfectionists in their landscapes and still lifes. Certain regions seemed particularly inclined toward realism. One was Colombia. Juan Cardenas (b. 1939) and Alfredo Guerrero (b. 1936) were invariably faithful to their subject matter and the following generation persisted in this line with brilliant results. The preciseness with which Raul Cattelani (Uruguayan, b. 1927) rendered his painted symbols shows the continuing influence— in his generation and the next—of Torres-Garcia's spirit of synthesis. Only with the generation represented by Clever Lara (b. 1952) did Uruguayan painting become fully realistic. The letters—complete with address and postage stamp—which the Peruvian Luis Arias Vera (b. 1932) painted may serve as a bridge to a final form of realism, which manifested itself above all in three-dimensional objects. The Venezuelan Mario Abreu (b. 1919) and the Brazilian Rubem Valentim (b. 1922) showed remarkable ingenuity in constructing their boxes and magic objects. The "furniture-piece" women that Hernando Tejada (Colombian, b. 1925) turned

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130 • DECADES OF CHANGE


out in the 1970s and the "boxed" women the Uruguayan German Cabrera (b. 1903) produced after 1955 are more realistic in effect than the boxes of the Venezuelan Gabriel Morera. Closer to Pop Art are the erotic sculptures of the Argentine Emilio Renart (b. 1925) and the free-form works of his compatriots Ruben Santantonin (1919-1969), Vicente Marotta (b. 1935), and Pablo Suarez (b. 1937). This listing of the most representative artists of the decades from 1950 to 1970 makes clear, first, the assurance with which individuals working within an international repertory asserted their personalities in compositions of their own invention and, second, their persistence in these personal projects during the difficult period of the '60s. In no case did they yield to the facile slogan "Death to

Art."

Notes 1

Among artists who contributed to the flowering that took place in the '50s were Julio Verdie (Uruguayan, b. 1900), Francisco de Narvaez (Venezuelan, 1905-1982), Guillermo Wiedemann (1905-1969, born in Germany, active in Colombia after 1939), Francisco Amighetti (Costa Rican, b. 1907), Noemi Gerstein (Argentine, b. 1910), Maria Martorell (Argentine, b. 1909), Manuel de la Cruz Gonzalez (Costa Rican, b. 1909), Marina Nunez del Prado (Bolivian, b. 1910), Luis Martinez Pedro (Cuban, b. 1910), Felipe Orlando (Cuban, b. 1911, moved to Mexico in 1951), Vicente Martin (Uruguayan, b. 1911), Luis Garcia Guerrero (Mexican), Jose Maria Cruxent (born in Barcelona, Spain, in 1911, active in Venezuela), Juan Ventayol (Uruguayan, b. 1915), Manuel Espinosa (Argentine, b. 1912), Lorenzo Homar (Puerto Rican, b. 1913), Mario Carreno (Cuban, b. 1913), Tomie Ohtake (born in Japan in 1913, active in Brazil after 1936), Mauricio Lasansky (Argentine, b. 1914), Alfredo Sinclair (Panamanian, b. 1915), Luis Tomasello (Argentine, b. 1915), Marcel Floris (born in France in 1914, active in Venezuela after 1950), Gunther Gerzso (Mexican, b. 1915), Libero Badii (born in Italy in 1916, active in Argentina), Braulio Salazar (Venezuelan, b. 1917), Marta Colvin (Chilean, b. 1917), Nemesio Antunez (Chilean, b. 1918), Ricardo Martinez (Mexican, b. 1918), and Mauricio Aguilar (Salvadoran, b. 1919). 2 Damian Bayon, Aventura pldstica en Latinoamerica (Mexico City: Fondo de Cultura Economica, 1974). 3 Alfredo Boulton, Historia de lapintura en Venezuela (Caracas, 1964-[72], 3 vols.).

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DECADES OF CHANGE • 131


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V

NEW TRENDS (1960-1980)

THE RELATION BETWEEN ART AND SOCIETY, THE POLITICIZATION OF ART through "commitment" on the part of the artist, and recourse to forms of expression divorced from visible reality as a springboard for the leap into modernity— these were the key issues for artists between 1920 and 1960. Since 1960 the issues with which artists have had to contend can be summed up by the slogan "What counts is life." This slogan was often repeated during the 1970s, when problems of "identity" and "dependency" were relegated to second rank. The new feeling was well conveyed by the Manifesto of the "Fed-up" (Mexico City, Antonio Souza Gallery, 1961), whose authors declared: "We are fed up with the pretentious structures of logic and reason, with functionalism, with carefully calculated decorative effects, and—obviously—with the pornographic chaos of individualism, passing fame, the day's fashion, vanity, ambition, bluff, artistic jokery, conscious and unconscious egotism, fatuous ideas, and the boring publicity given to 'isms' and their adepts in both figurative and abstract lines." The spirit of revolt against the established order grew from 1960 to 1968, as part of a worldwide protest movement. 1968 was the year of the May riots in Paris, with barricades in the streets and rejection of the Sorbonne as the archetypical establishment institution. It was also the year of the Russian invasion of Czechoslovakia, which put an end to hopes for democratic socialism, and the year of Martin Luther King's assassination, the result of his struggle for racial equality. In the theater and on the screen it was the year of Hair, of mocking insult to the public, and of the end of an author-audience relationship based on mutual restraint. It was the year of Easy Rider, and the beginning of an escalation of out-and-out violence. The confrontation between ideologies and generations reached an unparalleled degree of ferocity, resulting from the growing disbelief in accepted values that manifested itself in the societies of highly developed countries. Countering the spreading tyranny of technology, which government could do nothing to check, the young engaged in a brutal, boisterous movement whose aim was a re-

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NEWCOMERS AND

• JOSE LUIS CUEVAS. DR. RUDOLPH VAN CREFEL AND HIS PATIENT. 1975.

LITHOGRAPH 17/150, 55.8 X 76.2 CM.

COLLECTION OF THE INTER-

AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A.

BANK,


turn to nature and communal life. Disbelief undermined all social institutions, beginning with government and the university and extending to affect science, technology, and every aspect of daily life. Spontaneous anarchy—symbolized by the black flag raised by Parisian students in the May riots—swept away all that lay in its path. The effects were felt in Latin America, though the crisis produced by advances in science and technology had not reached the same pitch there. The "fed-up" attitude expressed in the Mexican manifesto was primarily a reflection on the frivolity of the ambient society. Not even the most highly developed urban centers of Latin America exhibited the characteristics that provoked revolt in the industrialized countries. In the world for which Herbert Marshall McLuhan served as spokesman, eyes were blinded by televised images, ears were bombarded with advertising, and cybernetics and data-processing provided instant access to information for all. When McLuhan prophesied the disappearance of the "Gutenberg Galaxy"—the end of the written word—and the coming of the "global village," in which life is uniformly homogeneous, in which "the medium is the message," he was addressing readily identifiable societies. McLuhan's views, the revolt against society typified by the hippies, the assertion of the primacy of imagination over traditional knowledge, and the categorical rejection of past models caused a great stir in Latin America. Art wavered on its base as radical changes were introduced at varying times and with different effects, depending on the power wielded by critics. During this period the avant-garde indulged in self-advertisement to an extent unknown before, but at the same time there was fierce defense of the right to individual or collective expression by those who sustained the connection between man and his dreams and between those dreams and the hopes of the community. The avant-garde's capacity for self-promotion was astonishing, considering the relative insignificance of Latin American coteries and the poverty of the critical environment. The avant-garde made such strides that at times it took over the whole stage, forcing the representatives of traditional media of expression to beat a retreat. The confrontation was summed up in two phrases: "Art is dead," proclaimed by a variety of speakers from a number of different platforms, and "Art is not dead," maintained by those whose work evidenced renewal in form and meaning. A third feature to be noted was a renewed interest in drawing and printmaking, activities that permitted a variety of individual expression and that were modest in their material demands, in contrast to the art forms promoted in Europe, the United States, and Japan. The latter possessed sophisticated means of production and could afford the costly materials required for technological experimentation. Their affluence also permitted indulgence in the destruction of automobiles, walls, furniture, and food that was featured in "happenings" and other "performances." Graphics took on profound significance. They proclaimed the primacy of sight over touch. They could be read without a key, in contrast to works based on

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134 • NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS


hermetic concepts that could be understood only by the initiate and that remained incomprehensible to the community at large. They also provided a stimulus to the creative spirit of the spectator, whose imagination could visually complete this open-ended type of composition. Printmaking has a peculiar potential for communication and education, since the reproductive process breaks down the barrier surrounding the work available in but a single copy. This obstacle had not been resolved by so-called multiples, whose cost as a rule has been too high for the general public. The burst of activity in graphics was spectacular. An important part in the upsurge was played by biennials and competitions held from 1960 on, and by the support lent by the Latin American subsidiaries of the Container Corporation of America. The following are a few of the more representative events. The first American Biennial of Printmaking took place in 1963 at the Museum of Contemporary Art of the University of Chile. At that time the institution was headed by the painter Nemesio Antunez, who invited participation from Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, El Salvador, Mexico, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay, and Venezuela. Beginning in 1959, the Central University of Venezuela held a series of eight national exhibitions of graphics, organized by the printmaker Antonio Granados (b. 1917). These led up to the Latin American Exhibition of Drawings and Prints, held in 1967. The First Latin American Print Biennial took place in 1970 in San Juan, Puerto Rico, under the sponsorship of the Institute of Puerto Rican Culture; a total of five exhibitions have been held to date. In 1970, also, the Pan American Exhibition of Graphic Arts took place in Cali, Colombia. This led to the First American Biennial of Graphic Arts, covering drawings, prints, and graphic design, which was presented the following year in the same city under the auspices of La Tertulia Museum. The series thus begun has continued to the present. Biennials of American Printmaking were held in Maracaibo, Venezuela, from 1977 to 1981, and in 1978 Benson and Hedges sponsored a show entitled "New Printmaking and Drawing in Argentina." All these, plus local graphic-arts shows that were held throughout Latin America, add up to an impressive display of activity, broad in range and substantial in value. Printmaking reached its highest point of development, both technically and thematically, in Brazil, which has set an example for the rest of Latin America. Established masters in the field, such as Isabel Pons (b. 1912), Edith Behring (b. 1916), Fayga Ostrower (b. 1920), Ruth Bess (b. 1924), Marcelo Grassmann (b. 1925), and Artur Luis Piza (b. 1928), have been joined by others of similar rank—Maria Bonomi (b. 1935) (p. 136), Anna Letycia (b. 1929), and Roberto de Lamonica (b. 1933). Thematic renewal is evidenced in the work of Fabio Magalhaes (b. 1942), Jose Alberto Nemer (b. 1945), Arlindo Daibert (b. 1952), and Jose Bezerra Dias (b. 1957). There were pioneer figures in graphics in other parts of Latin America as well: Francisco Amighetti (Costa Rican, b. 1907), Lorenzo Homar (Puerto Rican, b. 1913), Mauricio Lasansky (Argentine, b. 1914, active in the United

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NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS • 135 •


MARIA BONOMI, STAGE.

1962.

WOODCUT, 111.8 X I 0 1 . 6 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C.,

U.S.A. GIFT OF FRANCISCO

MATARAZZOSOBRINHO, 1964. PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

States) (p. 137), the Venezuelan Luisa Palacios (b. 1923), and the Uruguayans Luis A. Solari (b. 1918) (p. 139), Antonio Frasconi (b. 1919), Leonilda Gonzalez (b. 1924), and Anhelo Hernandez (b. 1922). All continued active during the period now under consideration and performed an important role as teachers. Lorenzo Homar, for example, trained all the young printmakers of his native island, emphasizing wood engraving, the silk-screen process, and poster production. The upsurge in graphics brought about a return to communal activity in collective workshops, where artists supported one another in moments of doubt and international crisis. A number found complete fulfillment in graphics, instead of alternating activity in this line with painting or sculpture. Such was the case with the Argentines Ana Maria Moncalvo (b. 1921), Eduardo Audivert (b. 1931), Julio Guillermo Paz (b. 1939), and Gristina Santander (b. 1942); with the Colombians Alonso Quijano Acero (b. 1927), Augusto Rendon (b. 1933), and Pedro Alcantara (b. 1940); with the Mexicans Juan Manuel de la Rosa (b. 1945) and Nunik Sauret (b. 1951); with the Puerto Rican Antonio Martorell (b. 1939);

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• 136- NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS


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NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS • 137 •

• MAURICIO LASANSKY. KADDISH. 1975. COLOR ETCHING, 107 X 66 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, WASHINGTON, D.C.,

OAS,

U.S.A. PUR-

CHASE FUND, 1978. PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

with the Uruguayans Glauco Capozzoli (b. 1929), Luis Camnitzer (b. 1939), and Naul Ojeda (b. 1939) (p. 139); and with the Venezuelan Francisco Bellorin (b. 1941). This flowering of graphics in Latin America is highly significant for the resistance it represents to the spectacular effort that was then being made on the international stage to find replacements for traditional art forms, which were held to be "dead." At the Latin American Exhibition of Drawings and Prints held in Caracas in 1967, the Venezuelan critic Juan Calzadilla was clear in his recognition of this point. He wrote: "Art is not dead. The situation is really one of coexistence, side by side, of a variety of concepts. This exhibition, for example, testifies to the continuing relevance of an inherited but living tradition. At a moment when our consciousness of being underdeveloped makes us prone to be dazzled by what is not our own, this exhibition of real works of art by genuine artists comes as a timely reminder that in art it is more important to be authentic than to be fashionable." It was precisely out of scorn for "fashionableness" that painters and sculp-


• JUAN ANTONIO RODA. LAUGHTER NO. 6. 1972. ETCHING 8/20, 64.8 X 48.4 CM. COLLECTION OF THE INTER-AMERICAN

DEVELOPMENT

BANK, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. PHOTOGRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

tors turned to printmaking. The case ofjuan Antonio Roda (Colombian, b. 1921) (p. 138) provides a brilliant example. As a painter he had attained the highest of levels with a series of Christs he did in 1968 and his Windows in Suba of 1970. From 1971 to 1976, however, he devoted himself exclusively to printmaking, producing series entitled Portrait of a Nobody, Laughter, The Dead Nuns' Delirium, and Dog Leashes. His prints, like those that Lasansky did on the Nazis and their victims, rank among the best produced in Latin America. They mark a break with the concept of uniqueness—of the work which exists solely in the original—and a step toward making art available, through reproduction, to the public of lesser means. The social aspect of printmaking was recognized by the Cuban revolution from the very first. Strong support was lent to the Print Workshop in Havana, at which a numerous generation of artists received training. The revolution achieved its greatest success, however, in the area of poster-production. It was first promoted by cultural institutions such as the Cuban Institute of Cinematographic Arts and Industries (ICAIC), the National Council of Culture, and the Union of Cuban Artists and Writers, but soon posters were adopted as a means of mass communication with the public. Painters old and young, graphic artists, and

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• 138 • NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS


NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS • 139 •

NAUL OJEDA. THE LAST SUPPER.

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1977. WOODCUT, 48.2 X 91.4 CM. REPRODUCED BY PERMISSION OF THE ARTIST (ABOVE). LUIS SOLARI.

CHARMING ALLEGORY. 1975. COLOR ETCHING AND DRYPOINT, 45.7

X 61 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS, WASHINGTON, D.C.,

U.S.A. PUR-

CHASE FUND, 1978 (BELOW). PHOTOGRAPHS BY ANGEL HURTADO.

movie-makers engaged in designing wall drawings and posters to serve as strategic weapons for bringing about the change of viewpoint required for radical political and social reforms. They achieved their purpose thanks to the artists' good taste and high professional standards, and to their skill at reducing themes to essentials. By their appreciation of the nature of the medium and its capacity for instant communication, they carried out a literacy campaign that was as effective in its way as the one waged in the schools. Cuban posters, like those produced in Poland, managed to escape the pitfalls of socialist realism, which is the ruination


• 140 • NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS

produced one of the most significant bodies of work in Latin America—an achievement that was recognized both there and in the United States, by critics such as Damian Bayon and Susan Sontag. At the same time that printmaking was reasserting its peculiar values and flourishing rather than retreating before the advances of "antimuseum art" or "Systems art," drawing also took on deeper significance. It was not a question of painters or sculptors indulging in drawing as a side line, but of artists devoting themselves to drawing heart and soul. Such was the case with the Mexican Jose Luis Cuevas (pp. 132, 141), who played a decisive role during the '70s in winning standing for drawing as a medium and in demonstrating its power of communication. Certain artists mentioned in the previous chapter, such as Zachrisson, Carlos Alonso, and Grassmann, showed a new and powerful imagination in their drawings. Among pioneer efforts worthy of mention are the Faceless Men, a series done in Mexico in 1968 by Luis Nishizawa (b. 1920), and the sketches, collages, and montages of the Ecuadorians Guillermo Muriel (b. 1925) and Hugo Cifuentes (b. 1923). The Ecuadorian critic Wilson Hallo rightly considers the latter to have been one of the main contributors to the development of graphic arts in his country, opening the way for young men such as Ramirojacome (b. 1948). Like free-hand drawing, illustration enjoyed new prestige, taking on the political and social significance it had had at the end of the nineteenth century. Good examples are provided by the series in tribute to the singer Carlos Gardel To the Master, with Love, done by the Uruguayan Hermenegildo Sabat (b. 1933), and the various series of political drawings done by the Guatemalan Arnoldo Ramirez Amaya (b. 1944) and the Colombian Gustavo Zalamea (b. 1951) (p. 143), whose Documents of the Planet date from 1979. In certain cases, such as those of the Mexican Javier Arevalo (b. 1957), the Peruvian Valeriano (i.e., Pablo Alvarez Valeriano, b. 1957), and the Ecuadorian Nicolas Svistonoff (b. 1945), a talent for drawing went hand in hand with skill in the techniques of printmaking. During the '70s Venezuela and Colombia could boast of draftsmen of exceptional quality—in the case of Venezuela, Alexis Gorodine (b. 1946), Simon Guedes (b. 1948), Jorge Pizzani (b. 1949), Francisco Quilici (b. 1954), and Maria Eugenia Arria (b. 1956); in that of Colombia, Miguel Angel Rojas (b. 1946), Felix Angel (b. 1949) (p. 161), Ever Astudillo (b. 1948), and Oscar Munoz (b. 1951). In their compositions line acquired a value of its own comparable to the values of painting. Draftsmen of the rank of Maria Lino (Cuban, b. 1951), Juan Ramon Velazquez (Puerto Rican b. 1950), and Remo Bianchedi (Argentine, b. 1950), not only confirmed the strength of traditional media but justified rejection of the transformation of art into a public spectacle. The idea that the "object of the art" had fallen into discredit was thoroughly disproved by the endeavors of individuals such as these. Moreover, the relatively modest price of graphics in the market and their public accessibility automatically gave them a "use value" which the partisans of antiart had vainly sought in their

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of painting, sculpture, and drawing as art. Avoiding ideological excess, the artists


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NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS • 141 •

• JOSE LUIS CUEVAS. SELF-PORTRAIT WITH

THE

YOUNG

LADIES

OF

AVIGNON. FROM THE SERIES IN

TRIBUTE TO PICASSO. 1973. PEN AND

INK WASH ON PAPER, 40 X 33.5 CM.

COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS, WASHING-

TON, D.C., U.S.A. PURCHASE FUND, 1974.

PHOTOGRAPH

HURTADO.

endeavor to free themselves from the tyranny of the "market value" set by middlemen. Recognition of art's "use value" was one of the great ambitions of the '70s. Recognition, however, takes on altogether different characteristics depending on whether one speaks of Latin America or the highly industrialized areas of the world. The difference between "use value" and "market value" that existed in the developed countries simply did not apply in Latin America. The crisis existing in the former could not be transplanted to the latter. When an attempt was made in this line, the result was a burst of artificial activity, promoted by entities such as the Center for Art and Communication (CAYC) in Buenos Aires. Thanks to the prestige acquired by draftsmanship and the intercommunication that took place at biennials and other collective exhibitions, graphic artists were able to lessen the distinction between "use value" and "market value," thereby attaining one of the prime objectives of the decade— a closer relationship between artists and the public. Of the three main lines of activity into which the work of this period can

BY ANGEL


be divided—the division being made merely for purposes of an orderly sampling of the enormous amount of material available—it is graphics that most clearly illustrates consciousness of the challenge to "directed chaos" that presented itself at the same time in the United States and in Europe. In a very real and original sense, graphics constituted the Latin American version of the "poor-man's art" that was first promoted in Italy and then became one of the passing fashions of the '60s and '70s, taking on the sophistication which fashionableness implies. Multiple prints for those of limited means, the modest production cost of graphic art as compared with painting and sculpture, and the transitory value of posters and wall art had the expected impact on the Latin American public. The "ephemeral mural" done by Jose Luis Cuevas for the fashionable "Pink Zone" of Mexico City, the Speedway Museum promoted by Rafael Bogarin (b. 1946) at El Tigre racetrack in Venezuela, the newspaper reproductions and heliogravures of which the Colombian Gustavo Zalamea made distribution were all planned and executed with the general public in mind. Thus in the Latin American context graphic artists constituted a true avant-garde. Three of the products of the people-oriented avant-garde merit particular attention: "objects," textiles, and primitive paintings. Toward the end of the '60s, in the heat of the general break with tradition, a number of artists turned out "objects," employing a variety of materials. The creations presented by the Colombian ceramist Beatriz Daza (1927-1968) in 1966 under the title "The Testimony of Objects" are substantially different from the ceramics done by three women active in Venezuela—those produced from 1967 to 1969 by Tecla Tofano (born in Italy in 1927), those of Seka Severin (born in Yugoslavia in 1923, came to Venezuela in 1960), and the ones turned out in the early '70s by Colette Delozanne (born in France in 1934, came to Venezuela in 1955). All however provide good examples of the increasing lack of definition between areas of artistic endeavor. In Tecla Tofano's violent criticisms of male- and consumer-oriented society one can find elements of both sculpture and political caricature. Seka's pieces are like totems carved from stone. Delozanne engages in nostalgic archaeology, seeking to relink present-day Latin American society to its pre-Hispanic origins. Beatriz Daza's collages of real-life objects lent value to cups and spoons at a time when U.S. Pop Art was bringing such items into discredit. The same search for meaning is evidenced in the boxes of the Mexican Alan Glass (b. 1932). The magical effects they produce derive more from invention than from memory, contrary to the case of the U.S. artist Joseph Cornell. In the Surrealist line, the Mexican Xavier Esqueda (b. 1943) produced in 1968 a series he called Present Memories. One of the most original creative artists of the following generation was the Colombian Bernardo Salcedo (b. 1942). In the late '60s and throughout the '70s he turned out the largest collection of boxes and free-form objects in Latin America. He began with white boxes containing fragments of dolls, and went on, first to a series connected with speedways, and then to objects of his own invention that recall machinery and household appliances.

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• 142 • NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS


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NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS • 143 •

• GUSTAVO ZALAMEA TRABA STUDY WITH NARAJANA FRUIT. 1988. OIL

ON CANVAS, 200 X 200 CM. PHOTOGRAPH FURNISHED AND REPRODUCTION

AUTHORIZED

"CENTRO

DE

ARTE

BY

THE

EUROAME-

RICANO" GALLERY IN CARACAS, VENEZUELA.

Jose Ramon Lerma, a Chicano born in 1930, was one of the first to turn to a theme which was to become a commonplace in Latin American Pop Art— the Sacred Heart of Jesus. Others who took it up were the Colombian Juan Gamilo Uribe (b. 1945) and the Venezuelan Carlos Zerpa (b. 1950). The insistence on this theme and the fact that it crops up even in the work of a U.S. artist of Latin extraction give evidence of the strong pressure exerted by religion in Latin America. The originality of the theme from the viewpoint of Pop Art lies in the fact that it takes as its point of departure not a consumer product but a massproduced color print. Objects charged with meaning were also produced by the Brazilian Jonas dos Santos (b. 1947). In his use of "ecological" materials he resembles Frans Krajcberg (born in Poland in 1921, came to Brasil in 1948), but the end product is decidedly fetish-like in effect. This is also the case with the work of his compatriot Tunga (b. 1952). The "objects" made by the Colombian Ramiro Gomez (b. 1949) fall into the same category as the box-books of the U.S. artist Lucas Samaras; Gomez's is the poor-man's version, however, aggressively fashioned from nails, wire, tow, and rubbish.


The number of artists of interest during this period is too great to permit mention of all. As an example of the lively activity in textiles, let us take Mexico, where all sorts of new materials—thread, string, hemp, and other fibers; gold, silver, and other wires—were incorporated into the woven fabric, which might also be enhanced with collages of plexiglas and wood. Androna Linartas (b. 1940), Helga Freund (b. 1942), Tomas Gonzalez (b. 1942), Ismael Guardado (b. 1942), Aldape Luz (b. 1946), Marcela Villasefior (b. 1948), Teresa Villarreal Nunez (b. 1952), Maricarmen Hernandez (b. 1952), and Victor Abreu (b. 1952) provide good examples of the new directions taken in Mexican weaving. A not unnatural development in this generation was treatment of textiles as three-dimensional objects, as in the case of the tubes adorned with woven stripes executed by Maricarmen Hernandez in 1971. The originality of their invention was firmly asserted and remains unsurpassed. The most important event of the '70s as regards textiles was the extraordinary increase in the number of weavers: it was a mass appropriation of a means of expression closely linked to handicrafts and to the art of the past. There was unquestionably a willful effort to bring graphics, "objects," textiles, and folk arts into close rapport. Whereas in industrialized countries there was a great divorce between handicrafts and studio art, in Latin America folk inspiration continued to pervade all aspects of daily life, including studio art. In countries with a strong Indian tradition, folk art and relics of the pre-Hispanic past still live on. Even in countries such as Venezuela, in which modernization is far advanced, the folk tradition is preserved in prints, talismans, fetishes, and rites. Poverty and ethnic continuity are responsible for the fact that folk art is more easily visible in Brazil, Mexico, and Colombia than in the countries of the southern cone, in which the rise of the middle class has consigned such production to the provinces. Folk art covers a vast terrain. It corresponds to a need for self-expression, compensating in part for life's brutal social and economic inequalities. "Primitive" or "naive" painters were busy throughout the '70s. Free of the influence of changing fashion, they provide a positive, many-sided, timeless vision of the world. Among the pioneers in this line were the Nicaraguan Asilia Guillen (1887-1964) (p. 145), the Honduran Jose Antonio Velasquez (1906-1983) (p. 145), the Colombian Noe Leon (1907-1978), the Venezuelan Feliciano Carvallo (b. 1920), and the Colombian Sofia Urrutia (b. 1912). The last-mentioned constitutes a unique instance of a primitive painter springing from the cultural elite. All contributed to increased appreciation of a genre that had found its way into the commercial market thanks to the efforts of the primitives and pseudo-primitives of Haiti. When we come to the primitives born after 1940— Dirceu Carvalho (Brazilian, b. 1942), Joseph Jean-Gilles (Haitian, b. 1943) (p. 146), Julio Sequeira (Nicaraguan, b. 1947), Neke Alamo (Venezuelan, b. 1948)—we find that in nearly all cases we are dealing with works done solely for the artist's own satisfaction, without commercial intent. It is a static art, which permits of no change.

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• 144 • NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS


NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS • 145 •

ASILIA GUILLEN. RAFAELA HE-

RRERA

DEFENDS

THE

Copyright © by the Inter-American Development Bank. All rights reserved. For more information visit our website: www.iadb.org/pub

CASTLE

AGAINST THE PIRATES. 1962. OIL ON CANVAS, 63.5 X 96.5 CM. (ABOVE). JOSE ANTONIO VELASQUEZ.

SAN

ANTONIO DE ORIENTE. 1972. OIL ON CANVAS, 120 X 153.7 CM. (BELOW).

BOTH WORKS, COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS,

WASHINGTON, D.C.,

U.S.A.

PURCHASE FUND, 1962 AND 1972.

PHOTOGRAPHS BY ANGEL HURTADO.

In the 1970s, the Solentiname group constituted a case apart. It grew up in the village of the same name on the shores of Lake Nicaragua, under the inspiration of the poet Ernesto Gardenal. It was not a question of setting up a school for primitive painters: the village was as it were a forcing bed in which peasants were persuaded they had talent and provided with the means of expressing it. The results were surprising.


JOSEPH JEAN-GILLES.

HAITIAN

LANDSCAPE. 1973. OIL ON

CAN-

VAS, 76 X 122 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS,

WASHINGTON, D.C.,

PURCHASE FUND,

1974.

U.S.A. PHOTO-

GRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO.

During the '60s and '70s the international art scene was one big brassy show. In Latin America, however, the first current to evidence itself was willfully marginal in character, purposely antispectacular, and stubbornly devoted to conveying meaning. Paradoxically, "communication" was also the aim of the "happenings," the Conceptual art, and the Systems art of the period. Art was understood to be a language, with codes to be deciphered, and semiotics was all the rage. The principal critical confrontation of the period involved a matter of definition: What type of art bows to domination, and what type contributes to liberation? Two tendencies were evidenced in the endeavors to resolve this problem. On the one hand there was art that still took the form of an object produced in a traditional manner and circulated through the established channels of galleries and museums. On the other hand there was art that might take any form whatever but that was not to be treated as an object and that rejected both the concept of museums and galleries and the services which they offered. When it came to theory, traditional art was accused of serving the consumer market, and the art that broke with tradition was charged with being anticonsumer and incapable of meeting consumer needs. These, in broad outline, were the premises around which the arguments revolved.

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• 146 • NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS


It is difficult to review the period objectively because there is almost no difference between the criticisms made by one side and those made by the other. Critics who defended tradition that evidenced a capacity for renewal were by no means unanimous in their views. Their best-known spokesmen were the Argentine Damian Bayon and the Colombian Marta Traba. The books they published in the '70s differ in tone and objective, though they agree as to the tedium and weakness of the works systematically turned out by the avant-garde and its failure to communicate with the public. The avant-garde line was represented primarily by the Argentine Jorge Glusberg and the Peruvian Juan Acha, who likewise failed to agree with one another. In the '70s Glusberg adopted the strategy of the defenders of traditional art. "The new art," he wrote, "seeks to break the ideological bonds imposed by countries in which wealth and power are concentrated, employing at times the very methodology and language current in those countries, at times utilizing devices entirely its own. There is an undeniable convergence of attitudes with respect to what we might term the strategies of liberation. Though political and social in origin, they are clearly manifested in the cultural and artistic areas." For Marta Traba the artist's capacity for effecting a revolution lies in the substance and effectiveness of his message; for Glusberg, in his capacity for breaking with rules. Both critics concur as to the end result: the revolutionary artist will aid in the liberation process. However, the divergence between them with respect to artistic action was complete. Avant-garde art was produced for the elite; traditional art, circulated through galleries and museums, continued its task of educating the middle classes and sought to broaden further its range of action. Criticism suffered as a result of this confrontation. In light of the highly bellicose attitude of the avant-garde, the great majority of new critics to come along preferred to devote themselves to research and the history of art in their respective countries. The Venezuelan Maria Elena Ramos wrote in 1981: "If the artist is to reflect the real nature of our countries and of their inhabitants ('the public,' 'one's fellow men,' 'human beings,' 'active members of society') he cannot indulge in a solitary love affair with his own thoughts, like a person constantly staring at his reflection in a mirror. He must make others the object of his love, and do so effectively." The first Latin American colloquium on nonobjective art was held under the auspices of the Museum of Modern Art in Medellin in reaction to the Coltejer Biennial of 1981. It brought the confrontation between the two critical and aesthetic tendencies into focus, clarifying their points of difference. To get a clear idea of the situation, one must recall, first of all, the appearance of the nonobjective avant-garde in the U.S. and Europe in the early 1960s. In the U.S. the happenings or performances put on by Allan Kaprow (the first book on the topic, Happenings, Assemblages and Actions, was published in 1966) came at about the same time as Tinguely's self-destroying machine Tribute to New York (1960) and the destructive happenings that Wolf Vostell staged in Ulm, Germany (1964). The self-destruction process culminated in the bodily sacrifices of the Vienna group and the suicide of Piero Manzoni, the principal European advo-

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NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS • 147 •


cate of aggressive acts. Closely associated with the foregoing were acts such as those of Kounellis and Vito Aconcci in which the human body was made an object of degradation, or those of Charlotte Mormann or Yves Klein in which it was rendered the subject of ridicule. These are but two of innumerable types of "body art" and "destructive art." The smashing of luxury items—automobiles, refrigerators, and pianos—obviously reflects the affluence of the societies in which such acts took place. They constituted a reaction to the advertising with which the media bombarded society and to the emphasis placed on selection of the right brand name rather than on the pleasure to be derived from the use of a given product. The new Latin American critics were quick to see that this situation did not apply to their countries. The Peruvian critic Alfonso Castrillon wrote: "One can understand the succession of manifestations such as poor-man's art, ecological art, body art, happenings, and Systems art as responses to the crisis in sensitivity and the crisis with respect to the object considered as merchandise." Later he asserted: "Juan Acha advanced a theory that could find no acceptance among artists of that time [i.e., the 1960s] because industrialization was still in its beginnings in Peru and therefore modern technology and communications media could not fulfill the role proposed by McLuhan in his Utopian visions." At times the doubts aroused by obvious differences were stated in the form of questions. "Given the marginal character of activity in the nonobjective line—which parallels the activity of the traditional art market—to what extent," the Brazilian critic Aracy Amaral wondered, "can it be considered a desirable and effective factor for integrating the artist into the struggle in which a society such as that of Latin America is engaged? A society in which—as a political commentator has said with reference to Brazil—'80 percent of the population goes hungry and 20 percent represents those in power.'" The manifold antiart and avant-garde movements which evidenced themselves in Europe and the U.S. during the '60s and '70s had a solid social and economic base on which to operate. It was not a matter of individual novelty, such as the Merzbau (the cathedral of poverty) put up by Schwitters in the 1920s in Hannover, Germany, or the bottle of Paris air which Duchamp brought to the U.S. in 1915. The air that Piero Manzoni bottled half a century later represented a general spirit of aggressiveness towards the society in which all creative sectors participate. In Latin America a few solitary figures might be considered forerunners of this rebellion, for example the Brazilian Flavio Rezende de Carvalho (1899-1973), who broke the calm of Sao Paulo in 1931 with a series of extravagant performances, fashions, and situations expressly designed to shock the public. One must also keep in mind the Brazilian tradition of body movement to which the critic Aracy Amaral draws attention, a tradition which is expressed in such manifestations as Carnival, the voodoo rites of candomble, and the dance-like type of fighting known as capoeira. In the nonobjective line, Brazil once again showed itself a pioneer. The first group of nontraditional artists, headed by Rubens Gerchman (b. 1942) and

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• 148 • NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS


Antonio Dias (b. 1944), appeared in 1964 under the name of "New Objectivity." During the successive presentations of "Opinion" in 1965-66, the public had its first surprise encounter with Helio Oiticica (b. 1937) and his billiard tables with players absorbed in the game, and with the water-and-stone-filled plastic bags of Lygia Clark, already mentioned in the previous chapter as an avant-garde pioneer. In 1966 Wesley Duke Lee (b. 1931) made his appearance in Brazilian art with his "rex-time," or hope in avant-garde art, promoted by his own "Rex Gallery and Sons." It was a spectacle sponsored by the Di Telia Institute, entitled "The Mess," which stirred up opinion pro and con in Buenos Aires. It made the reputations of Leopoldo Maler (b. 1937) and Marta Minujin (b. 1941) (p. 149) and paved the way for a new generation which thereupon took center stage in Argentina: Pablo Mesejean (b. 1937), Delia Cancela (b. 1942), and Dalila Puzzovio (b. 1942). With them nontraditional art—which at that time had much of the nature of U.S. Pop Art and happenings—received the stamp of official approval. The active wielders of the stamp were the Di Telia Institute and the critic Jorge Romero Brest. Another critic, the previously mentioned Juan Acha, was the intellectual godfather of the Peruvian avant-garde. The MIMUY group was presented at the Institute of Contemporary Art, which played a role similar to that of the Di Telia Institute. It induced the young to reject traditional means of expres-

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NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS • 149 •

MARTA MINUJIN. THE FLOP. IN-

STALLATION (6 X 6 X 4 M.) PRESENTED AT THE TORCUATO DI TELLA

INSTITUTE IN BUENOS AIRES, ARGEN-

TINA, IN 1965. PHOTOGRAPH COURTESY OF MARTA MINUJIN.


sion; they thereupon proceeded to fill the gallery with garbage and trash. The Peruvian adventure culminated in 1969 with the Conceptual work of Rafael Hastings (b. 1945), who in an exhibit at the Institute of Contemporary Art, showed the course ofjuan Acha's development by a display of documents. Through its imitation of U.S. Pop Art and the satellite position it adopted with respect to U.S. and European Conceptual art—consecrated at the "Documenta" exhibit in Kassel, Germany—the avant-garde succeeded in making a way for itself from one end of Latin America to the other. Few attempts were made, however, to "nationalize" those forms of expression. In 1967 the Bogota Museum of Modern Art inaugurated an exhibit entitled "Environmental Spaces," at which five young artists—among them Alvaro Barrios (b. 1945), the future leader of the nonobjective trend—were given a whole floor for their presentation. This single experiment featured a maquette executed by a popular artist, so gigantic that it had to be stored on the Museum grounds until one of the walls of the room in which it was to be displayed could be demolished (and later rebuilt, at the Museum's expense). In 1968, however, the Brazilians and Argentines outdid the Colombians. In Brazil a public art month, called "Art in the Street," was organized by the critic Frederico Morais. Participants included Wilma Martins (b. 1934), Wanda Pimentel (b. 1943), Helio Oiticica (b. 1937), and Roberto Moriconi (born in Italy in 1932, came to Brazil in 1953). This occasion provided further evidence of the social orientation of the avant-garde, which sought to involve a public that was already accustomed to extroverted rituals and spur-of-the-moment spectacles. Oiticica's versatility and ingenuity were demonstrated by his parangoles, consisting of mantle-covered bodies which provided lively illustrations for the texts that were included. The populist and critical intent of the Brazilian movement, which was strengthened later by the contribution of groups in the Northeast, set it off from the one in Argentina, which was characterized by sophistication and elements of laboratory experimentation, even in its politically oriented action. In Brazil, violence took the name of "Apocalypopothesis." In Argentina Pablo Suarez (b. 1937) and Roberto Jacoby (b. 1944) initiated dissident action within the Di Telia Institute. Their slogan was "What counts is life." Their most visible achievement was the performance Tucumdn in Flames, in which they sought to involve the public by calling on the Workers' Federation and the community at large to participate. The scandalshow put on by the Di Telia Institute in 1968 was "Impo-Expo: Buenos Aires Up to Date." It evidenced little in the way of ingenuity and still less in the way of critical judgment. Paradoxically, the "new objectivity" and nonobjective art produced numerous "objects," such as the "box-poems" which Lygia Pape (b. 1929) turned out in Brazil in 1967, and the novel archaeological book-objects which Jacques Bedel (b. 1947) authored in Argentina in 1968. Objects were also destroyed. They were however of less value than those used by the Europeans in such cases. In 1970, for example, the Brazilian Cildo Meireles (b. 1948) burned chickens alive. In the course of the numerous performances he put on later, he recorded

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• 150 • NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS


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NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS • 151 •

LUIS FERNANDO BENEDIT. THE

CAT. 1969. ACRYLIC ON CANVAS,

47 X 55.9 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS, OAS,

WASHINGTON, D.C.,

PURCHASE

FUND,

1970,

U.S.A.

PHOTO-

GRAPH BY ANGEL HURTADO,

messages to put in Coca Cola bottles, which were then returned to circulation. The Coca Cola logo served the same purpose for the Conceptual artists as did the image of the Sacred Heart ofjesus for the Pop artists. The Colombian Antonio Caro (b. 1950) won fame by imitating the first syllable of the logo in writing his country's name. In 1969, with the ideological and financial backing of Jorge Glusberg, the Center for Art and Communication (CAYC) of Buenos Aires began to achieve new prominence. Between that year and 1973, a number of artists affiliated with the institution visited the best-known fashion and spectacle centers of Europe and Japan and countries noted for high technology, where they took up computer art. In 1969 they had made themselves felt in so many places and had sufficient means that they were able to hold an Interdisciplinary Encounter on Body Art at the Pompidou Center in Paris, at which the nucleus of the group, composed of Clorindo Testa (mentioned in the previous chapter), Victor Grippo (b. 1936), Luis Benedit (b. 1937) (p. 151), Leopoldo Maler (b. 1937), Vicente Marotta (b. 1935), and Jacques Bedel (b. 1947) had already appeared. The traveling exhibition on Systems art in Latin America which circulated at the same time presented works by more than 70 artists, including many from the area of graphics or who had only occasionally ventured into nontraditional activities. In the same year


1969, pressure of circumstances forced CAYG to forsake its international pretensions and adopt the mantle of Latin Americanism, rejecting foreign models and calling for the liberation of oppressed peoples. The use as a slogan of Antonio Gramsci's saying "Truth is always revolutionary" is highly indicative of the sudden change. It was in 1969 too that a large number of artists and critics boycotted the Sao Paulo Biennial in protest against the excesses of the military dictatorship. This was a more effective act than the Idle Myths performance suggested by Ivald Granato (b. 1949) as an answer to the First Latin American Biennial in 1978. In 1970 Antonio Manuel (b. 1947) put on a corporal performance in Brazil, proclaiming as he stripped off his clothes, "My work is my body." He was continuing a line previously exploited by Oiticica, Lygia Clark, and Ferreira Gullar. At about the same time Emilio Hernandez (b. 1940) was presenting photos and "environments" and engaging in Conceptual art processes and ecological explanations at the Culture and Liberty Gallery in Lima. Thenceforth the new forms of expression took their place in museums, and experimental groups multiplied, taking two different lines: they either went into isolation, constituting a hermetic avant-garde that abstained from communication, or they infiltrated folk art, as in the case of Brazil, Mexico, and Colombia. A majority of the artists who appeared during this decade in Argentina were absorbed into the Center for Art and Communication; among them were Geny Dignac (b. 1932), Jaime Davidovich (b. 1936), Lea Lublin (b. 1929), Luis Pazos (b. 1940), and Carlos Ginzburg (b. 1946). Whatever the political or social message of such performances as were put on, it was blurred into a generalized perception of CAYC-type avant-garde art. The Tribute to Chief Viltipico, the last headman of the Humahuacas, presented by Alfredo Portillos (b. 1928), melds with the passion of "Art and Cybernetics" in Buenos Aires. The triumph of the Group of Thirteen at the Sao Paulo Biennial signaled the victory of "objects" and spectacles over traditional systems. Leopoldo Maler, who presented the spectacle The Place in London in 1969, wound up collaborating in 1981 with Marta Minujin in the performance From Amaru to Barthes, in which fields and purposes were defined. Involved in the performance were three critics: the Frenchman Pierre Restany, the Argentine Jorge Romero Brest, and the Peruvian Juan Acha. The performance was totally lacking in public participation and support. Its name implied the idea behind it: Tupac Amaru and Roland Barthes were superficial disguises for Latin Americanism and semiotics. In 1976, CAYC once again undertook a regional role, presenting "Latin America 76" at the Miro Foundation in Barcelona, Spain. The reaction came in 1977 with the announcement of the Benson and Hedges Prize for new Argentine painting, in an attempt to clarify the national scene, for in reality traditional art had not been stamped out by the avant-garde but continued to flourish. The same recognition of the situation had been achieved in Brazil, more consciously and with greater rapidity, at the Salon for Young Contemporary Art in 1972, at which acknowledgment was made of the coexistence of avant-garde

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• 152 • NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS


and traditional studio art. This notwithstanding, there were really important avant-garde manifestations in Brazil in the early 1970s. In 1971, the Rio de Janeiro Museum of Modern Art sponsored the "Activity-Creativity" symposia, at which the leading figures were Lygia Pape, Antonio Manuel, and Ana Bela Geiger (b. 1933). The same year the "Creation Sundays" coordinated by the critic Frederico Morais got the people of Rio and a large number of artists working together in an effort to stimulate invention at the folk level. Two years later the critic Aracy Amaral and the French artist Fred Forest (b. 1933, active in Rio de Janeiro in the 1970s) had the idea for "Sound and You," which was carried out with the help of Radio Pan-Americana. The project consisted in receiving and disseminating reactions and replies from the public. Undoubtedly the capacity for dialogue and the creation of politico-social consciousness displayed by Brazilian critics from Mario Pedrosa to Frederico Morais, together with their concern for communication, is a fundamental factor in the constantly maintained relationship between the avant-garde and the people. The Brazilian critic Ferreira Gullar had a peculiarly acute awareness of the two directions taken by art under the pressure exerted by mass culture. According to him, art either disintegrated before the advance of new images, situations, and actions, or else it sought to identify with mass culture, adopting its methods and resources. In this regard he pointed out the need that knowledge be gained, not through intuitive perception of reality, but through common human experience, since it thereby acquires a deeper and truer power of expression. Critics in Mexico identified with the avant-garde in its concern for the relationship between art and the people, witness the writings of Rita Eder and Ida Rodriguez Prampolini and the theories developed in the '70s by Nestor Garcia Canclini. In 1971 the Mexico City Museum of Modern Art exhibited Systems art for the first time, giving rise to fears that the avant-garde might become intellectualized in the Argentine manner. Despite this beginning to the decade and the ultrasophistication of the performances carried out in 1972 by the writer Alejandro Jodorowsky and the painter Alberto Gironella (b. 1929), whose Burial qf^apata was put on as a happening at the Palace of Fine Arts, just as in the case of Brazil a proliferation of groups assured a variety of experiments and a continuing consciousness of the vigor of Mexican folk culture. The groups of the mid '70s were thoroughly populist in character. There was the "No Group," which questioned art's sacred cows and the advertising and distribution media, giving dramatic presentations similar to Chicano theater. There was the "Pentagon Process," particularly concerned for liberation struggles in Latin America and the fate of those who had "disappeared" because of their political beliefs. The Summa Group painted street murals after the fashion of the Ramona Parra Brigade, active in Chile during the presidency of Salvador Allende, which ended in 1973. The Plastic Research Workshop promoted community-painted murals. In 1978 the Mexico City Museum of Modern Art sponsored the "New Tendencies" exhibition, at which an effort was made to bring together groups of a more intellectual character: the Intersection Group headed by Moises

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NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS • 153 •


Zabludowsky, concerned with city architecture and urban art; Monica Mayer, with her project for a wall on which the public could express its opinions in the form of graffiti; Susana Sierra (b. 1942) with her stelae; Ivette Fertes, with "neon in the city." That same year, at the Forum for Contemporary Art, a panel composed of Bostelmann, Donde, Estrada, and Naranjo discussed the media and the validity of Conceptual art, considerably after similar debates had taken place elsewhere in the world. In 1980 a group called Alternative Forms—likewise composed of Enrique Bostelmann (b. 1939), Olga Donde (b. 1935), and Rogelio Naranjo (b. 1937)—presented Life, Passion, and Death on the basis of their respective pictorial and graphic experiences. The Ajolotes Project directed by the writer Elizondo, who caustically sought to redefine Mexican culture as "Axolotl (i.e. salamander) culture," provided a good example of the mingling of the folk element with intellectual satire, as did the project "Peyote and Company." In Colombia the avant-garde took a position halfway between esoteric isolation and continuing communication with the public, the need for which was clearly felt by individual artists. Among the moderates were Bernardo Salcedo (b. 1942); Jose Urbach (b. 1940), with important Conceptual work supported by photographs; and Dora Ramirez (b. 1923), and Marta Elena Velez (b. 1939), with their Pop paintings. The break with traditional art was best typified by Beatriz Gonzalez (b. 1938) with her demystification of culture in general and Colombian culture in particular. Toward the end of the '70s she turned to largescale work, divided between enormous canvases in which she reworked Manet's Dejeuner sur I'herbe, shower curtains printed with the likeness of President Turbay, and television sets on which the president's face was also repeated for humoristic effect. The esoteric avant-garde in Colombia was promoted by museums at which young critics congregated. The Bogota Museum of Modern Art sponsored the "Athens Salon," La Tertulia Museum in Cali organized "Art in the Eighties," and the Medellin Museum of Modern Art was responsible for the previously mentioned colloquium on nonobjective art. The decentralization of art in Colombia favored the simultaneous growth of a number of esoteric movements. The strongest group was unquestionably "The Syndicate," active in Barranquilla from 1976 to 1979. Its leading light was Alvaro Barrios (b.1945), who in 1979 organized the Barranquilla Festival of Avant-garde Art. As was the case with Beatriz Gonzalez, the target of Barrios' work was European culture, as represented by Raphael, Millet, Marcel Duchamp, and Pollaiuolo. Group 44, also based in Barranquilla, is best represented by Alvaro Herazo's maps and the food-product landscapes of Delfina Bernal. (Both artists were born in 1942.) The cleverness of the code-setting elite was always affected—despite its efforts to the contrary—by the real poverty of Colombian life. Greater authenticity is therefore to be found in the work of the avant-garde artists who reflect that poverty—such as Gabriel Sencial (b. 1947) with the examples of bus art he displayed in 1972, Carlos Restrepo (b. 1950) with his sculptures made of wire and toothpaste tubes, Jonier Marin (b. 1946) with his Amazon project, Alicia Barney (b.1952) with the industrial waste she gathered

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• 154 • NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS


from Yumbo, Inginio Caro (b. 1952) with his wax sculptures—than in the constructions of Sara Modiano (b. 1951) or Monica Negret (b. 1957). Thirty years after the first acts of aggression, destruction, or environmental change, similar performances by young Colombians serve but to show how uninformed a "closed-door" country such as theirs can be. The same observation applies to serial photos or photomontages that reflect U.S. experimentation along such lines. The team of Medellin architects made up of Jorge Mario Gomez, Patricia Gomez, and Fabio Antonio Ramirez was in a better situation. Using photos, videotapes, films, and monographs, they aimed at such visionary urban undertakings as the Monument to Jose Marti or the "Colombianisco Project," in all of which contact was maintained with reality. The naturally "pop" character of daily life in Colombia was an obstacle to attempts at intellectual Pop Art. This explains the failure met by the Argentine Marta Minujin's burning of an effigy of Carlos Gardel in Medellin in 1980, in contrast with the success of Juan Camilo Uribe's prints featuring Bolivar and the miraculous doctor Jose Gregorio Hernandez. The development of social consciousness by young artists led to other experiments: the mural newspapers on occurrences in Colombia executed by Diego Arango (b. 1942) and Nirma Zarate (b. 1936), the Wrappings for our Institutions (enormous bags stamped in printer's ink) turned out by Gustavo Zalamea (b. 1951), and Alfredo Guerrero's accusatorial compositions labeled The Colombian Fatherland Sunk in a Morass. When avant-garde tendencies suddenly appeared in countries such as Peru and Venezuela, they seemed even more like imports from abroad than in the cases previously analyzed. New experiments and attitudes cropped up sporadically in Peru during the '70s but had no impact on the public. In 1972 Teresa Burga (b. 1939) presented at the Peruvian-American Cultural Institute a series of clinical self-portraits recording stages of her life as observed over the period of a month. The critic Alfonso Castrillon wrote: "The sudden leap into avant-garde art which took place about 1968 found no echo in our society and evidenced a lack of critical reflection during the production process." This applies to all that followed until the "Sign Countersign Exhibit" promoted by the architects Willey Ludena and Hugo Salazar in 1979. Attempts at breaking with tradition were ill founded, and invariably outdated. Award of the 1976 National Prize for Plastic Arts to the retablo-makerjoaquin Lopez Antay (1897-1981) was a bold criticism of both the emptiness of studio art and the uncalled-for extravagance of art that broke with tradition. The decision foreshadowed the democratic aims of the nationalistic revolution which General Velasco Alvarado led in 1968. Kinetic art was dominant in Venezuela in the early '70s and bore the stamp of official approval. The young artist who came along could either play it safe, producing a kinetic picture, mural, or object, or take his chances on some other means of expression. The most important member of the younger generation was William Stone (b. 1945). He headed a brilliant group which numbered among its members Margot Romer (b. 1938), Ana Maria Mazzei (b. 1941), and Beatriz Blanco (b.1944). In 1973 they promoted three spectacle-exhibitions:

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NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS • 155 •


Man's Lost Sensations, presented at the Mendoza Foundation, Contribution to General Confusion, and Skin against Skin. The last-mentioned—a space complex, designed like the others to arouse diverse sensations of touch, sight, and hearing in the spectator—went on to the Twelfth Sao Paulo Biennial. However, it was through photography, videotapes, and particularly "Super 8" that the avant-garde standard was snatched from the hands of kinetic artists. Photography was handled with a certain degree of caution. The admirable Jose Sigala (b. 1940) reinterpreted the U.S. classic tradition; Ana Luisa Figueredo and Ricardo Armas stood out among younger photographers. The greatest contribution of photography to the avant-garde movement was the support it provided for Conceptual art. The work of Claudio Perna (b. 1939) stands out in an extensive range of "mixed techniques" which achieved maximum effect in the production of "Super 8." There were a large number of cinematographers, but only Diego Rizquez (b. 1949) produced critically coherent work, the most notable example of which, Bolivar, a Tropical Symphony, came toward the end of the '70s. Working in the mordantly satiric spirit of the "Whale Roof group, Carlos Zerpa (b. 1950) combined a variety of media in attacking themes such as Jose Gregorio Hernandez, the unbeatable Sacred Heart of Jesus, and Venezuela's oil-derived wealth. The last-mentioned he mocked in the spectacle Welcome, Mr. Nation, which concluded with a shower of coins. Stimulated by the Venezuelan critic Margarita D'Amico, the production of videotapes, "Super 8," comic strips, and performances followed step by step the festivals promoted by Charlotte Mormann and Nam Jum Paik in the United States. Comic strips played a marginal role in these behind-the-times activities. The Mexican Jesusa Rodriguez, Nelson Moctezuma (b. 1949), and Zalathiel Vargas (Mexican, b. 1941) sought however to give new life to the comic strip as an impact-producing vehicle of satiric communication. Finally, mention should be made of a few figures who invented their own individual forms of avant-garde art, without swelling the ranks of any given group. There were, for example, Vinicio Horta (Brazilian, b. 1942), with his "mortuary chapel"; Ana Mendieta (Cuban, b. 1948), with the silhouettes and clay compositions she did in 1972; the Colombian Silvia Mejia (b. 1943), with the exhibit of photographs of hands which she presented in 1978 under the title "Words of Feminine Gender"; the bundles or wrappings of the Chilean Catalina Parra; and the Puerto Rican printmaker Jose Rosa (b. 1939), with his Bottles that Sell Us, a series with strong links to folk art and sayings. During the 1970s the avant-garde was characterized by "antiart" manifestations and by an aggressive attitude which was immediately neutralized in art centers by the power of the media and establishment institutions. In Latin America, however, the paradox of institutionalized aggression can be found only in Buenos Aires, for the reasons already set forth, and in Venezuela, where the ruling class felt the need to take on a twenty-first-century air. In the rest of the region avant-garde tendencies remained outside the mainstream until they were accepted by museums and presented like any other trend, not as substitutes for

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traditional art. From the viewpoint of concrete accomplishment, the avant-garde failed in the objectives at which it aimed: it brought about neither the death of art nor the demolition of institutions. It had no critical impact, since it had lost all contact with the public whose feelings it was supposed to arouse. Understanding of its message remained the privilege of a small elite. In cases in which it did not lose sight of society but played rather the role of an irreverent iconoclast, it brought a breath of fresh air and a new appreciation of the creative power inherent in the people. In these instances it has a legitimate place in the history of the development of modern Latin American art. The third line of artistic production in the 1970s is represented by traditional uses of accepted media and firm confidence in symbolic language's power of communication. Here it is impossible to draw a clear dividing line between young artists born after 1940 and those who preceded them. More than in previous decades renewal was a matter of local circumstance. In the case of Buenos Aires, for instance, it can be measured by the degree to which the artist came into confrontation with the Center for Art and Communication. In Colombia studio art was dominant and maintained an unbroken line of communication with the public. Nonobjective and avant-garde art was relegated to a place on the periphery. In Venezuela kinetic art retained a position of preponderance. However, the strength of the art market was such as to permit simultaneous activity along new and traditional lines, including graphics, since buyers could be found for everything, at least up to 1983. We repeat that the persistence of traditional media of expression amid imitations or adaptations of avant-garde imports has a "behavioral" value. The "behavioral" idea was strong in the '70s. The Documenta exhibitions in Kassel, Germany, and the Venice Biennial, at which European novelties were much in evidence, gave "behavior" a very precise meaning: the artistic object was supplanted in importance by the creative act or the impulse that led the artist thereto. "Behavior," understood as action, concerned itself with creating situations (necessarily ephemeral in nature, despite the fact that they might be captured on film) or with leaving evidence of the process which led up to the act of creation, there being no particular interest in the creation itself. However, long before this term became a buzz word among opinion-shapers in the avant-garde, the lines of work in which Latin American artists engaged can be viewed as "behavior" provoked by the 180° turn in aesthetic concepts, the new burden of ideology imposed on the avant-garde, and the exactions of the cultural industry. As regards aesthetics, the Latin Americans who defended painting, sculpture, drawing, and printmaking and continued in their practice lent support to the placement of values within a historical framework. They categorically opposed the new "aesthetics of deterioration," in accordance with which all axiological considerations were rejected in favor of change and transitory situations. They were also called to respond to the strong ideological influence of the media—to the illusion of a single, worldwide culture, achieved by transfer to the third world of the symbols associated with highly industrialized countries. In

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NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS • 157 •


their response the Latin Americans emphasized in one way or another their regional character, rejecting concepts of foreign origin and exploiting the possibilities afforded by local cultures. Opposition to the cultural industry was relatively easy. The danger foreseen by the sociologists of the Frankfurt school, that the artist might be taken over by industry and alienated from art, had little application in Latin America, owing to the weakness of industrial organization in that part of the world. The two principal determinants of Latin American "behavior" were a sense of history and a will to communicate with society. In 1980, when artists in the U.S. and Europe once again proclaimed the need to give their work a social value, the significance of Latin American behavior 20 years earlier became readily apparent. There was considerable development along abstract lines during the period under consideration. One notes the contribution of such young artists as the Brazilians Marzia Barroso do Amaral (b. 1943) and Adriano d'Aquino (b. 1946); the Paraguayan Enrique Gareaga (b. 1944); Alberto Icaza Vargas (b. 1945, active in Costa Rica); the Colombians Alberto Uribe (b. 1947), John Castles (b. 1946), Edelmira Boiler (b. 1940) and Ronny Vajda (b. 1954). The last-mentioned was responsible for the most important sculptural work since Negret and Ramirez Villamizar. One notes also the knots and flat stones of the Argentine Fabriciano Ramos (b. 1944), and the hard-edge compositions of the Peruvian Giro Palacios (b. 1943). All brought a refreshing note of novelty, limited, however, by respectful observance of geometric precepts in painting or sculpture. In Venezuela, where interest had centered entirely on kinetic art, the new activity in the geometric-abstract area succeeded in attracting the public to painting such as that produced by Guido Morales (b. 1946), Jorge Veliz (b. 1949), Diana M. Villamizar (b. 1949), Christine Malcuzinsky (b. 1951), Pedro Pina (b. 1953), Julio Pacheco Rivas (b. 1953), and Alejandra Daini (b. 1957). Jorge Pacheco Rivas provides a perfect example of the trend toward less mechanical forms of art as he moves from Surrealist concepts of space to highly imaginative free-form constructions. The great surprise of the '70s as regards the geometric-abstract area was the mass turn of young Mexicans toward a form of expression that had previously been the province of solitary pioneers such as Gunther Gerzso (see the previous chapter) or Rodolfo Zanabria (b. 1930). Their work was characterized by interest in color fields and adoption of hard-edge techniques. Such is the case with Arnaldo Coen (b. 1940), Hersua (b. 1940), Ricardo Regazzoni (b. 1942), Benjamin (b. 1943), Francisco Moyao (b. 1946), Ignacio Salazar (b. 1947), Sebastian Roberto Real de Leon (b. 1950), Carlos Agustin (b. 1952), Omar Gasca (b. 1952), Susana Campos, and Alejandro Herrera (b. 1955). The lastmentioned was one of a group of young geometric-abstract artists from Oaxaca who were strongly influenced by Gerzso and Donis. Another important aspect of Mexican Neogeometry was its connection with sculpture and architecture. Important precedents were set by the sculptures

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of the Path of Friendship designed for the Olympic Games of 1968 and Angela Gurria's Usumacinta River project. In 1979 the Center for Sculptural Space was opened in the Mexican capital's University City. Helen Escobedo, Mathias Goeritz, and Manuel Felguerez were among the established artists participating; Sebastian, Silva, and Hersua, among the newer figures. The critic Rita Eder characterized the ensemble as part urban, part ecological: "An enormous sea of wrinkled lava is surrounded by 64 smooth, 3-by-4-meter modules. It has the attraction of ancient stone circles and exudes the monumental spirit of pre-Hispanic architecture. Nonetheless, it represents a modern concept of space." It is interesting to note that the decade of the '70s, which began with a work that might have been conceived by the Pharaohs, the "Mexico of the Year 2000" project, of which Siqueiros' Polyforum was a part, concluded with the Sculptural Space, an undertaking in which the air was cleared of official ideology and the bad taste of the ruling class was thoroughly repudiated. A tendency developed during the '70s which remained within the bounds of Neogeometry but permitted of certain poetic touches and sought for more indirect or elliptical modes of expression. The Brazilian critic Roberto Pontual labeled it "Lyric Abstraction" at the exhibition he organized for the Rio Museum of Modern Art in 1978 after engaging in extensive research and collecting works from throughout Latin America. The tendency evidenced itself in Mexico in works of great versatility and good taste, as in the output of such artists as Beatriz Zamora (b. 1935), Rafael Zepeda (b. 1938), and Gabriel Macotela (b. 1954). Other interesting figures were Ismael Martinez Guardado (b. 1942), Jose Luis Serrano (b. 1947), Kiyoto Ota Okuzawa (born in Japan in 1948, came to Mexico in 1972), Francisca Sutil (b. 1952), Federico Amat (born in Barcelona, Spain, in 1952, but active in Mexico), Susana Sierra (b. 1942), and Agueda Lozano (b. 1944). Similar to the work of the last-mentioned is that of the Nicaraguan Use Manzanares. All these helped the advance toward modernization, shaking off the bonds imposed by the Muralist School and the figurative painting that had succeeded it, so that complete freedom of expression was at last achieved. Various types of Lyric Abstraction were developed in Colombia by Ana Mercedes Hoyos (b. 1942) in her works of the late 1970s, Ana Maria Rueda (b. 1954), Hugo Zapata (b. 1945), and Alvaro Marin (b. 1946). The work of the lastmentioned is similar to that of the Puerto Rican abstract landscapists Wilfredo Chiesa and Colo. Wherever the Lyric Abstraction tendency manifested itself—as in the work of the Ecuadorian Mario Soils (b. 1940), the Uruguayan Ney (b. 1943), the Brazilian Claudio Tozzi (b. 1944), and the Cubans Richard Rodriguez and Rafael Vadia (both born in 1950), and in the compositions done in the '70s by the Peruvian Martha Vertiz—one can recognize a desire for symbolic communication which transcends the purely visual message of the Neogeometric artists. The organic atmosphere, the presence of nature as a remembered or conceivable landscape, the delicate intromission of graphic signs, the notes and touches that have no relation to rational thought—all these serve to link the Lyric Ab-

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• LUIS CABALLERO. DARK NIGHT OF SAINT JOHN OF THE CROSS. 1977. LITHOGRAPH 13/60, 29.2 X 43.2 CM. COLLECTION OF THE INTER-AMERICAN DEVELOPMENT BANK, WASHINGTON, D.C., U.S.A. PHOTOGRAPH BY WILLIE HEINZ.

straction of the '70s to the worldwide growth of ecological groups, though to be sure there is no cause-and-effect relationship between the two. One must acknowledge also that in Latin America the ecological movement did not take on the dramatic character of a crusade to save humanity that it had in the highly industrialized countries. It consisted more in an awareness of the need to preserve flora and fauna (including isolated Indian tribes) that were on the way to extinction, and a consciousness of living in a realm of nature whose wild beauty has not yet been destroyed. The impossibility of drawing a clear line between artists born before and after 1940 applies also in the figurative area,whatever the tendency taken—realistic, hyperrealistic, or surrealistic. In 1970, just as in previous decades, Latin American realism kept its distance from the spectacular hyperrealism that characterized the U.S. return to figurative painting. It also viewed with distrust the appearance toward the end of the '70s of the ultravanguard in Italy, Germany, and the United States, preceded in the last-mentioned case by the "brutalism" of the Chicago groups and the mural work of the Chicanos on the West Coast. The U.S. ultravanguard differed from its European counterpart in that it incorpo-

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rated marginal groups, particularly the Puerto Ricans in Manhattan who had been responsible for the graffiti in the subways 15 years earlier. There were but a few isolated representatives of the ultravanguard in Latin America: the Cuban Luis Cruz Azaceta (b. 1942) (p. 162); the Argentine Osvaldo Romberg (b. 1938), the reference here is to his relatively recent work, done around 1980; and the Mexican Alejandro Colunga (b. 1948), whose fable-like work of the late '70s, inspired in national myths, exudes a brute force far superior to that of the European ultravanguard of the 1980s. Several artists show how far Latin American realism can go by a concentrated effort that is outwardly manifested in perfectionist painting, for example Gregorio Cuartas (Colombian, b. 1938), Carlos Revilla (Peruvian, b. 1940), Gonzalo Morales (Costa Rican, b. 1945), and the Brazilian Gregorio Correia. In this context the human figure constitutes a silent spectacle, to be read much as a landscape, witness the work of Teresa Moran (Mexican, b. 1939), Dario Morales (Colombian, b. 1944), and Hector Giuffre (Argentine, b. 1944). In contrast with this essentially quiet realism we find work of a more dramatic character. Thus a religious atmosphere of suffering and penance pervades the extraordinary compositions of the Colombian Luis Caballero (b. 1943) (p. 160) and the sculptures of

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• FELIX ANGEL. MAN ALONE. 1974. PENCIL, CRAYON, AND TEMPERA

ON PAPER, 50 X 70 CM. COLLECTION OF THE ART MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAS,

OAS,

WASHINGTON,

D.C., U.S.A. PURCHASE FUND, 1974. PHOTOGRAPH BY WILLIE HEINZ.


• LUIS CRUZ AZACETA. CITY PAINTER OF HEARTS.

1981.

ACRYLIC

ON

CANVAS, 182.8 X 304.8 CM, (TWO PANELS). COLLECTION OF MR. AND MRS.

DAVID WORKMAN,

STAM-

FORD, CONNECTICUT, U.S.A. PHOTOGRAPH BY ERIC POLLITZER FURNISHED BY FRUMKIN/ADAMS GALLERY, NEW YORK, U.S.A.

the Venezuelan Carlos Prada (b. 1944). In his painting the Venezuelan Edgard Sanchez (b. 1940) successfully meets all dramatic challenges, as does the Colombian sculptress Beatriz Echeverri (b. 1938) in her treatment of the human body. Realism finds a third form of expression in the grotesque. The sources from which this trend derives are many; among others one can recognize vaguely the hand of such masters as the Colombian Fernando Botero, the Englishman Francis Bacon, and the Dutchman Karel Appel. It is local reality that supplies the basic material, however—the deforming effect that Latin American society has on individuals, acts, and situations. Among the representatives of this trend are the Argentine Hugo Sbernini (b. 1942), Antonio Moya (born in Spain in 1942, active in Venezuela), the Venezuelan Alirio Palacios (b. 1944), the Nicaraguan Dino Aranda (b. 1945), and the Colombians Jorge Mantilla Caballero (b. 1946) and Francisco Rocca (b. 1946). Ugliness and deformity continue to crop up throughout the '70s, treated in a variety of ways by figures such as the Colombian Maria de la Pazjaramillo (b. 1948) and three artists born in 1949: the Argentine Jorge Alvaro, the Colombian Felix Angel, and the Venezuelan Anita Pantin. Colombia has been particularly prolific in artists in this line, owing doubtless to the stimulating example of Fernando Botero. The variations run a wide gamut, from the figures tied up and hanging by their feet painted by Sonia Gutierrez (b. 1947) to the huge, flat figures of Alberto Sojo (b. 1956) and the

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gesturalism of Maria Teresa Vieco (b. 1952). In the three-dimensional field we have the rag sculptures of Lilia Valbuena (Venezuelan, b. 1946) and the cut-out metal silhouettes of Abigail Varela (Venezuelan, b. 1948), which recall those of her compatriot Beatriz Blanco (b. 1944). All constitute disquieting representations of the human figure. Disquietude can also be felt in landscape painting. One can note it in the work of the Argentine Maria Helguera (b. 1943), with her dislocated rooms, the Venezuelan Ana Maria Mazzei (b. 1941), Jorge Segui (born in Argentina in 1945 but active in Venezuela), Nicolas Amoroso (born in Argentina in 1944 but active in Mexico), the Argentine Miguel Angel Bengoechea (b. 1945), the Venezuelan Francisco Quilici (b. 1954), the Mexican Saul Villa (b. 1958), and a number of painters from Oaxaca, Mexico, most notably Filemon Santiago (b. 1958) and Felipe de Jesus Morales (b. 1959). The divergent paths taken in figurative painting were in many cases a matter of individual choice. Some artists took pleasure in combining objects and color fields, or in developing a color field to the fullest extent of its possibilities, as was the case with Julio Larraz (Cuban, b. 1944) and Eduardo Tamariz (Mexican, b. 1945). The somber chromatic atmosphere of pool halls presides over the work of the Colombian Saturnino Ramirez (b. 1946). Americo Castilla (Argentine, b. 1942), Adrian Pujol (Venezuelan, b. 1948), and in particular Antonio Barrera (Colombian, b. 1948) paint calm, loosely composed landscapes with the same energy that Edgard Silva (Colombian, b. 1944) produces tightly constructed ones. Such diverse elements as suns, eggs, fragments of birds, and machine-like forms appear in the work of Roberto Huezo (Salvadoran, b. 1947), Carlos Aresti (Chilean, b. 1939), and Eduardo Berroeta (Chilean, b. 1946). Closely drawn, sharply outlined figures distinguish the compositions of the Colombian Heriberto Cogollo(b. 1945). The Latin American hyperrealist tendency is marked by strong, sensitive concern for covering the gamut of reality. This is evidenced in the work of a long list of young painters and graphic artists. Carmen Aldunate (Chilean, b. 1940) draws Renaissance women with the same preciseness that the Colombian Dioscorides Perez (b. 1950) investigates the culture of the past. The Peruvian Humberto Aquino (b. 1947) and the Argentine Monica Meira (b. 1949, active in Colombia) give their attention to simple everyday objects. Javier Restrepo (Colombian, b. 1943), Bill Caro (Peruvian, b. 1949), and the Colombian Beatriz Jaramillo (b. 1955) deal more aggressively with urban life, painting interiors, wretched-looking housefronts, and town squares. The Colombian Oscar Munoz (b. 1951), one of the most notable draftsmen of his generation, does pathetic scenes of rooming houses and slum dwellings, portraying their inhabitants in strong chiaroscuro. A large number of young artists born in the '50s or just before continue to believe in realism: the Colombian Carlos Lozano (b. 1950), the Venezuelans Henry Puerta and Azalea Quinones (both born in 1951), the Mexican Enrique Guzman (b. 1952), the Colombian Mariana Varela (b. 1947), the Dominicans

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NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS • 163 •


Alberto Blass (b. 1949) and Sum Prats (b. 1959), and Enrique Estrada (Mexican, b. 1942), the outstanding figure at the Young Painters Salon in Mexico in 1980. As regards Surrealism in the 1970s, in a sampling of fully realized talents mention might be made of the Mexicans Tomas Parra (b. 1937) and Juan Calderon (b. 1938) and the Argentine Alicia Carletti (b. 1946). In Carletti's works, in which disproportionate values are assigned to component elements, one can detect a descendant of Rene Magritte, with his rooms invaded by fruits. The Venezuelan Emerio Dario Lunar (b. 1940) provides a fascinating example of the convergence of professional and folk art with his strange images, representative of the best in Surrealism. Venezuela produced at this time a number of artists who excelled in original ways. Ender Cepeda (b. 1945), Henry Bermudez (b. 1950), and Felipe Marquez (b. 1954) invented extraordinary bestiaries. One may also mention Carmelo Nino (b. 1951), Gabriela Morawetz (born in Poland in 1952 but active in Venezuela), and Francisco Cisneros (b. 1956). The arrival in the country of the Polish printmaker Mieteck Detiniesky (b. 1938), coinciding as it did with Alirio Palacios' return home after a stay in Detiniesky's country and the resumption of artistic activity by Jacobo Borges, had a strong influence on efforts to carry figurative painting to the limits of the possible. In the '70s the Mexican Xavier Esqueda (b. 1943) invented what the critic Xavier Moyssen called "Pop Surrealism" in the series the artist entitled Eclipses and Generous Minors. At the same time the Brazilian Joao Camara Junior (b. 1944) was doing surprising allegories of national life. In the case of some artists belonging to earlier generations one notes new developments, inspired by the times. Such was the case with the Uruguayan Horacio Torres (1924-1976) and his female nudes, the Brazilian Mario Gruber (b. 1927) with the notable series of hands and puppets he did in 1976, and the Argentines Delia Cugat (b. 1930) and Sergio Camporeale (b. 1937), who, on resuming painting, enriched the Surrealist and hyperrealist areas with works of surprising perfection and semantic richness. Artists of continuous evolution, such as the Argentine Antonio Segui (b. 1934) and the Uruguayan Jose Gamarra (b. 1934), contributed ironic imagery to the art of the '70s. The foregoing represents but a sampling; there were many other artists of comparable rank. Their numbers were too great and the quality of their work too high for the unfortunate idea of the death of art to prosper in Latin America. Comprehension of, and receptiveness to, art have not varied substantially. Given the stagnation in political and social development, economic recession, rising public indebtedness, retreat in the field of human rights, and the loss of illusions of development that accompanied the crises of the '80s in Mexico, Brazil, and Venezuela, artists found their market limited to a small circle of collectors. The art boom of the '60s (which unquestionably preceded the boom in literature) was over; sights were lowered to more modest levels. After the worldwide exuberance of the '60s came the let-down of the '70s and a settling of accounts. This together with the oil crisis and the shifts of power that it brought about have served to

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• 164 • NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS


NEWCOMERS AND NEW TRENDS • 165 •

It is true that Latin America is responsible for no original "ism" in the twentieth century. Mexican Muralism, despite its energy and novelty, did not transform the language of plastic expression in a fashion comparable to U.S. Abstract Expressionism, Spanish Informalism, English Pop Art, Italian "poorman's art," or German Conceptual art. However, thanks to its firmly held aim of maintaining communication with the public via visual messages charged with meaning, it has gradually produced an "image bank," a reserve of real importance to the region and of considerable potential value for the rest of the world. Paralleling this bank, whose images consist in reconstructions or renovations of imported models, is another bank, whose stock is composed of folk art, the work of the least-favored sectors of society. It represents an area of life in which the symbols derive primarily from religion and superstition; it is particularly rich in countries with large numbers of mestizos and mulattoes. It is responsible for the preservation of media and processes proper to handicrafts; it favors an expansion of the art market toward what the Peruvian critic Mirko Lauer calls "a turn toward the masses by the bourgeoisie possessing a medium level of information, refinement, and culture." This two-pronged activity—professional art on the one hand and folk art on the other—is characterized by the social orientation which is a constant in modern Latin American art. Knowledge of art therefore helps in understanding and analyzing Latin American societies. Artists give direction to our hopes, tear away the veil of our illusions, and communicate our defects. The essence of artistic creation lies in the unveiling of mystery. This has been the task to which succeeding generations have dedicated themselves. In the case of the Spanish-speaking countries there is a common bond of language, tradition, and history, their bond to Brazil being one of geography and social and economic development. Like Africa, Latin America is a divided block, but a block just the same. Consequently, despite controversy about the matter, it is permissible to speak of Latin American art, or of art produced in Latin America, as an element for defining a culture that cannot and will not be confused with others.

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increase Latin America's traditional anomie. Nonetheless, though they have found themselves as the result of unfavorable circumstances relegated to the rank of merely regional heroes, artists as individual creators have kept up a constantly rising rate of production.


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Abela, Eduardo (Cuba): p. 50 Abreu, Mario (Venezuela): p. 130 Abreu, Victor (Mexico): p. 144 Abularach, Rodolfo (Guatemala): pp. 84-85, 121; illus.: p. 125 Acebal, Jorge Soto (Argentina): p. 59 Acero, Alonso Quijano (Colombia): p. 136 Aconcci, Vito (United States): p. 148 Acosta Leon, Angel (Cuba): p. 122 Acufta, Luis Alberto (Colombia): pp. 41-42; illus.: p. 33 Adami, Valerio (Italy): p. 124 Agam, Yaacov (Israel): pp. 86, 107 Aguerre, Ricardo (Uruguay): p. 46 Agustin, Carlos (Mexico): p. 158 Aizenberg, Roberto (Argentina): pp. 61, 120 Ajolotes Project (Mexico): p. 153 Alaman, Agustin (Spain-Uruguay): p. 93 Alamo, Neke (Venezuela): p. 144 Albers, Josef (Germany-United States): p. 67 Alcantara, Pedro (Colombia): p. 136 Aldama, Yamandu (Uruguay): p. 109 Aldunate, Carmen (Chile): p. 163 Alice, Antonio (Argentina): p. 6 Alonso, Carlos (Argentina): pp. 125-126 Alonso, Jose (Argentina): p. 43 Alonso, Raul (Argentina): p. 120 Alpuy, Julio U. (Uruguay): p. 78 Alternative Forms (group) (Mexico): p. 154 Althabe, Julian (Argentina): p. 103 Alvarado, Antonio (Panama): p. 88 Alvaro, Jorge (Argentina): p. 162 Amaral, Jim (Colombia): p. 124 Amat, Federico (Spain-Mexico): p. 159 Amaya, Arnoldo Ramirez (Guatemala): p. 140 Amighetti, Francisco (Costa Rica): pp. 49, 135 Amoroso, Nicolas (Argentina): p. 163 Angel, Felix (Colombia): pp. 140, 161; illus.: p. 161 Anglada Camarasa, Hermenegildo (Spain): pp. 6, 44, 74-75 Anguiano, Raul (Mexico): p. 30 Antay Lopez, Joaquin (Peru): p. 155 Antunez, Nemesio (Chile): pp. 123, 135 Appel, Karel (Holland): p. 162 Apurimak [Alejandro Gonzalez] (Peru): p. 36

Aquino, Edmundo (Mexico): p. 88 Aquino, Humberto (Peru): p. 163 Aranda, Dino (Nicaragua): p. 161 Arango, Diego (Colombia): p. 155 Arauz, Felix (Ecuador): p. 127 Arciaga, Romero (Cuba): p. 50 Arche, Jorge (Cuba): pp. 8, 49 Aresti, Carlos (Chile): p. 163 Arevalo, Javier (Mexico): p. 140 Arias Vera, Luis (Peru): p. 130 Ariza, Gonzalo (Colombia): p. 42 Armas, Ricardo (Venezuela): p. 156 Arostegui, Alejandro (Nicaragua): pp. 85, 122 Arp, Jean Hane (Germany-France): p. 84 Arpel Gonzalez, Pedro (Venezuela): p. 48 Arria, Maria Eugenia (Venezuela): p. 140 Arroyo, Miguel (Venezuela): p. 84 Artaud, Antonin (France): p. 9 Arzadun, Carmelo de (Uruguay): pp. 74-75 Astudillo, Ever (Colombia): p. 140 Atl, Dr. [Gerardo Murillo] (Mexico): pp. 14, 28, 30 Audivert, Eduardo (Argentina): p. 136 Ayoroa, Rudy (Bolivia): p. 112 Azaceta, Luis Cruz (Cuba-United States): p. 161; illus.: p. 162 Azar, Aquiles (Dominican Republic): p. 121 Bacon, Francis (England): pp. 126, 128, 162 Badii, Libero (Italy-Argentina): pp. 61, 94 Baez, Myrna (Puerto Rico): p. 124 Balcacer, Ada (Dominican Republic): p. 121 Balmesjose (Chile): p. 127 Ballivian, Maria Esther (Bolivia): p. 89 Banderas, Hector (Chile): p. 45 Bangardini, Fioravanti (Argentina): p. 59 Baptista, Hugo (Venezuela): p. 94 Barba, Ramon (Colombia): p. 42 Barcala, Washington (Uruguay): p. 109 Barney, Alicia (Colombia): p. 154 Barradas, Rafael (Uruguay): pag: 47 Barragan, Luis (Mexico): p. 61 Barreda, Ernesto (Chile): p. 130 Barrera, Antonio (Colombia): p. 163 Barrios, Alvaro (Colombia): pp. 84, 150, 154 Barros, Gracia (Chile): p. 127 Batlle Planas,Juan (Argentina): pp. 9, 60-61

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ARTIST INDEX


Battegazzore, Miguel (Uruguay): p. 109 Battistini, Aimee (Venezuela): p. 106 Bauhaus (movement) (Germany): p. 99 Bayley, Edgard (Argentina): p. 61 Bedel, Jacques (France): p. 151 Behring, Edith (Brazil): p. 135 Bejar, Feliciano (Mexico): p. 95 Belkin, Arnaldo (Canada-Mexico): p. 124 Beloff, Angelina (Mexico): p. 30 Bellorin, Francisco (Venezuela): p. 137 Benedit, Luis Fernando (Argentina): p. 151; illus.: p. 151 Bengoechea, Miguel Angel (Argentina): p. 163 Benjamin (Mexico): p. 158 Berdia, Norberto (Uruguay): pp. 32, 45 Bermann, Marieta (Venezuela): p. 92 Bermudez, Cundo (Cuba): p. 50, illus.: pp. 38-39 Bermudez, Henry (Venezuela): p. 164 Bermudez, Jose (Cuba): pp. 85, 94 Bernal, Delfina (Colombia): p. 154 Berni, Antonio (Argentina): pp. 8, 32, 44, 126; illus.: p. 41 Berroeta, Eduardo (Chile): p. 163 Bess, Ruth (Brazil): p. 135 Betancourt, Jose Horacio (Colombia): p. 42 Bianchedi, Remo (Argentina): p. 140 Bigatti, Alfredo (Argentina): p. 43 Bill, Max (Switzerland): pp. 62, 86, 100 Blanco, Beatriz (Venezuela): pp. 155, 163 Blass, Alberto (Dominican Republic): p. 164 Blinder, Olga (Paraguay): p. 38 Bloc, Andre (France): p. 62 Boa Group (Argentina): p. 61 Bogarin, Rafael (Venezuela): p. 142 Boggio, Emilio (Venezuela-France): pp. 48, 73 Bolivar, Elsa (Chile): p. 111 Boiler, Edelmira (Colombia): p. 158 Bonevardi, Marcelo (Argentina): p. 103; illus.: p. 104 Bonnard, Pierre (France): pp. 6, 79-80 Bonomi, Maria (Brazil): pp. 84, 135; illus.: p. 136 Bonta, Marco (Chile): p. 45 Borda, Osvaldo (Argentina): p. 120 Borges,Jacobo (Venezuela): pp. 124, 164; illus.: p. 121 Borges, Norah (Argentina): p. 57 Borla, Hector (Argentina): p. 120 Bostelmann, Enrique (Mexico): p. 154

Botero, Fernando (Colombia): pp. 85, 114, 125, 127, 162; illus.: pp. 115, 126 Boto, Marta (Argentina): p. 86 Bourdelle, Antoine (France): p. 56 Bracho, Gabriel (Venezuela): p. 48 Brandt, Federico (Venezuela): p. 48 Braque, Georges (France): pp. 14, 16 Braun, Hermann (Peru): p. 124 Bravo, Claudio (Chile): p. 130; illus.: p. 130 Breton, Andre (France): pp. 9, 67, 70, 120 Briceno, Pedro (Venezuela): p. 95 Brizzi, Ary (Argentina): p. 101 Brocos y Gomez, Modesto (Brazil): p. 5 Bru, Roser (Spain-Chile): pp. 93, 127 Brunet, Tereza (Brazil): p. 99 Bueno, Mauricio (Ecuador): p. 112 Burchard, Pablo A. (Chile): p. 71 Burga, Teresa (Peru): pp. 125, 155 Burton, Mildred (Argentina): p. 120 Burztyn, Feliza (Colombia): p. 96 Bustos Garcia, Arturo (Mexico): p. 31 Butler, Horacio (Argentina): p. 56 Caballero, Luis (Colombia): p. 161; illus.: p. 160 Caballero Mantilla, Jorge (Colombia): p. 162 Cabre, Manuel (Venezuela): p. 48 Cabrera, German (Uruguay): p. 131 Cabrera, Roberto (Guatemala): pp. 88, 128 Caceres, Luis Alfredo (El Salvador): p. 49 Cajahuaringa, Milner (Peru): p. 112 Calderon, Constancia (Panama): p. 112 Calderon, Juan (Mexico): p. 164 Camacho, Jorge (Cuba): p. 122 CamaraJr.,Joao (Brazil): p. 164 Camargo, Sergio de (Brazil): pp. 98-99; illus.: p. 100 Camargo, Ibere (Brazil): p. 91 Camino Brent, Enrique (Peru): p. 36 Camnitzer, Luis (Uruguay): p. 137 Camporeale, Sergio (Argentina): pp. 120, 164 Campos, Susana (Mexico): p. 158 Cancela, Delia (Argentina): p. 149 Cantu, Federico (Mexico): pp. 28, 30, 46 Cafias, Benjamin (El Salvador): p. 122; illus.: p. 118 Capozzoli, Glauco (Uruguay): p. 137 Cardenas, Agustin (Cuba): p. 94 Cardenas, Juan (Colombia): p. 130 Cardenas, Santiago (Colombia): p. 130

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• 168 • ARTIST INDEX


Careaga, Enrique (Paraguay): p. 158 Caride, Miguel (Argentina): p. 120 Carletti, Alicia (Argentina): p. 164 Caro, Antonio (Colombia): p. 151 Caro, Bill (Peru): p. 163 Caro, Inginio (Colomia): p. 155 Carreno, Mario (Cuba): pp. 49-50, 84, 121 Carreno, Omar (Venezuela): p. 107 Carrillo, Lilia (Mexico): pp. 88, 105 Carrington, Leonora (England-Mexico): pp. 9, 31, 63, 65 Carvalho, Dirceu (Brazil): p. 144 Carvallo, Feliciano (Venezuela): p. 144 Casanova, Teresa (Venezuela): p. 92 Castagnino, Juan Carlos (Argentina): p. 43 Castaneda, Alfredo (Mexico): p. 123 Castellanos, Julio ( Mexico): p. 30 Castellon, Rolando (Nicaragua): p. 89 Castilla, Americo (Argentina): pp. 124, 163 Castles, John (Colombia): p. 158 Castro, Pedro Leon (Puerto Rico): p. 48 Castro-Cid, Enrique (Chile): pp. 72, 94 Catalano, Fernando (Argentina): p. 59 Cattelani, Raul (Uruguay): p. 130 Centurion, Luis (Argentina): p. 8 Cepeda, Ender (Venezuela): p. 164 Cerra, Mirta (Cuba): p. 49 Cezanne, Paul (France): pp. 8, 33, 70 Cicarelli, Alessandro (Italy-Chile): p. 4 Cifuentes, Hugo (Ecuador): p. 140 Cisneros, Francisco (Venezuela): p. 164 Clark, Lygia (Brazil): pp. 97-98, 149, 152 Clausell, Joaquin (Mexico): pp. 5, 30 Cochet, Gustavo (Argentina): p. 43 Codesido, Julia (Peru): p. 36 Coen, Arnaldo (Mexico): pp. 88, 158 Cogollo, Heriberto (Colombia): p. 163 Cole, Thomas (United States): p. 5 Colo (Puerto Rico): p. 159 Colombino, Carlos (Paraguay): p. 112 Colon, Francisco (Puerto Rico): p. 124 Colunga, Alejandro (Mexico): p. 161 Colvin, Marta (Chile): p. 111 Concrete Art Invention (movement) (Argentina): p. 61 Constante, Theo (Ecuador): p. 89 Consuegra, Hugo (Cuba): p. 94 Cordeiro, Waldemar (Brazil): p. 97 Cornell, Joseph (United States): p. 142 Coronel, Pedro (Mexico): p. 88 Coronel, Rafael (Mexico): p. 123 Correa, Carlos (Colombia): p. 42

Correia, Gregorio (Brazil): p. 161 Corzas, Francisco (Mexico): p. 123 Cosgrove, Miguel (Chile): p. 111 Costa, Olga (Mexico): p. 30 Costigliolo,Jose Pedro (Uruguay): p. 109 Covarrubias, Miguel (Mexico): p. 30 Crenzans, Mario (Argentina): p. 124 Cresta, Norberto (Argentina): p. 59 Crovo, Hilda (Argentina): p. 120 Cruz-Diez, Carlos (Venezuela): pp. 86, 107; illus.:p. 109 Cuartas, Gregorio (Colombia): p. 161 Cueto, German (Mexico): p. 30 Cuevasjose Luis (Mexico): pp. 24, 84-85, 105, 122, 140, 142;illus.:pp. 132, 141 Cugat, Delia (Argentina): pp. 120, 164 CuneOjJose (Uruguay): pp. 74-75, 77 Chab, Victor (Argentina): p. 88 Chariot, Jean (France-Mexico): pp. 15, 28 Chavez Morado, Jose (Mexico): p. 28 Chiesa, Armando (Argentina): p. 59 Chiesa, Wilfredo (Puerto Rico): p. 159 Chong Neto, Manuel (Panama): p. 88 D'Aquino, Adriano (Brazil): p. 158 Da Silva, Alfredo (Bolivia): p. 89 Dacosta, Milton (Brazil): p. 98 Davidovich, Jaime (Argentina): p. 152 Daibert, Arlindo (Brazil): p. 135 Daini, Alejandra (Venezuela): p. 158 Damiani, Jorge (Italy-Uruguay): p. 93 Daneri, Eugenio (Argentina): pp. 43-44 Davila, Carlos (Peru): p. 112 Davila, Jaime (Peru): p. 112 Davite (Argentina): p. 102 Daza, Beatriz (Colombia): p. 142 De Amaral, Olga (Colombia): p. 95; illus.: p. 98 De Andrade, Mario (Brazil): pp. 54-55 De Bermudez, Lia (Venezuela): p. 94 De Castro, Amilcar (Brazil): p. 97 De Chirico, Giorgio (Italy): p. 122 De Jesus Morales, Felipe (Mexico): p. 163 De la Carcova, Ernesto (Argentina): p. 5 De la Rosa, Juan Manuel (Mexico): p. 136 De la Vega, Jorge (Argentina): pp. 86, 120, 125; illus.: p. 123 De Lamonica, Roberto (Brazil): p. 135 De Larranaga, Enrique (Argentina): pp. 43-44 De Leon Cabrera, Enrique (Guatemala): p. 49 De Marziani, Hugo (Argentina): p. 124

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ARTIST INDEX • 169 •


De Monte, Jose (Argentina): p. 130 De Santa Maria, Andres (Colombia): pp. 2, 4-6; illus.:pp. 9-10 De Stael, Nicolas (France): p. 107 De Stijl (movement) (Holland): p. 99 Debourg, Narciso (Venezuela): p. 107 Degand, Paul (France): p. 56 Deira, Ernesto (Argentina): pp. 86, 125; illus.:p. 122 Delia Francesca, Piero (Italy): p. 33 Delozanne, Colette (France-Venezuela): p. 142 Delvaux, Paul (Belgium): p. 10 Demarco, Hugo (Argentina): p. 86 Demirjian, Jorge (Argentina): p. 120 Demuth, Charles (United States): p. 20 Destructive Art (group) (Argentina): p. 121 Detiniesky, Mieteck (Poland): p. 164 Di Cavalcanti, Emiliano (Brazil): pp. 8, 34, 35, 55 Di Prete, Danilo (Italy-Brazil): pp. 84, 91 Dias, Antonio (Brazil): p. 149 Dias Bezerra,Jose (Brazil): p. 135 Diaz, Juan Luis (Guatemala): pp. 88, 104, 112 Dignac, Geny (Argentina): p. 152 Diomede, Miguel (Argentina): p. 43; illus.: p. 43 The Dissidents (group) (Venezuela): pp. 83, 106 Distefano, Juan Carlos (Argentina): pp. 120, 126 Do Amaral, Marzia Barroso (Brazil): p. 158 Do Amaral, Tarsila (Brazil): pp. 6, 54-55 Donde, Olga (Mexico): pp. 123, 154 Donis, Roberto (Mexico): pp. 88, 158 Donoso, Pedro Leon (Ecuador): p. 41 Dorazio, Pietro (Argentina): p. 61 Dosamantes, Francisco (Mexico): p. 30 Douchez, Jacques (Brazil): p. 114 Dubon, Jorge (Mexico): p. 104 DubufFet, Jean (France): p. 121 Ducmelic, Zoravko (Yugoslavia-Argentina): p. 120 Duchamp, Marcel (France): pp. 148, 154 Durante, Armando (Argentina): p. 102 Echeverri, Beatriz (Colombia): p. 162 Egas, Juan Camilo (Ecuador): pp. 39-40, 89 Egenau, Juan (Chile): p. 127 Egerton, Daniel T.(England-Mexico): p. 4 Eielson, Jorge (Peru): p. 112 Eiriz, Antonia (Cuba): p. 127 Escobar, Marisol (Venezuela): p. 125; illus.: p. 119 Escobedo, Helen (Mexico): pp. 104, 159 Escher, Maurits (Germany): p. 28 Espinola Gomez, Manuel (Uruguay): p. 108

Espinoza, Manuel (Venezuela): p. 92 Esqueda, Xavier (Mexico): pp. 123, 142, 164 Esteve, Maurice (France): p. 107 Esteves, Mercedes (Argentina): p. 102 Estrada, Enrique (Mexico): pp. 154, 164 Exter, Alexandra (Russia): p. 67 Fader, Fernando (Argentina): p. 5 Falcini, Luis (Argentina): p. 43 Fanjul, Margot (Guatemala): p. 112 Fanon, Frantz Omar (Martinique-Algeria): p. 40 Fejer, Kasmer (Hungary-Brazil): p. 102 Felguerez, Manuel (Mexico): pp. 88, 96, 105, 159; illus.: p. 90 Ferdinandov, Nicholas (Russia-Venezuela): pp. 48, 73 Fernandez Ledesma (Mexico): p. 28 Fernandez, Agustin (Cuba): p. 93 Fernandez, Aristides (Cuba): p. 50 Fernandez, Lola (Costa Rica): p. 114 Fernandez Muro, Jose Antonio (Argentina): pp. 85, 88, 93 Fertes, Ivette (Mexico): p. 154 Figari, Pedro (Uruguay): pp. 6, 57, 79-80; illus.: pp. 78-79 Figueredo, Ana Luisa (Venezuela): p. 156 Fiora, Amelia (Argentina): p. 59 Fioravanti, Jose (Argentina): p. 43 Floris, Marcel (Venezuela) p. 107 Fonseca, Gonzalo (Uruguay): pp. 78, 103 Fontana, Lucio (Argentina): p. 61 Forest, Fred (France): p. 153 Forner, Raquel (Argentina): pp. 8, 44, 56, 129 Fornieles, Francisco (Argentina): p. 59 Forte, Vicente (Argentina): pp. 59-60 Fossa Calderon, Julio (Chile): p. 5 Foujita, Leonard (Japan-France): p. 8 Frasconi, Antonio (Uruguay): p. 136 Freire, Maria (Uruguay): p. 109 Freire, Nelly (Argentina): p. 122 Freitas, Ivan (Brazil): p. 99 Freund, Helga (Mexico): p. 144 Friedeberg, Pedro (Italy-Mexico): p. 123 Friesz, Emile Othon (Germany-France): p. 56 The Front (group) (Brazil): p. 97 Fukushima, Tikashi (Japan-Brazil): p. 91 Gahona, Gabriel Vicente (Mexico): p. 15 Galdos Rivas, Enrique (Peru): p. 60 Galecio, Galo (Ecuador): p. 41 Galicia, Roberto (El Salvador): p. 105 Gamarra,Jose (Uruguay): pp. 78, 164 Gamboa, Fernando (Mexico): p. 28 Garabito, Ricardo (Argentina): p. 130 Garafulic, Lily (Chile): p. 112

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• 170 • ARTIST INDEX


Garcia Ponce, Fernando (Mexico): p. 106 Garcia Rossi, Horacio (Argentina-France): p. 86 Garreaud, Gaston (Peru): p. 112 Gasca, Omar (Mexico): p. 158 Gattorno, Antonio (Cuba): p. 50 Gauguin, Paul (France): pp. 14, 75 Gego [Gertrudis Goldschmidt] (Germany-Venezuela): pp.92, 107;illus.:p. I l l Geiger, Ana Bela (Brazil): p. 153 Gerchman, Rubens (Brazil): p. 148 Gero, Julio (Hungary-Argentina): p. 61 Gerstein, Noemi (Argentina): p. 61, 94 Gerzso, Gunther (Mexico): pp. 106, 158; illus.:p. 106 Gilbert, Araceli (Ecuador): p. 111 Ginzburg, Carlos (Argentina): p. 152 Giotto [Angelo di Bondone] (Italy): p. 33 Girola, Claudio (Argentina): p. 102 Gironella, Alberto (Mexico): pp. 128, 153; illus.:p. 129 Giudice, Reinaldo (Argentina): p. 5 Giudicelli, Pablo (Dominican Republic): p. 128 Giuffre, Hector (Argentina): p. 161 Giusiano, Eduardo (Argentina): p. 126 Glass, Alan (Mexico): p. 142 Goeritz, Mathias (Mexico): pp. 32, 86, 97, 103, 105, 159 Goitia, Francisco (Mexico): p. 30 Golding, Tomas (Venezuela): p. 48 Gomez, Jorge Mario (Colombia): p. 155 Gomez, Patricia (Colombia): p. 155 Gomez, Ramiro (Colombia): p. 143 Gomez Campuzano, Ricardo (Colombia): p. 42 Gomez Cornet, Ramon (Argentina): pp. 43-44 Gomez Jaramillo, Ignacio (Colombia): pp. 8, 41-42 Gongora, Leonel (Colombia): p. 129 Gonzalez, Beatriz (Colombia): pp. 68, 154 Gonzalez, Carlos (Uruguay): p. 46 Gonzalez, Juan Francisco (Chile): p. 70 Gonzalez, Leonilda (Uruguay): p. 136 Gonzalez, Tomas (Mexico): p. 144 Gonzalez Bogen, Carlos (Venezuela): pp. 84, 107 Gonzalez Camarena, Jorge (Mexico): p. 28 Gonzalez Camargo, Alfonso (Colombia): p. 6 Gorky, Arshile (United States): p. 72 Gorodine, Alexis (Venezuela): p. 140 Gorriarena, Carlos (Argentina): p. 126 Gottlieb, Adolf (United States): p. 78 Goya, Francisco de (Spain): pp. 6, 24 GRABAS (group) (Argentina): p. 120 Gramajo Gutierrez, Alfredo (Argentina): p. 43 Gramcko, Elsa (Venezuela): p. 92

Granada, Carlos (Colombia): pp. 127-128 Granato, Ivald (Brazil): p. 152 Grassmann, Marcelo (Brazil): pp. 84-85, 122, 135, 140 Grau, Enrique (Colombia): pp. 127-128; illus.: p. 128 Grau, Ricardo (Peru): p. 85 Greco, Alberto (Argentina): pp. 88, 121 Grez, Vergara (Chile): p. 111 Grilo, Sarah (Argentina): pp. 85, 88, 107; illus.: p. 89 Grippo, Victor (Argentina): p. 151 Grisjuan (Spain): pp. 14, 16, 54, 58 Gropius, Walter Adolf (Germany-United States): pag. 67 Gros, Baron Jean-Louis (France-Mexico): pp. 3-4 Group of Eleven (Cuba): p. 84 Group of Thirteen (Argentina): p. 152 Group 44 (Colombia): p. 154 Gruber, Mario (Brazil): p. 164 Guadalupe Posada, Jose (Mexico): pp. 14-16; illus.: p. 15 Guardado Martinez, Ismael (Mexico): pp. 144, 159 Guayasamin, Oswaldo (Ecuador): p. 40; illus.: p. 46 Guedes, Simon (Venezuela): p. 140 Guerrero, Alfredo (Colombia): pp. 130, 155 Guerrero, Jose Enrique (Ecuador): p. 41 Guerrero, Xavier (Mexico): pp. 16, 28, 30 Guerrero Galvan, Jesus (Mexico): p. 29 Guersoni, Odetto (Brazil): p. 99 Guevara, Andres (Paraguay): p. 38 Guevara Moreno, Luis (Venezuela): pp. 107, 129 Guillen, Asilia (Nicaragua): p. 144; illus.: p. 145 Gullar, Ferreira (Brazil): p. 152 Gurria, Angela (Mexico): p. 159 Gurvich, Jose (Uruguay): p. 78 Gutierrez, Servulo (Peru): p. 36 Gutierrez, Sonia (Colombia): p. 162 Guttero, Alfredo (Argentina): p. 56 Guzman, Alberto (Peru): p. 95 Guzman, Enrique (Mexico): p. 163 Halegua, Alfredo (Uruguay): p. 109 Hamilton, Richard (England): p. 114 Hastings, Rafael (Peru): pp. 124, 150 Helguera, Maria (Argentina): p. 163 Henriquez, Carlos (Cuba): p. 50 Heras Velasco, MariaJuana (Argentina): p. 94 Herazo, Alvaro (Colombia): p. 154 Heredia, Alberto (Argentina): p. 120 Hermansen, Emilio (Chile): p. 111 Hernandez, Anhelo (Uruguay): pp. 78, 136 Hernandez, Emilio (Peru): p. 152 Hernandez, Maricarmen (Mexico): p. 144 Hernandez Cruz, Luis (Puerto Rico): pp. 90, 112

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ARTIST INDEX • 171 •


Hernandez Guerra, Carlos (Venezuela): p. 124 Herrera, Alejandro (Mexico): p. 158 Hersua (Mexico): p. 158 Hlito, Alfredo (Argentina): p. 61 Hoffmann, Marlene (Colombia): p. 114 Homar, Lorenzo (Puerto Rico): pp. 48, 135-136 Horta, Vinicio (Brazil): p. 156 Hoyos, Ana Mercedes (Colombia): p. 159 Huezo, Roberto (El Salvador): p. 163 Hung, Francisco (Venezuela): p. 92 Hurtado, Angel (Venezuela): p. 92; illus.: p. 96 Hyppolite, Hector (Haiti): p. 49 lanelli, Arcangelo (Brazil): p. 99 lanelli, Tomaz (Brazil): p. 124 Icaza Vargas, Alberto (Nicaragua): p. 158 Inciarte, Jacinto (Venezuela): p. 6 Intersection Group (Mexico): p. 153 lommi, Enio (Argentina): pp. 61, 102 Izquierdo, Cesar (Nicaragua): p. 88 Izquierdo, Maria (Mexico): p. 30 Jacoby, Roberto (Argentina): p. 150 Jacome, Ramiro (Ecuador): p. 140 Jamis, Fayad (Cuba): p. 90 Jaramillo, Alipio (Colombia): p. 41 Jaramillo, Beatriz (Colombia): p. 163 Jaramillo, Luciano (Colombia): p. 124 Jaramillo, Maria de la Paz (Colombia): p. 162 Jean-Gilles, Joseph (Haiti): p. 144; illus.: p. 146 Jimenez, Max (Costa Rica): p. 50 Jones, Allen (England): p. 125 Kahlo, Frida (Mexico): pp. 9, 30, 62, 65; illus.: p. 63 Kaprow, Allan (United States): pp. 114, 147 Kemble, Kenneth (Argentina): pp. 61, 86 Kingman, Eduardo (Ecuador): p. 40; illus.: p. 45 Kirchbach, Ernst (Germany-Chile): p. 4 Klee, Paul (Germany-Switzerland): p. 58 Klein, Yves (France): pp. 114, 148 Kline, Franz (United States): p. 85 Klose, Paul (Denmark-Venezuela): p. 107 Kosice, Gyula (Czechoslovakia-Hungary-Argentina): pp.61, 101 Kounellis, Jannis (Italy): p. 148 Krajcberg, Frans (Poland-Brazil): pp. 94, 143 Kranz, Marilia (Brazil): p. 99 Krasno, Rodolfo (Argentina): p. 93 Kubotta, Arturo (Peru): p. 90

La Placa, Alfredo (Bolivia): p. 89 Lacamera, Fortunato (Argentina): p. 44 Lam, Wifredo (Cuba): pp. 8, 50, 67-70, 85; illus.: p.69 Landau, Myra (Brazil): p. 95 Langlois,Juan Carlos (Argentina): p. 120 Lara, Clever (Uruguay): p. 130 Larraz, Julio (Cuba): p. 163 Lasansky, Mauricio (Argentina): pp. 135, 138; illus.: p. 137 Laurens, Henri (France): pp. 56, 84 Laville, Joy (Mexico): p. 128 Lazaro, Raquel (Cuba): p. 122 Lazo, Agustin (Mexico): pp. 30, 62 Le Pare, Julio (Argentina): pp. 86, 100-101, 103; illus.: p. 101 Lee, Wesley Duke (Brazil): p. 149 Leger, Fernand (France): pp. 20, 49, 55, 84 Lemos, Fernando (Portugal-Brazil): p. 84 Leon, Noe (Colombia): p. 144 Leon, Pedro (Ecuador): p. 39 Leonetti, German (Argentina): p. 59 Lerma,Jose Ramon (Puerto Rico): p. 143 Letycia, Anna (Brazil): p. 135 Leufert, Gerd (Lithuania-Venezuela): p. 107; illus.: p. 110 Lezama, Jorge Edgardo (Argentina): p. 59 Lhote, Andre (France): pp. 8, 33, 44, 46, 54, 56, 70 Liberti,Juan Carlos (Argentina): p. 120 Linares, Ezequiel (Argentina): p. 126 Linares Ruiz, Jorge (Colombia): p. 42 Linartas, Androna (Mexico): p. 144 Linati, Claudio (Italy-Mexico): p. 15 Lino, Maria (Cuba): p. 140 Lira, Pedro (Chile): p. 5; illus.: p. 7 Liz, Domingo (Dominican Republic): p. 121 Lobo (Venezuela): p. 84 Logioio, Vechy (Argentina): p. 120 Lopez, Candido (Argentina): p. 4 Lopez Dirube, Rolando (Cuba): p. 94 Lopez Garcia, Antonio (Spain): p. 130 Lopez Loza, Luis (Mexico): p. 92 Lozano, Agueda (Mexico): p. 159 Lozano, Alfredo (Cuba): p. 49 Lozano, Carlos (Colombia): p. 163 Lozza, Raul (Argentina): p. 61 Lublin, Lea (Argentina): pp. 120, 152 Ludena, Willey (Peru): p. 155 Lunar, Emerio Dario (Venezuela): p. 164 Luque, Angel (Venezuela): p. 92

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• 172 • ARTIST INDEX


Luz, Aldape (Mexico): p. 144 Mabe, Manabu (Japan-Brazil): pp. 84-85, 91; illus.: p. 95 Mac Entyre, Eduardo (Argentina): p. 101; illus.: p. 99 Maccio, Rornulo (Argentina): pp. 86, 125 Macotela, Gabriel (Mexico): p. 159 Madi Art Movement (group) (Argentina): p. 61, 96 Magalha.es, Fabio (Brazil): p. 135 Magarifios, Victor (Argentina): p. 102 Magritte, Rene (Belgium): pp. 10, 71, 121, 164 Malcuzinsky, Christine (Venezuela): p. 158 Maldonado, Estuardo (Ecuador): p. 112 Maldonado, Tomas (Argentina): p. 61 Maler, Leopoldo (Argentina): pp. 149, 151, 152 Malfatti, Anita (Brazil): p. 54 Manaure, Mateo (Venezuela): pp. 84, 94, 107 Manes, Pablo Curatella (Argentina): pp. 56-57 Manet, Edouard (France): p. 154 Manilla, Manuel (Mexico): p. 14 Manuel, Antonio (Brazil): pp. 152-153 Manuel, Victor [Garcia] (Cuba): pp. 49-50 Manzanares, Use (Nicaragua): p. 159 Manzoni, Piero (Italy): pp. 115, 147-148 Manzur, David (Colombia): pp. 85, 113-114 Mara, Oscar (Argentina): p. 120 March, Horacio Gerardo (Argentina): pp. 43-44 Marin, Alvaro (Colombia): pp. 124, 159 Marin,Jonier (Colombia): p. 154 Marotta, Vicente (Argentina): pp. 131, 151 Marquez, Felipe (Venezuela): p. 164 Marquez, Laura (Paraguay): p. 112 Marti, Febo (Argentina): p. 59 Martinez Pedro, Luis (Cuba): p. 50 Martinez, Prospero (Venezuela): p. 48 Martinez, Raul (Cuba): p. 90 Martinez, Ricardo (Mexico): pp. 30, 123 Martins, Wilma (Brazil): p. 150 Martorell, Antonio (Puerto Rico): p. 136 Mathieu, Georges (France): p. 85 Matisse, Henri (France): p. 70 Matta, Roberto Sebastian (Chile): pp. 3, 67, 70-72, 85, 90; illus.: pp. 52, 71 Mayer, Monica (Mexico): p. 154 Maza, Fernando (Argentina): p. 120 Mazza, Raul (Argentina): p. 44 Mazzei, Ana Maria (Venezuela): pp. 155, 163 Mazzey, Luis (Uruguay): p. 46 Medina Ramela, Enrique (Uruguay): p. 109 Meira, Monica (Argentina): p. 163

Meireles, Cildo (Brazil): p. 150 Mejia, Norman (Colombia): p. 127 Mejia, Silvia (Colombia): p. 156 Mele, Juan (Argentina): p. 102 Mena, Bolivar Franco (Ecuador): p. 40 Mendez, Leopoldo (Mexico): p. 28 Mendieta, Ana (Cuba): p. 156 Menocal, Armando (Cuba): p. 49 Merida, Carlos (Guatemala-Mexico): pp. 21, 28, 30, 62, 65-66, 103; illus.: pp. 57, 66 Mesejean, Pablo (Argentina): p. 149 Messil, Gabriel (Argentina): p. 102 Michaelson, Hans (Ecuador): p. 39 Michelena, Arturo (Venezuela): p. 5; illus.: p. 7 Mideros, Victor M. (Ecuador): pp. 39-40 Miguens, Josefina (Argentina): p. 88 Milian, Raul (Cuba): p. 90 Millares, Manolo (Spain): p. 85 Millet, Jean Francois (France): pp. 5, 154 MIMUY (group) (Peru): p. 149 Minujin, Marta (Argentina): pp. 149, 152, 155; illus.: p. 149 Mir, Joaquin (Spain): p. 6 Mishaan, Rodolfo (Nicaragua): p. 89 Moctezuma, Nelson (Mexico): p. 156 Modiano, Sara (Colombia): p. 155 Moholy Nagy, Laszlo (Hungary): p. 67 Molinari, Luis (Ecuador): p. 112 Monasterio Ortiz, Luis (Mexico): p. 30 Monasteries, Rafael (Venezuela): pp. 5, 48 Moncalvo, Ana Maria (Argentina): p. 136 Mondrian, Piet (Belgium): p. 98 Monet, Claude (France): pp. 6, 74, 95 Monsanto, Edmundo (Venezuela): pp. 48, 73 Monteiro, Vicente Re go (Brazil): p. 55 Montenegro, Roberto (Mexico): pp. 30, 62 Montiel, Jonio (Uruguay): p. 78 Montparnasse (group) (Chile): pp. 2, 45, 70 Monvoisin, Raymond (France-Chile): p. 4 Mora, Robinson (Chile): p. 111 Morales, Armando (Nicaragua): pp. 84-85, 89, 122, 125; illus.: p. 117 Morales, Dario (Colombia): p. 161 Morales, Gonzalo (Costa Rica): p. 161 Morales, Guido (Venezuela): p. 158 Moran, Teresa (Mexico): p. 161 Morawetz, Gabriela (Poland-Venezuela): p. 164 Morellet, Francois (France): p. 86 Morera, Gabriel (Venezuela): p. 131

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ARTIST INDEX • 173 •


Mori, Camilo (Chile): p. 70 Moriconi, Roberto (Italy-Brazil): p. 150 Mormann, Charlotte (United States): pp. 148, 156 Moro, Cesar (Peru): p. 9 Moya, Antonio (Spain-Venezuela): p. 162 Moyao, Francisco (Mexico): p. 158 Muntzer, Samys (Romania-Venezuela): pp. 48, 73 Munoz, Oscar (Colombia): pp. 140, 163 Muriel, Guillermo (Ecuador): p. 140 Mutal, Lika (Holland-Peru): p. 112 Nakakubo, Massuo (Brazil): p. 99 Naranjo, Rogelio (Mexico): p. 154 Narvaez, Francisco de (Venezuela): pp. 48, 84 Navarro, Gilberto Aceves (Mexico): p. 88 Nedo (Italy-Venezuela): p. 107 Negreiros, Maria Teresa (Brazil): p. 91 Negret, Edgar (Colombia): pp. 86, 113, 158 Negret, Monica (Colombia): p. 155 Neira Dominguez, Pedro (Argentina): p. 59 Nel Gomez, Pedro (Colombia): p. 32, 42 Nemer,Jose Alberto (Brazil): p. 135 Nevelson, Louise (United States): p. 78 The New Art Movement (group) (Paraguay): p. 84 New Objectivity (group) (Brazil): p. 149 Ney (Uruguay): p. 159 Nicola, Norberto (Brazil): p. 114 Nieto, Rodolfo (Mexico): p. 88 Nino, Carmelo (Venezuela): p. 164 Nishizawa, Luis (Mexico): p. 140 Nissen, Brian (Mexico): p. 120 No Group (group) (Mexico): p. 153 Noe, Luis Felipe (Argentina): p. 86 Nojechowitz, Noe (Poland-Argentina): p. 120 Nonell Monturiol, Isidro (Spain): p. 6 Nunez, Ruben (Venezuela): p. 107 Nunez del Prado, Marina (Bolivia): p. 39 O'GormanJuan (Mexico): pp. 27-28, 30; illus.: p. 27 O'Higgins, Pablo (Mexico): pp. 28, 31 Obelar, Pablo (Argentina): p. 120 Obin, Philome (Haiti): p. 49 Obregon, Alejandro (Colombia): pp. 84, 91, 127; illus.: pp. 82, 127 Ocampo, Miguel (Argentina): p. 88 Ohtake, Tomie (Japan-Brazil): p. 91; illus.: p. 91 Oiticica, Helio (Brazil): pp. 98, 149, 150 Ojeda, Naiil (Uruguay): p. 137; illus.: p. 139 Okumura, Lydia (Brazil): p. 99 Okuzawa, Kiyoto Ota (Japan-Mexico): p. 159 Oldenburg, Claes (Sweden-United States): pp. 114, 130

Opazo, Rodolfo (Chile): p. 123 Oramas, Alirio (Venezuela): p. 84 Orion Group (Argentina): pp. 60-61 Orlandi, Alicia (Argentina): p. 102 Orlando, Felipe (Cuba): p. 121 Orozco,Jose Clemente (Mexico): pp. 2, 13-14, 16-17, 21. 23-26, 30, 36, 105; illus.: pp. 24-26 Orozco Romero, Carlos (Mexico): pp. 29-31 Ortiz de Zarate, Manuel (Chile): p. 70 Osorio, Trinidad (Mexico): p. 30 Ospina, Marco (Colombia): p. 113 Ossandon, Carlos (Chile): p. 45 Ossaye, Roberto (Guatemala): p. 78 Ostrower, Fayga (Brazil): p. 135 Otero, Alejandro (Venezuela): pp. 74, 83, 92, 106 Ozenfant, Amedee (France): p. 112 Paalen, Wolfgang (Germany-Mexico): p. 9 Pacenza, Onofrio (Argentina): p. 44 Pacheco, Maria Luisa (Bolivia): pp. 85, 89; illus.: p. 92 Padin, Carmen (Mexico): p. 95 Paik, Namjum (United States): p. 156 Pailos, Manuel (Uruguay): p. 78 Paksa, Margarita (Argentina): p. 102 Palacios, Alirio (Venezuela): pp. 162, 164 Palacios, Giro (Peru): pp. 112, 158 Palatnik, Abraao (Brazil): pp. 96 Palau, Marta (Mexico): p. 95 Pantin, Anita (Venezuela): p. 162 Pantoja, Oscar (Bolivia): p. 89 Paparella, Aldo (Argentina): p. 120 Pape, Lygia (Brazil): pp. 97, 150, 153 Paramo, Roberto (Colombia): p. 5 Pardo, Mercedes (Venezuela): p. 107 Paredes, Diogenes (Ecuador): p. 40 Parra, Catalina (Chile): p. 156 Parra, Tomas (Mexico): p. 164 Pasqualini, Vilma (Brazil): p. 125 Paternosto, Cesar (Argentina): p. 102 Paz, Julio Guillermo (Argentina): p. 136 Pazmino, Giro (Ecuador): p. 40 Pazos, Luis (Argentina): p. 152 Pelaez, Amelia (Cuba): pp. 2, 50, 67-70, 85; illus.: p. 68 Peluffo, Marta (Argentina): pp. 94, 120 Penalba, Alicia (Argentina): pp. 61, 85, 94 Pena Defillo, Fernando (Dominican Republic): pag. 121 Penalba, Rodrigo (Nicaragua): p. 49; illus.: p. 47 "Pentagon Process" (group) (Mexico): p. 153

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• 174 • ARTIST INDEX


Perez, Dioscorides (Colombia): p. 163 Perez, Francisco (Chile): p. 111 Perez, Matilde (Chile): p. 111 Perez, Regulo (Venezuela): p. 92 Peri, Alberto (Argentina): p. 59 Perna, Claudio (Venezuela): p. 156 Pettoruti, Emilio (Argentina): pp. 6, 8, 44, 57, 58-59, 62; illus.: pp. 59-60 Pevsner, Antoine (Argentina): pp. 62, 74, 84 Peyote and Company (project) (Mexico): p. 154 Phases (group) (Argentina): p. 94 Phases (group) (France): p. 61 Picasso, Pablo (Spain): pp. 6, 8, 14, 16, 34, 40, 58, 67 Picchia, Menotti del (Brazil): p. 54 Piemonte, Carmen (Chile): p. 111 Pierri, Orlando (Argentina): pp. 59-61 Pimentel, Wanda (Brazil): p. 150 Pinkham Ryder, Albert (United States): p. 75 Pina, Pedro (Venezuela): p. 158 Piza, Artur Luis (Brazil): pp. 84-85, 135 Pizzani, Jorge (Venezuela): p. 140 Plastic Research Workshop (group) (Mexico): p. 153 Plumed Horn (circle) (Mexico): p. 124 Pogolotti, Marcelo (Cuba): p. 49 Poleo, Hector (Venezuela): pp. 47-48, 84; illus.: p. 35 Polesello, Rogelio (Argentina): pp. 85, 94, 103; illus.: p. 97 Policastro, Enrique (Argentina): p. 43 Pollaiuolo, Antonio del (Italy): p. 154 Pollock, Jackson (United States): pp. 22, 85 Ponce de Leon, Fidelio (Cuba): p. 70 Pons, Isabel (Spain-Brazil): p. 135 Portillos, Alfredo (Argentina): p. 152 Portinari, Candido (Brazil): pp. 32, 34, 35; illus.: pp. 31, 36 Portocarrero, Rene (Cuba): pp. 50, 85, 121 Posada, Jose Guadalupe (Mexico): p. 9 Poveda, Carlos (Costa Rica): p. 85 Prada, Carlos (Venezuela): p. 162 Prado, Carlos (Brazil): p. 34 Prats, Sum (Dominican Republic): p. 164 Praxis (group) (Nicaragua): p. 84 Fresno, Lincoln (Uruguay): p. 109 Prete, Juan del (Argentina): pp. 56, 62 Prieto, Cesar (Venezuela): p. 48 Priori, Gloria (Argentina): p. 120 Proyecta (group) (Dominican Republic): p. 121 Pucciarelli, Mario (Argentina): pp. 88, 121 Puelma, Dora (Chile): p. 45 Puente, Alejandro (Argentina): p. 102

Puerta, Henry (Venezuela): p. 163 Pujol, Adrian (Venezuela): p. 163 Puppo, Giancarlo (Italy-Uruguay): p. 93 Puyo, Ines (Chile): p. 45 Puzzovio, Dalila (Argentina): p. 149 Quilici, Francisco (Venezuela): pp. 140, 163 Quin, Carmelo Arden (Uruguay): p. 61 Quinquela Martin, Benito (Argentina): p. 43 Quinones, Azalea (Venezuela): p. 163 Quiros, Cesareo Bernaldo de (Argentina): p. 43 Rabinovich, Raquel (Argentina): p. 102 Raphael (Italy): p. 154 Ramirez, Dora (Colombia): p. 154 Ramirez, Fabio Antonio (Colombia): p. 155 Ramirez, Saturnino (Colombia): p. 163 Ramirez Villamizar, Eduardo (Colombia): pp. 86, 113, 158; illus.: p. 113 Ramona Parra Brigade (group) (Chile): p. 153 Ramos, Fabriciano (Argentina): p. 158 Ramos, Nelson (Uruguay): p. 109 Ramos Prida, Fernando (Mexico): p. 123 Ravelo, Juvenal (Venezuela): p. 107 Ravenet, Domingo (Cuba): p. 49 Ray King, Erik (Argentina): p. 120 Rayo, Omar (Colombia): p. 113 Real de Leon, Sebastian Roberto (Mexico): p. 158 Rebaza, Gilberto (Peru): p. 125 Recinos, Efrain (Guatemala): pp. 88, 121 Rectangle (group) (Chile): p. 110 Regazzoni, Ricardo (Mexico): p. 158 Renart, Emilio (Argentina): p. 131 Rendon, Augusto (Colombia): p. 136 Rendon, Manuel (Ecuador): p. 112 Rengifo, Cesar (Venezuela): p. 48 Renoir, Auguste (France): p. 6 Restrepo, Javier (Colombia): p. 163 Restrepo, Carlos (Colombia): p. 154 Reveron, Armando (Venezuela): pp. 5-6, 48, 67, 72-74, 80, 83; illus.: pp. 72-73 Revilla, Carlos (Peru): p. 161 Revueltas, Fermin (Mexico): p. 28 Reyes, Emma (Colombia): p. 128 Rezende de Carvalho, Flavio (Brazil): p. 148 Ribeiro, Alceu (Uruguay): p. 78 Ribeiro, Edgardo (Uruguay): p. 78 Richter, Luisa (Germany-Venezuela): pp. 92, 128 Riganelli, Agustin (Argentina): p. 43 Rivas, Julio Pacheco: p. 158 Rivera, Diego (Mexico): pp. 2, 8, 13-20, 22-24, 28-30, 3233, 36, 40, 44, 62; illus.: pp. 12, 17-19 Rizquez, Diego (Venezuela): p. 156

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ARTIST INDEX • 175 •


Robirosa,Josefina (Argentina): p. 124 Roca Rey,Joaquin (Peru): p. 128 Rocca, Francisco (Colombia): p. 162 Roda, Juan Antonio (Spain-Colombia): pp. 127-128, 138; illus.:p. 138 Rodriguez, Alirio (Venezuela): p. 129 Rodriguez, Eduardo (Argentina): p. 102 Rodriguez, Jesusa (Mexico): p. 156 Rodriguez, Jose Domingo (Colombia): p. 42 Rodriguez, Mariano (Cuba): p. 50 Rodriguez, Richard (Cuba): p. 159 Rodriguez Lozano, Manuel (Mexico): p. 62 Rojas, Carlos (Colombia): p. 113 Rojas, Cristobal (Venezuela): p. 5; illus.: p. 7 Rojas, Elmar (Guatemala): p. 121 Rojas, Miguel Angel (Colombia): p. 140 Rojas Lara, Hugo (Bolivia): p. 92 Rojo, Vicente (Spain-Mexico): p. 88 Rolando, Maruja (Venezuela): p. 92 Roman, Claudio (Chile): p. 111 Romanach, Leopoldo (Cuba): p. 49 Romberg, Osvaldo (Argentina): p. 161 Romer, Margot (Venezuela): pp. 124, 155 Rosa, Jose (Puerto Rico): p. 156 Rosado del Valle, Julio (Puerto Rico): p. 85 Rothko, Mark (United States): pp. 85, 88 Roussel, Ker Xavier (France): p. 79 Roux, Guillermo (Argentina): p. 121 Rozo, Romulo (Colombia): p. 42 Rublyov, Andrei (Russia): p. 23 Rueda, Ana Maria (Colombia): p. 159 Ruelas, Julio (Mexico): pp. 9, 26, 63 Rugendas, Johann Mauritz (Germany-Mexico): p. 4 Ruiz, Antonio M. (Mexico): pp. 8, 29, 62 The Rupture (movement) (Brazil): p. 97 Rusinol, Francisco (Spain): p. 6 Sabat, Hermenegildo (Uruguay): pp. 129, 140 Sabogal Jose (Peru): pp. 3, 37, 38; illus.: p. 37 Sacilotto, Luis (Brazil): p. 97 Saez, Carlos F. (group) (Uruguay): p. 109 Saenz, Leoncio (Nicaragua): p. 125 Sakai, Kazuya (Argentina): p. 88 Salas, Tito (Venezuela): p. 73 Salatino, Carlos (Argentina): p. 102 Salazar, Francisco (Venezuela): p. 84 Salazar, Hugo (Peru): p. 155 Salazar, Ignacio (Mexico): p. 158 Salcedo, Bernardo (Colombia): pp. 142, 154 Saldanha, lone (Brazil): p. 99

Salvo, Lily (Uruguay): p. 128 Samaras, Lucas (United States): p. 143 Sanchez, Desiderio (Panama): p. 128 Sanchez, Edgard (Venezuela): p. 162 Sanchez, Emilio (Cuba): pp. 49, 122 Sanchez, Fabian (Peru): p. 124 Sanchez, Ideal (Argentina): p. 61 Sanin, Fanny (Colombia): p. 114; illus.: p. 105 Sanin Cano, Baldomero (Colombia): p. 2 Santa Maria, Andres de (Colombia): pp. 42, 70 Santander, Cristina (Argentina): p. 136 Santantonin, Ruben (Argentina): p. 131 Santiago, Filemon (Mexico): p. 163 Santos, Jonas dos (Brazil): p. 143 Sao Paulo's 1922 Modern Art Week (group) (Brazil): pp. 3, 53-55; illus.: p. 56 Sargent, Freda (Colombia): p. 128 Sauret, Nunik (Mexico): p. 136 Sbernini, Hugo (Argentina): p. 162 Scliar, Carlos (Brazil): p. 98 Scotti, Ernesto M. (Argentina): p. 59 Sheeler, Charles (United States): p. 20 Schendel, Mira (Brazil): p. 91 Schreuder, Jan (Ecuador): p. 39 Schwitters, Kurt (Germany): p. 148 Sebastian (see Real de Leon) Segall, Lasar (Brazil): p. 35 Segui, Antonio (Argentina): pp. 120, 164; illus.: p. 116 Segui, Jorge (Argentina): p. 163 Seminario, Rendon (Ecuador): p. 39 Sencial, Gabriel (Colombia): p. 154 Sequeira, Julio (Nicaragua): p. 144 Serpa, Ivan (Brazil): p. 98 Serrano, Jose Luis (Mexico): p. 159 Severin, Seka (Yugoslavia-Venezuela): p. 142 Severini, Gino (Italy): p. 58 Shinki, Venancio (Peru): p. 90 Shiro, Flavio (Brazil): p. 91 Sicre, Juanjose (Cuba): p. 49 Sierra, Susana (Mexico): pp. 154, 159 Sigala, Jose (Venezuela): p. 156 Silva, Carlos (Argentina): p. 101 Silva, Carmen (Chile): p. 71 Silva, Edgard (Colombia): pp. 159, 163 Silva Julio H. (Argentina): p. 120 Simon, Maria (Argentina): p. 102 Sinclair, Alfredo (Panama): p. 88 Siqueiros, David Alfaro (Mexico): pp. 2, 13-14, 16-17, 20-24, 27-28, 30-32, 40-41, 44, 46, 50, 53, 66, 159; illus.: pp. 21-22

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• 176 • ARTIST INDEX


Smith, Anthony (Chile): p. 4 Smoje, Oscar (Argentina): p. 126 Sobalvarro, Orlando (Nicaragua): p. 122 Sobrino, Francisco (Argentina): p. 86 Sojo, Alberto (Colombia): p. 162 Solari, Luis A. (Uruguay): pp. 109, 136; illus.:p. 139 Solentiname (group) (Nicaragua): p. 145 Solis, Mario (Ecuador): p. 159 Somerscales, Thomas S. (England-Mexico): p. 4 Soriano, Juan (Mexico): pp. 31, 128 Soriano, Rafael (Cuba): p. 90 Sorribas, Freddy (Uruguay): p. 109 Soto,Jesus (Venezuela): pp. 84, 86, 107; illus.:p. 108 Soutine, Chaim (Poland): pp. 33, 44, 75 Spilimbergo, Lino Eneas (Argentina): pp. 8, 43-44 Sposito, Americo (Uruguay): p. 109 Stein, Joel (France): p. 86 Stone, William (Venezuela): p. 155 Suarez, Pablo (Argentina): pp. 131, 150 The Summa Group (Mexico): p. 153 Suro, Dario (Dominican Republic): pp. 32, 48 Sutil, Francisca (Chile): p. 159 Svistonoff, Nicolas (Ecuador): p. 140 The Syndicate (group) (Colombia): p. 154 Szyszlo, Fernando de (Peru): pp. 85, 90, 112; illus.: p. 94 Tabara, Enrique (Ecuador): pp. 40, 85, 90; illus.: p. 93 Takis (see Vassilakis) The Talent Group (Uruguay): p. 109 Tamariz, Eduardo (Mexico): p. 163 Tamayo, Rufino (Mexico): pp. 6, 16, 26, 28-29, 31, 62-65, 85, 90, 105, 112; illus.: pp. 29, 64-65 Tapies, Antonio (Spain): p. 85 Tejada, Hernando (Colombia): p. 130 Tejada, Jose Joaquin (Cuba): p. 49 Telemaque, Herve (Haiti): p. 124 Terrazas, Walter (Bolivia): p. 112 Testa, Clorindo (Argentina): pp. 88, 151 Theseus Association (group) (Uruguay): p. 74 Tinguely, Jean (France): pp. 115, 124, 147 Tofano, Tecla (Venezuela): p. 142 Toledo, Francisco (Mexico): pp. 9, 129 Tomasello, Luis (Argentina): pp. 86, 101 Torres-Garcia,Joaquin (Uruguay): pp. 2, 6, 63, 67, 74-78, 83,93, 103, 108-109, 130; illus.: pp. 58, 75-77 Torres, Augusto (Uruguay): pp. 78, 109 Torres, Cacipore (Brazil): p. 92

Torres, Horacio (Uruguay): pp. 78, 164 Torroja, Enrique (Argentina): p. 102 Toyota, Yutaka (Japan-Brazil): p. 99 Tozzi, Claudio (Brazil): p. 159 Triana, Jorge Elias (Colombia): pp. 41, 127 Trotta, Antonio (Argentina): p. 102 Trujillo, Guillermo (Panama): pp. 88, 128 Trujillo Maguenat, Sergio (Colombia): p. 42 Tsuchiya, Tilsa (Peru): p. 124 Tunga (Brazil): p. 143 Tupper, Maria (Chile): p. 45 Urbach,Jose (Uruguay): p. 154 Uribe, Alberto (Colombia): p. 158 Uribe,Juan Camilo (Colombia): pp. 143, 155 Urruchua, Demetrio (Argentina): pp. 8, 44 Urrutia, Sofia (Colombia): p. 144 Urteaga, Mario (Peru): p. 36 Urueta, Cordelia (Mexico): pp. 31, 62 Vadia, Rafael (Cuba): p. 159 Vajda, Ronny (Colombia): p. 158 Valbuena, Lilia (Venezuela): p. 163 Valdivieso, Raul (Chile): p. 128 Valentim, Rubem (Brazil): p. 130 Valera, Victor (Venezuela): pp. 84, 96, 107 Valeriano Alvarez, Pablo (Peru): p. 140 Vanegas Arroyo, Bias (Mexico): p. 15 Vardanega, Gregorio (Argentina): p. 86 Varela, Abigail (Venezuela): p. 163 Varela, Cybele (Brazil): p. 124 Varela, Mariana (Colombia): p. 163 Vargas, Zalathiel (Mexico): p. 156 Vargas Rosas, Luis (Chile): p. 70 Varo, Remedies (Spain-Mexico): pp. 9, 63, 65 Vasarely, Victor (Hungary-France): pp. 62, 74, 84, 86, 107 Vaskestler, Victor (Guatemala): p. 113 Vassilakis, Takis (Greece-France): p. 124 Vazquez Brito, Ramon (Venezuela): p. 107 Velasco, Jose Maria (Mexico): p. 4; illus.: p. XVI Velasquez, Jose Antonio (Honduras): pp. 49, 144; illus.: p. 145 Velazquez, Juan Ramon (Puerto Rico): p. 140 Velazquez, Manuel Adan (Panama): p. 112 Velez, Marta Elena (Colombia): p. 154 Veliz, Jorge (Mexico): p. 158 Ventayol (Uruguay): p. 109 Venturelli, Jose (Chile): pp. 32, 45-46 Vergara Grez, Ramon (Chile): p. 111 Vertiz, Martha (Peru): p. 159 Victorica, Miguel Carlos (Argentina): p. 44

Copyright © by the Inter-American Development Bank. All rights reserved. For more information visit our website: www.iadb.org/pub

ARTIST INDEX • 177 •


Vidal, Miguel Angel (Argentina): p. 101; illus.rp. 102 Vieco, Maria Teresa (Colombia): p. 163 Vieira, Decio (Brazil): p. 97 Vieira, Mary (Brazil): p. 98 Vigas, Oswaldo (Venezuela): pp. 84, 92 Vila, Teresa (Uruguay): p. 128 Vilaro, Francisco Matto (Uruguay): p. 78 Vilches, Eduardo (Chile): p. 127 Villa, Saul (Mexico): p. 163 Villacis, Anibal (Ecuador): pp. 40, 89 Villamizar, Diana M. (Venezuela): p. 158 Villanueva, Marta (Chile): p. 45 Villarreal Nunez, Teresa (Mexico): p. 144 Villasenor, Chabela (Mexico): p. 28 Villasenor, Marcela (Mexico): p. 144 Villet-Gardner, Cynthia (Barbados): p. 94 Visca, Jorge (Uruguay): p. 78 Visconti, Eliseu d'Angelo (Brazil): pp. 6, 55 "Visual Art Research" (group) (France): pp. 86, 100 Viteri, Oswaldo (Ecuador): pp. 40, 89 Vitullo, Sesostris (Argentina): p. 61 Vlady (Russia-Mexico): p. 88 Vlavianos, Nicolau (Greece-Brazil): p. 92 Volpi, Alfredo (Italy-Brazil): p. 98 Von Gunten, Roger (Mexico): pp. 105, 128 Vostell, Wolf (Germany): p. 147 Vuillard, Edouard (France): p. 6, 79 Wakabayashi, Kazuo (Japan-Brazil): p. 91

Warhol, Andy (United States): pp. 114, 118 Weissmann, Franz (Austria-Brazil): p. 98 Wells, Luis Alberto (Argentina): p. 121 Whale's Roof (group) (Venezuela): pp. 124, 156 Wolf, Lloyd (Ecuador): p. 39 Xul Solar, Alejandro [Schultz Solari] (Argentina): pp. 2, 8, 44, 57-58 Yrarrazabal, Ricardo (Chile): p. 94 Yrurtia, Rogelio (Argentina): p. 43 Yvaral, Jean Pierre Vasarely (France): p. 86 Zabludowsky, Moises (Mexico): pp. 153-154 Zachrisson, Julio A. (Panama): pp. 122, 140 Zalamea, Gustavo (Colombia): pp. 140, 142, 155; illus.:p. 143 Zalce, Alfredo (Mexico): p. 28 Zaluar, Abelardo (Brazil): p. 99 Zamora, Beatriz (Mexico): p. 159 Zamora, Jesus Maria (Colombia): p. 43 Zanabria, Rodolfo (Mexico): p. 158 Zanartu, Enrique (Chile): p. 71 Zapata, Hugo (Colombia): p. 159 Zarate, Nirma (Colombia): pp. 91, 155 Zelaya, Daniel (Argentina): p. 120 Zepeda, Rafael (Mexico): p. 159 Zerda, Eugenic (Colombia): p. 43 Zerpa, Carlos (Venezuela): pp. 143, 156 Zitman, Cornelis (Holland-Venezuela): p. 128 Zuloaga, Elisa Elvira (Venezuela): p. 48 Zurbaran, Francisco de (Spain): p. 130

Copyright © by the Inter-American Development Bank. All rights reserved. For more information visit our website: www.iadb.org/pub

• 178 • ARTIST INDEX


Copyright Š by the Inter-American Development Bank. All rights reserved. For more information visit our website: www.iadb.org/pub


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