Abstraction and Figuration in Space

Abstraction and Figuration in Space

Downtown Miami 1325 NE 1st AveMiami, FL 33132, USA Monday, June 29, 2020–Saturday, November 21, 2020 Opening Reception: Wednesday, July 29, 2020

   

innocent giant  by tom otterness

Tom Otterness

Innocent Giant , 2017

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regina con sombrero  by manolo valdés

Manolo Valdés

Regina con Sombrero , 2006

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marylin mata a un gallo by victor valera

Victor Valera

Marylin Mata a un Gallo, 1962

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lanzador de dardos by victor valera

Victor Valera

Lanzador de Dardos, 1962

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divertimiento by cornelis zitman

Cornelis Zitman

Divertimiento, 1973

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bailarina descansando by cornelis zitman

Cornelis Zitman

Bailarina Descansando, 1995

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la desconocida  by cornelis zitman

Cornelis Zitman

La Desconocida , 1972

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Featuring thirteen artists, this exhibition ventures into novel visual territories of abstract and figurative contemporary sculpture, claiming a place in present-day art history. Beginning with the Venezuelans, Jesús Soto and his extraordinary Mural (1967), whose incorporation of time- energy as the fourth dimension and the optical fragmentation of form have placed him as the most important pioneer of international kinetic art; Alejandro Otero presents Abra Solar (1981-1983), an aluminum sculpture revealing his explorations of public space; Víctor Valera presents the first manifestations of abstract-geometric sculpture in the country, but whose titles refer to the figurative universe: Lanzador de dardos and Marilyn mata a un Gallo (1962); Carlos Medina in Fragmento de lluvia (1989) and Círculo Total III (1996) begins his research on the behavior of geometric shapes in space; while the works of Rafael Barrios, Verticale Disloque (2018) and (2019) demonstrate his continued interest in optical-kinetic and real-unreal visual research; the sculpture Magritte II (1998) by the great master Marisol exemplifies her important contribution to the pop trend; Cornelis Zitman's three bronzes, La Desconocida (1972), Bailarina Descansando (1995) and Divertimiento (1973) resemble figurative poetics, like those of American Tom Otterness, Immigrants Family (2007) and Innocent Giant (2017), sculptures which are full of humor and to a certain extent, social critique. Móvil Espiral Fractal - M596 From Colombia, Edgar Negret and his peculiar geometric assemblies painted in bright colors, Torre Roja (1979), El Sol Rojo (1994) and Puente Colgante (1998), evoke natural forms and his ceaseless interest in industrial machinery; and Fernando Botero's two bronzes, Woman in Bed (2014) and Ballerina (2015) are centered around the female figure, the traditional theme characteristic of his work. The sculptures Little Horse (1989), Totem (undated), El Violinista (1989) and La Famille (1990) by Cuban artist Agustín Cárdenas are figurative, nearly biomorphic forms loosely referring to his Afro-Cuban culture. Last but not least, we have Manolo Valdés and Julio Larraz. In Valdés' Regina con Sombrero (2006), we witness the artist's fascination with carving and rearranging the wood medium to build a figurative sculpture; and the bronzes The Ark (2020) and Habeas Corpus (2007) impose the hyperrealist style charged with social sarcasm that permeates Larraz’s work.

The creative work of these artists, many of them painters as well, pertains to a vital development in ethics, esthetics and fine art with roots in some of the most important historical avant-gardes, the builders of universal contemporary art history.


Bélgica Rodríguez, PhD, Art Critic and researcher specialized in Latin American Art.