London-based gallery Timothy Taylor, which recently announced the opening
of its first space in New York at 515 West 19th Street, will debut with an
exhibition dedicated to the late Mexican architect Luis Barragán.
Luis Barragán (1902-1988) was one of the greatest second-generation
modernists, and along with Oscar Niemeyer, the most important 20th century
architect to emerge from Latin America.
Architecture of Color: The Legacy of Luis Barragán will explore Barragán’s
architectural practice, his spiritual sense of aesthetics, and his unique use of
color. The exhibition will also celebrate his legacy through the artworks of his
contemporaries, those influenced by him, and those with whom he shares a
visual and deeper synergy. This is the first exhibition of Barragán’s work in New
York since his retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in 1976.
The exhibition – curated by Oscar Humphries – will include works by Mexicobased
artists with whom Barragán had close ties, including Mathias Goeritz,
Chucho Reyes and Eduardo Terrazas. Timothy Taylor 16x34 will transform the
interior of the gallery with colorful walls that reference Barragán’s work,
creating conversations in color with pieces by some of the most influential
living and non-living artists of the past century. These artists will include Josef
Albers, Carl Andre, Dan Flavin, Sheila Hicks, Agnes Martin and Sean Scully,
and will be presented with Barragán-designed furniture.
Barragán’s bold use of color, his masterful manipulation of natural and artificial
light, and his command of form which he applied to local and international
architectural practice placed him at the very forefront of twentieth century
architecture. It has been Barragán’s amalgamation of expansive references,
together with his virtuosity and sensitivity as a creator of spaces, that transports
the occupant beyond architecture into the realm of art.
One of Modernism’s most poetic voices, his design approach was at once totally
new and classical. He saw and interpreted his country’s natural and cultural
geography through a 20th century lens. Mathias Goeritz, who collaborated with Barragán on the Torres de Satélite (1957-58), was the first to use the term
‘emotional architecture’ in relation to Barragán’s work. This exhibition will
explore those same principles in painting and sculpture, drawing a parallel
between Barragán’s ‘emotional architecture’ and the ‘emotional abstraction’ of
many of the artists included in the exhibition.
“Barragán was an architect surrounded by artists, not by architects,” says
Eduardo Terrazas, whose friendship with Barragán began in the 1960s.
In describing the exhibition, Tim Taylor says, “Oscar has taken the feeling and
meaning of a Barragán space and created an immersive physical reference by
way of artists who speak Barragán’s language of color and the result is rather
extraordinary. The intimacy of our New York space is perfectly suited for this
exhibition as Barragán worked at a human scale.”
Barragán’s furniture, never put into production and only made for specific
projects, has the same simplicity of form, tactility of material, and authenticity
that is evident in his buildings. In this exhibition, rare examples of his design
practice will be shown: a bench and a pair of chairs from his famous equestrian
project Cuadra San Cristobal (1966-68), Los Clubes, Mexico City.
The exhibition will also include rare archival material loaned by public and
private collections in Mexico and abroad, documenting Barragán’s architectural
practice, as well as personal documents and ephemera not previously shown in
the United States.
“My house is my refuge, an emotional piece of architecture, not a cold piece of
convenience.” Luis Barragán