AMA's Permanent Collection: Part IV

In commemoration of Hispanic Heritage Month 2020, we share some highlights of our collection. This exhibition is a carefully curated selection of the Art Museum of the Americas's permanent collection of more than 2,000 pieces. The AMA is the first museum of modern and contemporary art of Latin America and the Caribbean in the United States. Its origins date back to the Pan American Union art program which was the first exhibition space for young artists who are considered among the most influential of the mid twentieth-century in the Western Hemisphere. This collection is a vital bridge between the legacy of Latin American art and a heritage for todays Latinx ground braking artists. 

Autorretrato autobiográfico (1973) by Aída CarballoArt Museum of the Americas

Unlike other self-portraits where the artist’s hand is holding a brush or the palette, Carballo’s hand is there to give testimony about her life. She is looking ahead in a determined fashion.

Escritura Hurtado (1975/1975) by Jesús Rafael SotoArt Museum of the Americas

Escritura Hurtado, originally titled Escritura en gris obscuro, belongs to Soto’s artistic output of “writings” dating from the early 1960s which allowed the artist to draw in spaces.

Eco Esteril (1975/1975) by Ramon OviedoArt Museum of the Americas

After Jaime Colsón, Darío Suro, and Ada Balcácer, the late Ramón Oviedo is undoubtedly the leading figure of Dominican painting to emerge in the 1960s.

Sphere spatio-temporelle BS 7523 (1975) by Enrique CareagaArt Museum of the Americas

Sphere Spatio-Temporelle BS 7523 belongs to a series of two-dimensional optical geometric works created in Paris starting in 1973.

Las Tres Gracias (1975/1975) by Agustín FernándezArt Museum of the Americas

Las tres gracias characteristically inflects an aloof, polymastic armature with a classical referent, in this case the mythological and eternally youthful daughters of Zeus—said to embody grace, beauty, and charm.

Physichromie No. 965 (1977/1977) by Carlos Cruz-DiezArt Museum of the Americas

Physicromie is what Carlos Cruz-Diez calls the collection of works that he has created since 1959, where he proposes a visual discourse about the spatial production of color.

La guapachosa (1978) by Julio ZachrissonArt Museum of the Americas

Since the late 1950s, Julio Zachrisson has been one of a handful of Latin American artists exclusively dedicated to drawing and printmaking as his primary mediums of expression.

Acrylic No. 6, 1979 (1979) by Fanny SanínArt Museum of the Americas

Fanny Sanín’s Acrylic No. 6, 1979 is a perfect example of the artist’s signature style. Symmetry and balance are the main characteristics of this piece as is common in her entire oeuvre.

Yanomami (2003) by Claudia AndujarArt Museum of the Americas

Yanomami is part of a large series of photographs titled Marcados, or Branded, which Andujar shot in the period between 1981 and 1984 when she participated in a medical expedition to the Yanomami lands of northern Brazil.

Fragment Pieces #3 (1982) by María Martínez-CañasArt Museum of the Americas

In this work, Martínez-Cañas combined two-inch negatives—details of trees on the property of her mother’s house in Miami, the cradle of Cuban America—with marks that she scratched onto the surface of the print.

Untitled (1988) by Ronnie CarringtonArt Museum of the Americas

An intriguing black and white photograph where we see a foot resting on the window sill of a house. The hut is a typical chattel house, a Barbadian small movable wooden house for the working class.

Child Selling Pumpkins. Santiago, Dominican Republic (1985) by Domingo BatistaArt Museum of the Americas

In this color photograph, a boy sits outside a house with an orange pumpkin cut in two halves resting at his feet.

Cholos (1986) by Graciela IturbideArt Museum of the Americas

Iturbide chose to document the Chicano community of Boyle Heights in East Los Angeles. Iturbide was able to live with and shadow a group of women of the community for one and a half days closely detailing their activities.

Septiembre (1990) by Marta MinujínArt Museum of the Americas

Septiembre is a double life-size sculpture in aluminum mesh and welded iron. It is a wavy silhouette figure that curves graciously.

Rios 2 (1990) by Olga de AmaralArt Museum of the Americas

By deftly bringing together art, craft, and design in her fiber art work, Olga de Amaral has pushed the boundaries of conventional textiles.

Mar Caribe (1996) by Tony CapellanArt Museum of the Americas

The piece consists of some 500 green and blue rubber flip flops that the artist found on the banks of the Ozama River in the Dominican Republic.

Estela Vertical - D, I, P, S (detail) (1998) by Ricardo BenaimArt Museum of the Americas

The whole installation was based on the projection of his utopic ideal in search of a better reality, through his concern for the land and his passion for topography.

I Do Not Hear a Thing (1999) by Felix ÁngelArt Museum of the Americas

The graphic and pictorial work of Felix Ángel uses pictographic and compositional elements of German expressionism. I Do Not Hear a Thing is a piece that displays that.

Credits: Story

Artworks from the collection of the Organization of American States (OAS) AMA | Art Museum of the Americas
AMAmuseum.org

Art of the Americas: Collection of the Art Museum of the Americas of the Organization of American States is an endeavor that aims to study the historical and cultural legacy of the AMA | Art Museum of the Americas and the Organization of American States. See our online catalog here: http://www.oas.org/artsoftheamericas/art-of-the-americas

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The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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