Buenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (Museo Moderno)
Buenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (Museo Moderno)
Celebrating 58 years since it first opened its doors, the Museum of Modern Art of Buenos Aires has been greatly honored with a priceless set of 72 drawings by León Ferrari, generously donated by Alicia Ferrari, his children, and his grandchildren.
Untitled (1964) by León FerrariBuenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (Museo Moderno)
Among the earliest of Ferrari's works donated, the most interesting are those in which he explores the possibility of drawing as writing. These include The Crested Lark (1964), a written drawing forming part of a broad series in which León invents contoured calligraphies dripping with sarcasm and humor.
Untitled (1979) by León FerrariBuenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (Museo Moderno)
Untitled (1976) by León FerrariBuenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (Museo Moderno)
Untitled (1977) by León FerrariBuenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (Museo Moderno)
Music (1980) by León FerrariBuenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (Museo Moderno)
Ferrari used these to establish new possibilities for art as well as for writing.
Heliographies
The Heliographies are large plans that Ferrari would send by mail, motivated by his belief in democratizing art. They were created between 1982 and 1983 during his exile in São Paulo, Brazil. New copies were made in 2003
South Highway (1982/2003) by León FerrariBuenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (Museo Moderno)
People (1983/2003) by León FerrariBuenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (Museo Moderno)
In 1979, León started to create drawings incorporating Letraset copies for architectural plans representing men, toilets, beds, or doors.
The series of Heliographies which he started in 1980 consists of large heliographic plans depicting a society in which the man has become depersonalized.
Destiny (1982/2003) by León FerrariBuenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (Museo Moderno)
The use of the copies enabled Ferrari to systematize the representation of the human figure who, multiplied in uniformity, seems happy to live by the rules of an anonymous system of power.
Crujemento (1982/2003) by León FerrariBuenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (Museo Moderno)
Roads (1982/2003) by León FerrariBuenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (Museo Moderno)
On the paper, the infinite number of men continually wind, in line, until they are lost, mimicking the line in his earlier drawings.
Neighbourhood (1980/2003) by León FerrariBuenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (Museo Moderno)
Some of these plans, which León describes as "architectures of craziness," measure up to one meter by almost three meters.
City (1980/2003) by León FerrariBuenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (Museo Moderno)
Bed (1982/2003) by León FerrariBuenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (Museo Moderno)
Reciprocal Spectators (1981/2003) by León FerrariBuenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (Museo Moderno)
The Heliographies were reproduced in infinite editions that León would send by mail, clearly demonstrating his ambition to distribute his views as far and wide as possible.
Studio (1981/2003) by León FerrariBuenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (Museo Moderno)
Square (1982/2003) by León FerrariBuenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (Museo Moderno)
Writing (1983/2003) by León FerrariBuenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (Museo Moderno)
Stairs (1983/2003) by León FerrariBuenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (Museo Moderno)
Embroilment, entanglement, repetition and the profuse character of all Ferrari's work continue as a fundamental element.
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