The Pulverized Image

The IDB Art Collection: Abstract Art in the Second Half of the 20th Century

By Inter-American Development Bank

Story: Patricia Ortega-Miranda, Art Historian and Curator

Dust is an accumulation of minute particles, an abstract mass that can exist in all the states of matter. We live with it and is part of us but is not only a dispersed mass. It can also be a concentrate, forming solid bodies.  This exhibition considers dust a metaphor through which to tell a dispersed and diluted history of abstract art in the second half of the 20th century through a selection of works from the IDB Art Collection, while emphasizing the singular qualities of each work of art.

Sin título Da Série Gaveta dos Recuerdos (2005) by Thais HeltInter-American Development Bank

THAIS HELT (BRAZIL)

Untitled (from the series "Gaveta dos Recuerdos"), 2005

In the work of Brazilian artist Thais Helt Salgado, the oval is a recurring shape that refers us to the locus where all things originate and form, and to the cyclical processes of biological and psychic phenomena. Evoking the figures of the egg and the womb, the oval appears often as a negative space, a teeming void in a simultaneous state of growth and disintegration. Helt Salgado’s work carries on the tradition of Brazilian neo-concrete aesthetics while signaling a radical departure. 

Sin título Da Série Gaveta dos Recuerdos (2005) by Thais HeltInter-American Development Bank

Helt Salgado’s work is characterized by the fusion of techniques and materials as she considers the relationship between a form’s interiority and exteriority. The artist’s engraving printed on fabric is adhered and sewn onto a sheet of paper with handwritten fragments of texts.

The central shape resembles a stain, its organic materiality suggests the internal motions of a gestation phase functioning as a physical and psychic space for storing memories.

Imago Mundi XV (2001) by Vicente Pascual RodrigoInter-American Development Bank

VICENTE PASCUAL RODRIGO (SPAIN)

Imago Mundi XV, 2001

In some ancient cultures, the spatial arrangement of a city was analogous, and in accordance with a spiritual and cosmological conception of the universe. The symbolic representation of landscape as unified order is a central theme in Pascual Rodrigo's work. In the 1990s Pascual  lived and worked in the United States for more than ten years. While living in Washington, D.C., Pascual adopted the somber palette and flat textural surfaces that characterize his post-minimalist abstract paintings.

Imago Mundi XV (2001) by Vicente Pascual RodrigoInter-American Development Bank

This triptych reconfigures the genre of landscape as a conceptual image. The yellow sphere perfectly centered in the middle panel is flanked by two rectangular canvases, alluding to the Babylonian inscriptions found on a clay tablet known as the oldest depiction of the world. 

Triptychs, where monochromatic panels of an earth-toned super flat surface make one single abstract composition, are unique in their total elimination of gestural traces, a quasi-alchemical blend of industrial and organic processes that imbue his paintings with great mystery.

El muro (1991) by Elvis AvilesInter-American Development Bank

ELVIS AVILÉS (DOMINICAN REPUBLIC)

El Muro, 1991

Dominican artist Elvis Avilés is an important figure within the neo-expressionist international movement of the 1980s. The resurgence of gestural abstraction and the organic textures of art informed his work and led him to formulate a renewed approach. For him, the surface of the canvas is like an archeological site. Yet, gathering the residual elements of his immediate urban landscape means turning away from the city to dig into the stories that speak of its endurance and slow disintegration.

El muro (1991) by Elvis AvilesInter-American Development Bank

In El Muro, the canvas mimics the porous and washed-out surface of a street wall. Dense textures give way to liquid transparencies resembling rocky formations of a coastal landscape which, eroded by water and salt, have begun to expose the reds and browns of its leaking minerals.

Through a highly dynamic and gestural application of paint, Avilés infuses the canvas with a life if its own. What results is a painting that conceives ephemerality as the renewal of collective narratives.

Untitled from "La Rinconada, Peru" Series (2014) by Magdalena CorreaInter-American Development Bank

MAGDALENA CORREA (CHILE)

Untitled (from the series "La Rinconada"), 2014

Located more than 5,000 feet above sea level, La Rinconada is one of the most exploited gold mines in the Andean region of Peru, a city of approximately sixteen thousand inhabitants, most of them of indigenous descent, living under extreme weather conditions and inhaling the toxic gases released by exposed garbage mounts. Part of a series of photographs taken in 2014, Untitled invites the viewer to reflect on the difficulty of aestheticizing the natural and human landscape of La Rinconada.

Untitled from "La Rinconada, Peru" Series (2014) by Magdalena CorreaInter-American Development Bank

In the photograph, a pile of rock or dirt is superimposed by another pile forming two horizontal flat planes, and in between, the depersonalized figure of a miner looking down towards the ground.

The two piles of rocks and soil, flattened by the absence of three-dimensional spatial illusionism, become a homogeneous mass that threatens to swallow the miner's body, rendering labor and landscape as anonymity and abstraction.

Espacios interiores (Inner Spaces) (2000) by Byron Lombardo MejíaInter-American Development Bank

BYRON LOMBARDO MEJÍA (HONDURAS)

Espacios Interiores, 2000

In the Greek epic poem The Iliad, the Homeric image of the underworld is one where mist and shadows reign, the dwelling place of the heroes’ souls. Removed from the realm of light, this world of invisibility is also a repository of memory, as it is where the heroes and heroines go to meditate on their past and narrate the most disturbing events of the war. In the paintings of Honduran artist Byron Lombardo Mejia, the Homeric underworld appears as a psychic and mythical place.

Espacios interiores (Inner Spaces) (2000) by Byron Lombardo MejíaInter-American Development Bank

In "Inner Spaces", phantasmagorical figures appear to be trapped in fear and shame. The Homeric underworld appears reconstructed in an image that recalls the Christian ladder of divine ascension, where the path to salvation is one of permanent penance and sorrow. 

In Lombardo's paintings vision is dethroned, awakening other senses by mimicking the viscosity and liquidity of earthy substances and burnt surfaces.  By invoking imaginaries of the afterlife, the artist reflects on judgement, mortality, violence, and pain.

Figuras (1986) by Gracia BarriosInter-American Development Bank

GRACIA BARRIOS (CHILE)

Figuras, 1986

The body and the face constitute central motifs in the work of artist Gracia Barrios. Her artistic practice was directly impacted by the violence carried out by the Chilean military dictatorship. Yet, her work does not aim to provide a graphic documentation of events or stand as mere representation of subjects, but to subvert and critique media culture and the construction of political and social subjectivities by combining opposed artistic tendencies such as pop art and gestural abstraction. 

Figuras (1986) by Gracia BarriosInter-American Development Bank

In Figuras, the act of applying makeup resonates with the convulsive and repetitive scratching gesture disfiguring the blurred figures painted on the canvas. The act of applying makeup is also a metaphor for an act of covering up or masking something.

The soft and muted tones of pastel paint evoking innocence is in strong contrast with the sexual innuendo of the red lip crayon. Rather than define gender categories, the application of makeup, much like the artist's paint, is conceived as an act where all distinctions collapse.

Rastros by Matilde MarinInter-American Development Bank

MATILDE MARÍN (ARGENTINA)

Rastros, 1988

Matilde Marin’s conceptual approach to printmaking has been a constant since the beginning of her artistic practice in the 1980s. Building up on a tradition that can be traced all the way back to the work of neo-concrete Brazilian artist Lygia Pape and her “Tecelar” (Weaving) series from 1954, Marin's conceptual investigations weave in a reflection around the reversibility of an image fixed onto a two-dimensional surface but resulting from a physical activity.

Rastros by Matilde MarinInter-American Development Bank

"Rastros" combines different media. The crevices of a wood block frame the central image, an etching and aquatint print tracing the marks left behind by a bundle of strips of paper that seem placed randomly. The pictorial and illusionistic space of representation...

...is also an image of juxtaposed materials and surface. At once a depiction of vertical logs and horizontal traces, the resulting image frees both medium and creative activity from their supposed regimes of structure and randomness, concealment and exposure. 

Untitled (2002) by Tomie OhtakeInter-American Development Bank

TOMIE OHTAKE (BRAZIL)

Untitled, 2002

An important figure within the global phenomenon of abstract art that resonated throughout the 20th century, Japan-born Brazilian artist Tomie Ohtake was influenced by the Japanese calligraphic tradition and by the intellectual and artistic work of other Japanese expatriates living in  São Paulo. Ohtake mastered printmaking and painting techniques while developing her own unique artistic style, and in 1954 joined the Group Seibi-Kai, working closely with Manabu Mabe and Takashi Fukushima.

Untitled (2002) by Tomie OhtakeInter-American Development Bank

In this untitled lithograph, the artist employs two color tones to create an optical effect where the brush mark can be perceived as both a stain and a shadow. For Ohtake, fluidity functions not only as a metaphor for the flow of energy that links humans to nature...

...but as an experience that is physically embodied in the relationship between the body, the brush, and the paint. The merging of the three takes place through movement, which erases all hierarchies in the expression of their fusion as a mastering of balance.

Untitled (1996) by Delcy MorelosInter-American Development Bank

DELCY MORELOS (COLOMBIA)

Untitled, 1996

In the work of Colombian artist Delcy Morelos, the degradation of red functions as a metaphor for the debasement of the human body as closeness or distancing from the earth. To go from red to orange or from red to brown is to go from blood to mud, or from fluid to residual pigment. In establishing a dialogue between the sculptural geometric language of minimalist art and the intensity of color in abstract expressionism, Morelos’ work weaves in the relationship between content and container.

Untitled (1996) by Delcy MorelosInter-American Development Bank

In this work left untitled, six squared blocks of red paint with irregular edges have at the same time a solid and liquid volume, granting them an impenetrable and permeable quality. 

Through this gesture of humility towards the basest of materials, Morelos creates a ritual site, where we attend our own burial among the dead while becoming part of the soil’s life, buried and alive, like a memory preserved in the density of silence.

Credits: Story

Patricia Ortega-Miranda, PhD Candidate, Twentieth-Century Latin American Art History, University of Maryland (United States).

Credits: All media
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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