“Roger the Rat” inaugurates the new gallery space: SENDA M&A, within the framework of City Screen 2021

The work is composed of a series of black and white photographs produced in Johannesburg between 2015 and 2020, accompanied by a video made during the months of confinement. 

Through these images, Roger Ballen documents a creature half-human, half-rat, living in isolation from society. The character, motivated by his loneliness, attempts to create new companions to share his daily life, but the isolation generates feelings of frustration and rage.

Roger the Rat personifies the impact of loneliness, exclusion, and the uncomfortable feeling of suffocation that afflicts human beings when confined in enclosed spaces. The psychic consequences of the pandemic are explored throughout the images through the absurd actions of the protagonist, which produce a feeling of identification and empathy on the part of the visitors. 

The son of a photo editor at Magnum, Ballen has worked as a geologist and mining consultant before launching his own photographic career, documenting small villages in rural Africa and their isolated inhabitants. His images are at once powerful social allegories and disturbing psychological studies. Ballen’s work “Terrallende” was considered one of the most extraordinary photographic documents of the late 20th century. It was awarded Best Photographic Book of the Year at PhotoEspaña 2001 in Madrid. He was awarded Best Photographic Book of the Year at PhotoEspaña 2001 in Madrid.

His distinguished photographic style has evolved using simply a square format and a black and white color scheme. His early work has a clear influence on documentary photography, but during the 1990s he developed a style that he described as documentary fiction. His distinctive photographic style has evolved using simply a square format and black-and-white color scheme.

Roger Ballen, Amputee. Archival pigment print. 61 x 43 cm. 2015
Roger Ballen, Revealed. Archival pigment print. 61 x 43 cm. 2020

Donald Sultan and the Rebirth of Still Life

By Cecilia Durán

Galeria Senda welcomed spring with “Day and Night: New Paintings and Drawings,” the first exhibition in Spain of renowned American artist Donald Sultan. Consisting of a collection of large sacale pieces with the mimosa flower as its motif, Sultan demonstrated that a result can be accomplished with an unusual formula. It’s the case of Spring Mimosa Dec 12: painted flowers that were watered with tar and enamel, instead of water. 

You are probably thinking: still life? The frenzy over dead nature and wine glasses left undrunk has long been dead, hasn’t it? The bread crumbs, the pear, the worm-eaten apple…Or those who opt for flowers, in order to come across as romantics, or perhaps because they were on offer and spring isn’t the season for pears. A white canvas, stained with the pigment of earthy colours — green, brown and dijon yellow. 

Perhaps the death of conventional still life paintings did occur. Cézanne took with him the last sigh of the  artist-admirer-of-fainted-fruits-over-ceramics, and Van Gogh that of sunflowers, which turned their heads away from the minds of those who claim to “know about art.” Maybe only a few of us still find peace in the representation of nature, even if it doesn’t come accompanied with conceptual affairs and ulterior motives. A bouquet of marigold, a strawberry, a landscape or something as mundane as a cigarette that dances in the darkness of a flat near 6 W & 24th st. 

Sometimes that’s all one needs. A breath of relief in the stifle that becomes living in a time where one suffers from having to narrow their taste to a world that is quick to decide who is worthy of taking up a white wall and who will never leave their paint and hormone scented room. 

Forget about the white wall, and while you are at it, forget the white canvas too. Instead, picture yourself in a concrete plant, where the tar fumes and the heat emerging from the pyramid of pebbles conceal your lungs and make your blood boil. In the midst of all that industrial landscape — metal, wood, iron and fire — grows a flower. It isn’t easy to imagine, in fact, it’s almost impossible for a flower to grow among so much hardship, yet, against all odds, it does. It is an orange flower, round like the sun, like the moon, like a dandelion that hasn’t granted its wish yet. 

Cézanne’s still life emits an aroma of a tablecloth marinated with peach nectar and the little puddle that your father spilled in what was his fourth glass of wine. Van Gogh’s sunflower brings about the smell of summer fields and the distant saltiness of the sea. However, Donald Sultan’s mimosas play with your senses: you can see minimal circles, surrounded by a bunch of olive leaves and it makes you think: south of France, dry and fruity air… but when you get closer to the piece all schemes fall down. You no longer think of the French countryside, but of the way there —  the voyage. The heat emerging from the asphalt when you step off the car to spread your legs, and the smell of tar coming from a factory that was built far from human life; to avoid shortening the very same with the impurity of the fumes steaming from its high chimneys. 

You see, Cézanne’s provincial scenery and Van Gogh’s thick-brushtroked flowers had become far removed from my mental archive of beloved pieces. It’s not that I don’t admire the works, nor a need for art to tell me “something.” It’s more that I am in a constant quest of works that will allow me to appreciate beauty in a world in which very rarely beauty comes without aftershocks. To believe, for once, that within industrial land, life can grow. 

If you get close to Sultan’s work you’ll be able to ‘smell’ your childhood in the countryside, the sweet taste of sun-ripened fruit, and the breeze that caresses your skin as you read under the olive tree on a sunny August afternoon… although what you are really smelling is masonite, enamel and tar. 

I think that is the whole point of it — stimulating your senses with what you think it is, what you would like it to be and what it truly is. If you wish to see it for yourself, the exhibition will be open until the end of July.

Glenda León exhibits “Musica de las formas” at Vigo’s MARCO

On June 18th the MARCO museum of Vigo will have the opening of Glenda León’s “Música de las formas”, which has been commissioned by José Jiménez.

The cuban artist return with a series of works which are representative of the bond between poetry and objects, thus creating a synthesis between visual and sonic worlds. León uses mundane objects and raw materials and she transforms them in a way that reveals their metaphorical power. That way, the works present a sensible look towards what is quotidian. His works transit between spheres of intimacy and openness, manifesting her ability to create new meanings through a process of contextualising, manipulating and associating objects.

In “Música de las formas,” the artist evidenciares music’s influence on her growth, both on a personal and an artistic level, and how interconnected it is to the movement of the stars. José Jiménez mentions Pithagoras to justify this phenomenon to which the latter refers to as the “cosmo’s harmony” as well. León manages to connect the ground with the sky, the mundane and the extraordinary.

Estrellas Masticadas (2015) is a great example of the aforementioned, given that the artist creates celestial bodies by linking together gums that were disposed and stuck to the ground. By doing so she is creating a debate between the mundanity of something so basic as chewing gum and the solemnity of those starts that so many other geniuses had observed in a past.

The exhibit can be seen until October 31st.

Peter Halley brings to life the walls of the Nivola Museum with latest exhibition “ANTESTERIA”

All those months spent inside feeling trapped within four walls triggered Peter Halley into re-thinking the artistic world he had been inventing since the 80’s. Changes in mode of life resulted in changes in mode of expression, as the New Yorker began to opt for alternative confines to his previously “conduit” and “cell-like” paintings. 

Nine months after his exhibition New Paintings at galeria Senda, Peter Halley has taken his laberinthian explosion of colors to the walls of the Nivola Museum in Orani, Sardegna. ANTESTERIA, which gives name to the exhibit, references the Greek festivity in devotion of the god Dyonisus and the arrival of spring.

Parting away from the static, rectangular and lethargic aspect of the conventional canvas, Halley has adapted his color induced shapes to the walls of the museum in a manner resemblant to those done by previous artists throughout history. Reminiscent of the legacy that traces back to cave paintings all the way to fourteenth-century fresco paintings such as those done by Giotto in the Arena Chapel at Padua, Halley has brought out a cathartic experience by combining his signature neon colored shapes with the geometric motifs of the room. The arched windows, with stained glasses similar to those in churches, are in conversation with the dynamic and psychedelic paintings of the American artist. 

A pristine place brought to life; a secular space made to receive an attention that dances the line between admiration and devotion. The signature cell structure of Halley’s work is distorted, made to appear as a continuum of lines that lead the viewer’s gaze from one side of the room to the other, stopping in between to stare into the kaleidoscopic splatters on the west and east walls, as well as the lower panels, which combine geometric shapes with more free draw lines. 

Peter Halley is reinventing himself according to the contemporary world we live in. His art fluctuates in the same way customs, culture and capitalism do. He proved so when he exhibited New Paintings in the gallery last September, when he moved away from the square canvas and took on a different meaning for it. To him the canvas no longer ought to be static, but by combining luminous colors with irregular confines, he contrasted textures and reliefs that brought together the industrial and urban register, and the sensuality of tactile experience. 

To the artist, the cells and conducts are not simply geometric compositions, but rather, symbolic images of the social schemes that surround us. A turn in his analysis of the models of organisation and communication in contemporary societies. 

ANTESTERIA will be exhibited until August 22nd.

Roger the Rat in ARCO E-XHIBITIONS april 2021

In April, Senda Gallery presented Roger Ballen’s new project Roger the Rat.

The work is composed of a series of black and white photographs produced in Johannesburg between 2015 and 2020, accompanied by a video made during the months of confinement. 

Through these images, Roger Ballen documents a creature half-human, half-rat, living in isolation from society. The character, motivated by his loneliness, attempts to create new companions to share his daily life, but the isolation generates feelings of frustration and rage.

Roger the Rat personifies the impact of loneliness, exclusion, and the uncomfortable feeling of suffocation that afflicts human beings when confined in enclosed spaces. The psychic consequences of the pandemic are explored throughout the images through the absurd actions of the protagonist, which produce a feeling of identification and empathy on the part of the visitors. 

The son of a photo editor at Magnum, Ballen has worked as a geologist and mining consultant before launching his own photographic career, documenting small villages in rural Africa and their isolated inhabitants. His images are at once powerful social allegories and disturbing psychological studies. Ballen’s work “Terrallende” was considered one of the most extraordinary photographic documents of the late 20th century. It was awarded Best Photographic Book of the Year at PhotoEspaña 2001 in Madrid. He was awarded Best Photographic Book of the Year at PhotoEspaña 2001 in Madrid.

His distinguished photographic style has evolved using simply a square format and a black and white color scheme. His early work has a clear influence on documentary photography, but during the 1990s he developed a style that he described as documentary fiction. His distinctive photographic style has evolved using simply a square format and black-and-white color scheme.

Click here to see the 3D exhibition

https://3d.exhibify.net/?uuid=2d406fd8-19e9-4902-8521-7a23b644e6da&v=v1191

Roger Ballen, Amputee. Archival pigment print. 61 x 43 cm. 2015
Roger Ballen, Revealed. Archival pigment print. 61 x 43 cm. 2020

Presentation of the book ZETA CERO by Yago Hortal

On May 25, Yago Hortal presented his first monograph at the ONA bookstore on Pau Claris street.

Yago Hortal participates in a talk, mediated by journalist Bibiana Ballbè, which invites the public to learn about his artistic career and his creative process.

His first monograph, produced by Senda Ensayo, reviews his artistic production over the last 15 years, tracing the evolution of his work during this time, and giving a glimpse of the new direction of his work in search of new horizons.

Hortal’s work, which from the beginning has been committed to redefining the formalism of abstract painting, functions on a metalinguistic level, and celebrates the dialogue of the work and its own process of creation.

Yago Hortal (Barcelona, 1983), studied Fine Arts at the University of Barcelona and the University of Seville. In 2007, one year after graduating, he wins the 49th Prize for Young Painters. The following year, at only 25 years of age, he began to exhibit not only in Spain but also in the rest of Europe and the United States. His paintings maintain a tight relationship between the work of art and action painting itself. The canvas forms part of a performance in which the artist consciously creates spontaneous color forms in an infinite gamma, expressing passion and vibrancy. The painting seems to come out of the canvas, causing a desire to touch it and creating textural sensations.

Visit our shop : https://galeriasenda.com/shop/yago-hortal-zeta-cero-2/

Works on paper : Solo Show de Sandra Vásquez de la Horra at Arco E-xhibitions

Sandra Vásquez de la Horra, El último tango, grafito y gouache
sobre papel encerado. 106 x 134 cm. 2020

This March, Galería Senda presents an online exhibition with the works of the chilean artist Sandra Vásquez de la Horra. She develops a poetic work where the mystical and popular tradition, very present in her personal parcours. Her drawings are true narratives inspired by memories, the unconscious and sexuality.

The exhibition invites the visitor to get to know the artist’s personal technique: the use of pencil and colored watercolors to later apply a wax bath to the works, a transparent film that provides permanence and protection to the work. The compositions, produced in various formats, intertwine asymmetrically and attract the public’s gaze thanks to their simultaneously humorous and critical tone, in which each drawing is part of an iconographic narrative.

Sandra Vásquez de la Horra’s works expose the artist’s own singular language and build new territories to be explored by the public.

Link to online exhibition : https://3d.exhibify.net/?uuid=b98222c5-8719-4083-9cde-5725892ed110&v=v981

Link to the Viewing Room : https://www.artsy.net/viewing-room/galeria-senda-sandra-vasquez-de-la-horra

De la tumba me levanto. Lápiz sobre papel / Baño de cera. 39 x 28 cm. 2013
Desde mis raíces. Lápiz sobre papel / Baño de cera. 39 x 26 cm. 2014
El viaje de Olokun. Lápiz y acuarela sobre papel / Baño de cera. 76 x 112 cm. 2013

Gino Rubert: EL MÓN DE L’ART (Una tragicomèdia) at the Teatroneu.

Original idea, script, music and actor: Gino Rubert
Costume, Actress and second voice: Estela Martguet Huguet
Duration: 60 minutes

The artist and writer Gino Rubert, who has exhibited at galleries and museums around the world and has published two fictional books, climbs to the stage of the Teatroneu to transform it into a contemporary art gallery, where, in a type of tragicomic catharsis, he draws an incisive and ruthless portrait of the world of art.

“…In The World of Art (a tragicomedy) of Gino Rubet, we find a satirical piece of low budget that bears some relation to his series of paintings The Opening. In fact, the most striking of the function was to discover that this excellent painter who has also published two good books of stories turns out to be a complete showman, capable of interpreting many and various characters, in different languages and various genres, as a multi-vocalist Fregolia. And that he also composes good music, plays it on the piano and sings it in various records, from a nearly blues to a funny horror song called Fata Morgana…

Juan Bufill LA VANGUARDIA  29-3-2021

And we have two special invitations : Richard Clayderman and Prince Charles!


THE WORLD OF ART (A Tragicomedia)
Every Wednesday June at 20:15 at the Teatroneu.

Link to buy the tickets :https://teatreneu.com/web/espectacle:645

Yago Hortal presents his first retrospective at the Can Framis Museum: “That was before, this is now”.

The title That was before, this is now, extracted from a work by Ed Ruscha, gives its name to the first retrospective of the painting of Yago Hortal (Barcelona, ​​1983), one of the most outstanding Catalan artists of his generation. Curated by Enrique Juncosa, the exhibition, which includes 36 works produced between 2007 and 2020, chronologically covers the fourteen years of the artist’s career and also, includes recent unpublished works.

As stated by the curator, “from the beginning of his career, Hortal has developed a formalist review of abstract painting, which considers the meaning to be an autonomous entity and not in the reasoning produced around it.

“Hortal’s work tells us about the work process itself and its technique: large splashes and thick accumulations of matter, and moves away from a symbolist, metaphorical or lyrical will. In this sense, the finished work is the result of a dialogue between the artist and the pictorial language and its possibilities. Hortal affirms that “listening, seeing, letting the painting speak as it takes shape is, for me, indispensable. This dialogue guides the result. The options are unlimited, although we have to unravel them.”

Yago Hortal, «SP124-SP123», 2016, acrylic on canvas, 260 x 360 cm

The chronological approach of the exhibition allows us to know the various interests that the artist has had throughout his career, according to the curator, is the result of a “thoughtful artistic evolution”. In this exhibition, we can see, on the one hand, how he has been defining the essential features that make up his work: the exuberance of color and the presence of gestures, which from a metalinguistic conception leads him to underline the physical characteristics of painting, but that also suggests, from the irony, playful and hedonistic ideas.

On the other hand, and as we can observe in the last rooms, we can also appreciate in the most recent works -some of which are unpublished- how his work turns his gaze towards the volume without forgetting the pictorial discipline and how he incorporates a palette of reduced colors.

Visit the online exhibition at the following link:

https://my.matterport.com/show/?m=WoG69EkBMRh

Yago Hortal, «SP257», 2020, acrylic on canvas, 230 x 190 cm

Zosen and Mina Hamada present “Una Mina de Color”, a large scale participatory project in the neighborhood of La Mina, Barcelona

“For some time we have been around the idea of painting a large mural in the neighborhood of La Mina, to give color to the streets and visibility to the community.”

Zosen grew up in Sant Adrià del Besós and there he started making his first graffiti pieces and murals. Over the years he managed to travel the world and leave his mark on different cities in North and South America, Europe and Asia. Many of these murals in collaboration with the Japanese artist Mina Hamada, which upon arriving in Barcelona in 2009, caught the attention of a neighborhood with its name and from that point that idea began to be forged.

In the summer of 2018 Zosen and Mina began to do workshops with some collectives that work with young people from the neighborhood to bring them their mural art and the proposal to create a participative mural with the ideas of all. The first workshop was held at the Casal Infantil Association of La Mina, where the children painted their ideas and dreams of how they imagined La Mina of the future. In the autumn, the workshops with the Salesians Sant Jordi entities (Grupo Unión) and the Casal dels Infants were continued. The workshops involved young people of different nationalities and cultures, who are neighbors of La Mina and Besòs and demonstrate the multicultural variety of the neighborhood.  The artists Zosen and Mina collected the ideas drawn and painted by all the participants of the workshops, and from there they began to create the proposal for the mural sketch.

The neighborhood was cultural diversity is present, flamenco, the sea and the planets that are part of the names of the streets and make up the galaxy of La Mina.

The children participating in the workshops when asked what they wanted or how they imagined their neighborhood of the future coincided in values such as: coexistence,  respect between different cultures, give visibility within society to people living in the neighborhood, peace, nature, green spaces, friendship, love, family and culture.

Zosen and Mina painted this mural during the month of January of 2019 in the neighbors building of Estrellas Street in front of the Municipal Sports court and the Gypsy Cultural Center; creating the first large format mural in La Mina and now can be seen from several points such as the Ronda del Litoral, the suburban train or walking from the street.

 

This project has been possible thanks to the collaboration between the City Council of Sant Adrià del Besós, the association El Generador, the collectives that work with the youth of the neighborhood and the artists Zosen and Mina Hamada.

 

In appreciation for:

Associació Casal Infantil de La Mina

Salesians Sant Jordi (Grupo Unión)

Casal dels Infants

Centro Cultural Gitano

Profesora Chuchu

Rafael Perona

Manuel Fernández

Karulo Abellán

Sra. Carmen

Juan Carlos Ramos

 

Direction: Germán Rigol

Original music: Falete Perona

Sound and interviews: Germán Rigol y Zosen

Edition and photography: Germán Rigol