Anyone passing through Borges de Medeiros Avenue, in the Historic Center of Porto Alegre, should be curious about the bands of orange colors that connect between the buildings.
This is the work “Batimento”, by Túlio Pinto, which is participating in the 13th edition of the Bienal do Mercosul.
In this edition of the Bienal do Mercosul, the artist reflect on collective experiences. With free access, the exhibitions – which focus on the theme Trauma, Dream and Escape – aim to provide immersive essays through the senses and perception of visitors.
The event is signed by the general curator, Marcello Dantas, and the assistant curators Tarsila Riso, Laura Cattani, Munir Klamt and Carollina Lauriano.
It is a project that uses the city as a support to carry out a great pictorial graphic intervention through the use of an industrial material that is the canvas used for the facades of buildings under construction or restoration.
The orange color of the vectors intends to generate a pictorial touch with the blue color of the sky. This is due to the complementary relationship of colors.
‘I normally start my day drawing,’ says Anthony Goicolea at his studio in Williamsburg, Brooklyn. ‘Eventually, one of those drawings will tell a story, then it becomes a painting.’
The New York based artist, first-generation Cuban-American, invited us to his luminous studio a Sunday afternoon in New York City.
Making use of a variety of media, Goicolea explores topics ranging from particular history and identity, through cultural tradition and heritage, to alienation and displacement.
His diverse oeuvre encompasses digitally manipulated self-portraits, landscapes, narrative tableaux executed in a variety of media, including black-and-white and color photography, sculpture & video installations, and multi-layered drawings on Mylar.
As I walk in, I am immediately captivated by the atmosphere of the studio. In the heart of Brooklyn, illuminated by a radiant mid-afternoon sun, we are greeted by some of Goicolea’s most recent pieces displayed around the space. All of them dialogue with one another creating at first an aura of contemplation and after a few minutes, of debate.
Anthony moves comfortably around the room picking out different paintings and carrying them from one place to another to get a better view. His active and energetic spirit gracefully guides us around the studio, showing us his latest creations and allowing us to enter his most personal creative space.
In ‘Crossing, 2021’, an oil on linen from 2020, four visible figures stand in front of an inflatable boat full of old bicycles, two other figures stand behind merging with the background.
As an unresting curious artist, he’s always looking for innovating challenges. I noticed the great variety of sizes of the canvases and discovered that the dimensions weren’t random. Goicolea builds his own canvases to give life to his paintings, facilitating the process of projecting his drawings onto the fabric in a more personal and approachable way.
In past series, many of the images were devoid of humans. In those works, primitive lean-tos and crudely constructed shanties coexist in an uneasy union with the technological vestiges of an industrialized society. Suggesting a world on the brink of obsolescence, these chilling images further cement the pervasive undercurrent of human alienation—from one another as well as the natural environment—that can be traced throughout the artist’s work.
However, it seems like Goicolea has officially entered –or, revisited– a phase in which his own personal history becomes the root of his inspiration by, once again, exploring his roots and family heritage with a different technical perspective.
These poignant, almost cinematic images are characterized by a fervent search for ancestral & social connections to his homeland: Cuba— revealing nostalgia for a past that the artist didn’t experience & a sense of cultural dislocation and estrangement.
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Jaume Plensa‘s stainless steel sculptural doors stand majestically at the entrance to the Gran Teatre del Liceu, marking a new era for this iconic coliseum on Barcelona’s Ramblas. Although their final installation is still in progress, passersby can already glimpse the magnificence of these monumental structures, each weighing half a ton.
On Tuesday, onlookers witnessed how the three imposing trellises designed by the acclaimed Catalan artist, who has closely supervised every stage of this ambitious project, will look. As the September opening date approaches, coinciding with the expected return of activity at the Liceu, these works of art will be temporarily covered with a tarp, further heightening anticipation among citizens and art lovers alike.
Christened with the evocative name of “Constel·lacions“, these doors represent much more than simple architectural elements. They are a tribute to the Liceu itself, to the music that has filled its halls over the years, to the emblematic grilles designed by Gaudí and to the nearby legacy of Miró, whose mosaic adorns the nearby Pla de l’Os.
But beyond their aesthetic value, the doors also have a practical function: to preserve the safety and integrity of the surrounding space. By preventing people from taking refuge in the arcade at night, these works of art play a crucial role in protecting the environment, as Víctor García de Gomar, artistic director of the Liceu, pointed out in a previous statement. “Sometimes we find ourselves in hell. It is necessary to protect this space so as not to be complicit in things that happen here, from people shooting heroin, people who want to sleep, situations like rape and prostitution“.
Plensa‘s art not only beautifies the Liceu, but also serves as a reminder of the diversity and cultural richness that defines Barcelona’s Ramblas. Made with alphabet letters from diverse cultures, these doors are a symbol of inclusion and respect for the plurality that characterizes this emblematic artery of the city.
In the midst of controversy and discussion about the fate of public space, Plensa‘s doors represent a balance between aesthetics and functionality, between artistic expression and practical necessity. With their placement, it is hoped that the Liceu will not only be a place of artistic excellence, but also a safe and welcoming refuge for all who visit it.
The Reus Museum exhibits at its headquarters in the Raval de Santa Anna the piece “Duna’s World II”, a work by the sculptor Jaume Plensa, which is part of a col private collection, lent to the city by the Senda Gallery.
Jaume Plensa born in Barcelona in 1955 is one of the greatest exponents of the current sculpture scene, and internationally known, especially for his pieces of art in public spaces.
“Duna’s World II” is another representation of Jaume Plensa‘s idea, a young face, sculpted directly on the marble, with an incredibly smooth surface that is a clear tribute to the purity of youth.
The face, with closed eyes transports us to the world of inner reflection, of introspection, of peace, like a utopian portrait of human thought. With its contemplation Plensa invites us to better feel our deepest being and abandon ourselves to the time of thought.
The face, with closed eyes, transports us to the world of inner reflection, introspection, peace, like a utopian portrait of human thought. With its contemplation, Plensa invites us to feel better our deeper being and leave us in the time of thought.
El rostro, con los ojos cerrados, nos transporta al mundo de la reflexión interior, de la introspección, de la paz, como un retrato utópico del pensamiento humano. Con su contemplación Plensa nos invita a sentir mejor nuestro ser más profundo y abandonarnos en el tiempo del pensamiento.
With the sale of this piece, Reus will have two works by Jaume Plensa. In 2003, the sculptor created the piece ‘Body of Light’ which is installed at the entrance of the Xavier Amorós Central Library.
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Museo de Reus has opened its doors to present a true jewel of contemporary art: the exceptional piece “Duna’s World II” by acclaimed sculptor Jaume Plensa. This work, part of a private collection on loan from Galeria SENDA, has found its home in the historic headquarters of the Santa Ana district, adding a new and vibrant cultural dimension to the city.
“Duna’s World II” transcends the mere category of sculpture to become a gateway to the artist’s fascinating universe. It is a living testimony of his artistic ideology and a celebration of eternal youth. Masterfully carved in marble, the delicacy and smoothness of its surface invite the viewer to approach and be enveloped by its mystical aura. The face, with eyes closed in a gesture of serene contemplation, suggests a state of deep reflection, an irresistible invitation to explore the innermost recesses of our own consciousness.
Jaume Plensa, renowned for his ability to capture the very essence of the human being in his works, leads us on a journey of self-discovery towards inner peace and spiritual harmony. “Duna’s World II” reminds us of the vital importance of introspection and invites us to immerse ourselves in the time of thought, where we find the serenity and balance so longed for in the tumult of modern life.
“Duna’s World II” is a unique marble piece, 183 x 67 x 58, created in 2015
The transfer of this masterpiece represents an invaluable gift for Reus, which can now boast of having two works by the renowned sculptor in its city In 2003, Plensa left an indelible mark on the city with his monumental creation “Body of Light“, which majestically adorns the entrance of Biblioteca Central Xavier Amorós. With the incorporation of “Duna’s World II“, Reus consolidates its position as an unavoidable cultural destination on the map of contemporary art, attracting visitors and art lovers from all over the world.
If you want to explore more closely “Duna’s World II“, in addition to approaching Museo de Reus, you can watch this video of Canal Reus where the details of the work are explored, in addition to hearing a few words from the councilor of culture of the City of Reus, Daniel Recasens, and the delegate of the Government of the Generalitat in Camp de Tarragona, Teresa Pallarès.
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The artist based in Barcelona has just presented a new series of sculptures in the shopping center La Roca Village. The collection represents a novelty for the artist who usually works on large-scale public murals.
Striking sculptures by American-born Japanese artist Mina Hamada dot the streets of the space. In June, the creator inaugurated a project conceived together with La Roca Villageand the galleryLAB36. The idea behind Colorful Walk, conceived ex profeso for that place, is to support local talent.
Three colorful geometric sculptures and a set of hanging wooden mobiles can now be seen at the entrance of La Roca Village. A final three meter tall sculpture will be installed later this summer. Mina talks about her work process, her iconic style and how she approaches a new medium.
Hamada transmits its good vibrations through itsfree and organic forms, in a style characterized by color, rhythm and improvisation. Although it is mostly known for its mural artof enormous dimensions, the artist explores other formats such as canvas or sculpture without abandoning the artistic language that identifies her. You can currently enjoy his circular and rectangular canvases in an individual exhibition that he has done for the galleryLAB36 titled Transition.
The La Roca Village project began to take shape in 2021 and, after several meetings, Hamada and the team created for the occasion, chose to develop strong>works with volume. The artist, who has worked in various disciplines, from paintings to murals or work on paper, is the first time that she has developed such large works in three dimensions:
“It’s a new challenge for me. With Paseo Colorido I can bring people closer to my work and make them interact with it.”
Hamada’s proposal is articulated through three groups of sculptures: Dream Passage, with large-scale works (300 x 200 x 150 cm) ; Summer whims, which are three small format pieces; and Aerial landscape, a mobile installation. The artist is excited about the opportunity to give volume to her creations, because “they look like characters that come out of my paintings and have a soul.”
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The Councilor for Culture of the Eivissa City Council and president of the Board of Trustees of the Eivissa Museum of Contemporary Art, Pep Tur, the director of the Eivissa Museum of Contemporary Art, Elena Ruiz, and the artist Zush have presented the exhibition “Zush en Eivissa” which was inaugurated on Friday, June 3 at 7:00 p.m. and will remain on display until November 30, 2022.
The Councilor for Culture and President of the Board of Trustees of the Pep Tur Museum of Contemporary Art has stated that:
“Zush is one of the essential artists to understand the evolution of Spanish art in the 70s and 80s mainly. We are lucky that a large part of this production was made on the island of Eivissa. Getting a part of it together makes it one of the most important exhibitions of the season, not only in Ibiza or the Balearic Islands, but throughout the country. This exhibition demonstrates the increasingly ascending line that MACE has had in recent years.“
The exhibition focuses on the period between 1968 and 1983 in which Zush resided on the island of Ibiza, a period that became a moment of intense creativity for the artist, who experimented with very diverse formats and techniques, such as fluorescent painting illuminated by black light. This exuberant diversity of artistic proposals will be reflected in an exhibition that will present more than a hundred works, some seventy from the Suñol Soler Collection, which will be exhibited in the Arms Hall of the Ibizan museum.
The artist Zush has stated that: “ The works that can be seen in this exhibition correspond to the period of 18 years that he lived on the island. He has also added that what gives him the most joy is thinking that his works give people joy. “
The curator of the exhibition, Enrique Juncosa, has highlighted that Zush is an artist who:
“Has known how to create an inner world, creating characters and turning them into myths; He is a pioneering and current artist, as is the study of identity, his relationship with drawing, collaborations with other artists, his relationship with electronic music, and he is an advanced figure in the artistic currents of surrealism and pop art.”
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This year we celebrate with great enthusiasm our twentieth participation in ART BRUSSELS, from April 28th to May 1st 2022, with the following selected artists:
The artist pays tribute to the victims of war in his new exhibition in the French town of Céret
“Every time a human being dies,/the house closes and a place is lost./My work is its memory; the frozen fixation/of so many bodies that are developing/and disappearing in the fleetingness of life./My work is its volume.” Jaume Plensa wrote this poem in 2000 and his verses, from which he has taken the title of his new exhibition, “Every face is a place“, resonate with a painful echo in each of the sculptures and drawings gathered at the Museo de Arte Moderno de Céret (France).
“In Ukraine there are many people dying, many houses destroyed, many places to which it will no longer be possible to return… How can art help in such tragic situations like this? I think these faces are a tribute to all the faces we are seeing in the press, those dramatic photographs of women and children going into exile, and of men who have decided to stay to defend their homeland, their country and their little place, their home, their work. We are so much alike that I find it scandalous that we call ourselves by different names or use different flags: we human beings are practically identical“.
A visitor walks between the sculptures ‘Julia‘ and ‘Lou‘ | Agencia EFE
“Every face is a place” (until June 6) is Jaume Plensa‘s second exhibition in Céret after his successful presentation in 2015. This time he has returned to inaugurate the new stage of the Museo de la Catalunya Nord, which reopens after more than two years of works with its expanded collection and a new 1,300-meter pavilion designed by the prestigious architect Pierre-Louis Faloci. There, in this new wing “that flows as if it were a small river between the houses of Céret“, Plensa has put into conversation a dozen sculptures and twenty drawings whose absolute protagonist is the portrait. “The face,” he recalls, “is the part of our body that we cannot see, the great gift we give to others; the photograph of the soul, the door we open to others“.
“We human beings are so similar that it is a scandal that we use different flags”
Plensa wanted to open his tour with another of his obsessions, silence, to which he invites through Carlota, the same girl who, from her 24 meters high, inspires calm in an old dock in Newport (New Jersey), just in front of Manhattan. The one that now receives the visitor is much smaller and is built with Macael marble, but the attitude is the same, the index finger on the lips. “I invite silence, not to not speak, but just the opposite. To be able to listen and better understand our thoughts, the vibration of our body and our ideas“. He also has his eyes closed. “I like to think that the viewer can use the sculpture as a mirror, that he himself closes his eyes and tries to look at this wonderful inner landscape that we keep hidden for reasons of education or culture, because we always believe that there are other more important things to talk about than oneself, and it seems to me that this way we miss valuable information from so many and so many people“.
Image of the exhibition “Every face is a place” by David Borrat | Agencia EFE
The ghost of war crosses the path again. “It’s a stupid war” Plensa laments. “I have many friends in Ukraine and also in Russia, I have exhibited in Kiev and I have exhibited in Moscow, and what is happening is an absolute misunderstanding. I hope it ends soon, and we return to civility, as Vicent Andrés Estellés used to say“. The artist also remembers Oscar Wilde, who said that “when you start to live you really want to write because what you are looking for is to understand life, and the more you have lived, the less you write because you realize that life is to be lived, not to be written“. The same thing happens to him. But, above all, a letter the poet wrote from Reading prison comes to mind, where he described the most serious problems they faced in prison: illness, hunger and insomnia. “That’s what must be happening in Ukraine” he imagines.
Barcelona artist Jaume Plensa during the presentation to the press by David Borrat | Agencia EFE
The artist delves into the faces of others from a first self-portrait, himself seated inside a large sphere made of letters of different alphabets that protects him and at the same time unites him to the world. “Sculpture is like a language in a bottle” he reflects. And the message is very important, but the bottle is key. “And here there are many bottles with a very similar message“. An art that declines the same idea in different containers. Faces in cast stainless steel, in bronze on wood that was captured when he was still alive, on burnt trunks that give them an almost sacred air or reaching almost invisibility in transparent meshes, like the one he presented at the Palacio de Cristal in Madrid. “Matter and invisibility seem contradictory terms, but there is a key moment in Macbeth that I think is a great definition of sculpture. Macbeth has just killed the king and realizes that he has not killed a being, a man, but he has killed the possibility of sleep. And that extraordinary idea that through matter you can speak of the invisible, of the untouchable, of what we cannot understand, is my sculpture“.
“The face is the part of our body we cannot see, the great gift we give to others”
Then come the spectators, who will complete the exhibition with their own faces and will join the ones that appear on the walls in the form of drawings. Some of them, the most recent ones, made on the sheets that protected the sculptures from dust in the studio and that by means of the frotage technique, with pastel and charcoal, absorb their traces as if they were a shroud. This will not be the only exhibition in which this year he will link sculptures and drawings. In May, he will be exhibiting at the Lelong Gallery in Paris and, in June, at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park (England) and at the Picasso Museum in Antibes (France).
With great excitement and enthusiasm, this year we are pleased to announce the twentieth participation of Galeria SENDA in the prestigious contemporary art fair Art Brussels, which will take place from April 28th to May 1st, 2022. For this special edition, we have carefully prepared a selection of artists that represent the plastic, sculptural and compositional quality of a small sample of the talent of those who are part of the SENDA family.
In our stand at Art Brussels you will find works by renowned artists exhibited at SENDA such as Jaume Plensa and his conceptual brutality represented in “Who Are You? V”; Peter Halley and his lively use of colors in his large geometric paintings; Yago Hortal and the grandeur of his canvases such as “Z53”; Stephan Balkenholwith his huge sculptural figures; Iran do Espírito Santo and his audacious way of turning contradiction into a tangible thing as with his sculpture “Black Light”; Glenda León with her reinterpretation of the lunar cycle in “Listening to the Moon”; Túlio Pinto and his sculptures created from the fusion of materials;Sandra Vásquez de la Horrawith her universe of fantastic figures that invite reflection on incendiary themes of the society in which we live; Gino Rubert with his farewells and reunions charged with symbolism; Xavi Bou and the wonderful chrono-photographic work captured in “Ornithographies“; Anthony Goicolea with his portraits where he explores human identity related to social issues such as migration; Donald Sultan and the reinvention of still lifes with works such as “Winter Mimosa Jan 28”; or the evocative photographs of Jordi Bernadó such as “New York (OS 276. 2)”. All this and much more is what anyone who attends the Art Brussels Week and passes by the stand A50 of Galeria SENDA will be able to find.
This amalgam of artistic projects demonstrates the solid gallery proposal of SENDA, betting on the dissemination of both national and international art. Likewise, the variety of techniques and disciplines is key to understand the idiosyncrasy of our gallery. Without the presence of this generous amount of projects so different from each other, fairs like Art Brussels would not make sense. For all this, if after getting to know the wide range of artists that will accompany SENDA in Brussels, you want to live an immersive experience and immerse yourself in the busy and vivid world of the fairs, you can find us at stand A50, in the Tour & Taxis building of the Belgian capital.
Portal, 2022 Sandra VÁSQUEZ DE LA HORRA Grafit, watercolour and gouache on wax-plated paper 76 × 56 cm
Escuchando la Luna, 2020 Glenda LEÓN Cow’s skin and wood 50 × 200 × 10 cm
Z51, 2022 Yago HORTAL Acrylic in cloth 230 × 190 cm