Minimal Means: Concrete Inventions in the US, Brazil and Spain

  • NEW YORK, New York
  • /
  • January 16, 2019

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Dan Flavin. untitled (to V. Mayakovsky) 1, 1987. six 4-foot red fluorescent lights 48 in. (122 cm) on the diagonal. Courtesy of Zeit Contemporary Art, New York

NEW YORK. JAN 17, 2019— Zeit Contemporary Art, in collaboration with Edelman Arts, is pleased to announce the exhibition Minimal Means: Concrete Inventions in the US, Brazil and Spain, on view at 111E 70th St, New York, NY, from January 24th through March 16th, 2019.

Curated by Joan Robledo-Palop, Minimal Means focuses on a group of artists whose creative careers began to evolve in the mid 1950s and 1960s in the United States, Brazil and Spain. The exhibition showcases thirty works by seventeen artists who have never before been juxtaposed in an exhibition and explores seemingly simultaneous ideas and methodologies, which actually developed independently and organically.

With common roots in the art of Kazimir Malevich, Piet Mondrian and the experience of the Bauhaus, the artists in this exhibition expanded the legacy of constructivism and geometric abstraction into a new era. This reassessment produced objects defined by geometry, clarity and apparent simplicity, reducing the formal aspects of the work of art to a minimal set of elements with endless possibilities. Informed by new theories about the experience of existence, from Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenology of perception to Ludwig Wittgenstein’s linguistics, these artists sought to transform the modes of sensory perception through radical formal investigation.

Elena Asins. 12 E 59 10 KV 575, 1979. White ink on black light cardboard. 25 3/5 × 19 7/10 in. (65 × 50 cm.). Courtesy of Zeit Contemporary Art, New York

This is the first presentation that brings together North American artists such as Anni and Josef Albers, Agnes Martin, Donald Judd, Dan Flavin, Sol LeWitt and Robert Mangold, with counterparts from Europe and Latin America: Jorge Oteiza, Manuel Barbadillo, Elena Asins, Jordi Teixidor, José María Yturralde, Mira Schendel, Willys de Castro, Lygia Clark, Lygia Pape and Hélio Oiticica. The artists associated with reductive abstraction and Minimalism in North America are relatively well-known in New York. In recent years, some of the artists from Brazil have had prominent exhibitions and scholarly attention in the United States. In comparison, the artists from Spain, while possessing a critical acclaim in their country have had little exposure in the United States.

Minimal Means is a conversation about how space and the way people occupy and imagine that space was understood in three parts of the world. There are points of contact through geographic displacement, travels and friendships that led to individual elaborations of a shared legacy. Some of the artists barely knew each other; others moved from one part of the world to another becoming essential points of exchange. For instance, the work of Josef Albers was very present in the Brazilian artistic milieu of the 1950s, connecting advanced artistic practices in the US and the avant-garde in Latin America. Spanish sculptor Jorge Oteiza traveled several times to Brazil in the 1950s, where he won the Grand Prize for Sculpture at the 4th Bienal de São Paulo in 1957, establishing a bridge between the art of the future Neo-Concrete group with the artistic proposals that were just starting to flourish in Francoist Spain. In the late 1950s, Manuel Barbadillo arrived in New York. This sojourn marked a transition from the subjectivism of the gestural abstraction of Informalism, happening in Europe in parallel to Abstract Expressionism, to a rational modular system. Barbadillo’s rationalism informed the artistic philosophy of the 1960s for artists attending the seminars on art and computer science organized by the Centro de Cálculo of the Universidad de Madrid.

Hélio Oiticica. Metaesquema 189, 1958. Gouache on light cardboard 12 x 15.9 in. (30,5 x 40,4 cm.). Courtesy of Zeit Contemporary Art, New York

Aiming to reflect on the shared language of geometric and reductive abstractions, this exhibition is organized beyond nationalities or geographical borders. Instead, we present the artists’ work around common themes and formal solutions such as lines, squares, grids, structures, and modules, and cross-examine the different political and cultural contexts that gave rise to these unique formal investigations. The selection of works presented in this exhibition are a firm testimony that concrete abstractions, perhaps one of the highest achievements of the art of the art of the past century, do not have borders. As Joan Robledo-Palop explains, “this sensorial investigations about space connected humanity and transcended languages, countries and continents. The work of these artists also contributed to expand the limits of the artistic object and the ways it relates to authorship and production, as well as spectatorship and perception.”

Works of art reveal themselves as precious agents for human rapport and common ground for understanding between different countries, languages and cultures. This exhibition also highlights a period in the history of art that was remarkable because of the role of women at the forefront of the art practice. While women have worked for decades alongside men, they have not always been visibly acknowledged. This exhibit reaffirms the work of Anni Albers and Agnes Martin in the United States, Lygia Pape, Lygia Clark and Mira Schendel in Brazil, and Elena Asins in Spain. We celebrate their work, in most cases advanced against substantial personal and artistic difficulties. Their subtle abstractions enrich the plurality of this transnational dialogue in significant ways.

The publication of a fully illustrated book with new scholarship on the artists and this crucial period in the history of art will accompany the exhibition. The publication includes a new study by Joan Robledo-Palop and a selection of writings by Hélio Oiticica, Sol LeWitt and Manuel Barbadillo. In these texts, artists discuss the use color, structures, modules and seriality illuminating this period from a unique perspective.

Joan Robledo-Palop is an art historian specializing in modern and contemporary art. A graduate of Universitat de València, Autonomous University of Madrid and Yale University, Robledo-Palop started his career as a curator at the Fundación Chirivella Soriano in València, Spain. He later became a Research Fellow at the Institute of History in the Spanish National Research Council – CSIC, and a Visiting Scholar at New York University. He has also worked for curatorial departments at the Yale University Art Gallery and the Yale Center for British Art.  He has taught and given public lectures at institutions such as Yale, Museo Reina Sofia in Madrid, Centre Pompidou Málaga and the Hermitage Museum in St. Petersburg, Russia. He is the Founder and CEO of Zeit Contemporary Art, a New York-based firm specializing in modern, postwar and contemporary art.

The exhibition is organized by Zeit Contemporary Art and presented in collaboration with Edelman Arts, New York.

For further information please contact Zeit Contemporary Art at contact@zeitcontemporaryart.com

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