Manolo Valdés at Rosenbaum Contemporary
Manolo Valdés:
“Pequeñas
Esculturas”
By Gabriel
Diego Delgado,
Assistant
Director Rosenbaum Contemporary
Manolo Valdés: “Pequeñas Esculturas” (Small Sculptures) exhibition
displays a curatorial selection of thirteen Manolo Valdés sculptures available for acquisition through Rosenbaum
Contemporary.
Internationally known for a distinctive and
signature aesthetic that has captured worldwide acclaim, Valdés has diligently crafted smaller studio sculptures alongside the
monumental public art projects that also encase all the art historical contexts
Valdés holds dear.
Born in 1942, in Valencia, Spain, Valdés enrolled at
the Fine Arts Academy of San Carlos, Valencia when he was fifteen years
old. Initially trained as a fine art
painter, Valdés chose to experiment with various art making techniques from
collage, printmaking, drawing, and sculpture.
In 1964 at the age of 22, Valdés co-founded the Equipo Crónica, an artist collective joined by Rafael Solbes and Joan Toldeo; a venture
that would lead these three artists to effectively use the notions of Pop Art
to effectively project criticisms onto the government of Spanish dictator,
Francisco Franco. As documented, Valdés
participated in over sixty solo exhibitions and an abundance of group
exhibitions under the guise of Equipo
Crónica until 1981, which was dissolved upon death of
Rafael Solbes.
After 1981, Valdés began to
focus more on his solo artistic career reflecting a defining decision to look
to the past to understand the future.
This was a self-guiding inquisition into an archived artistic lineage ,
a type of internalization and contextual assimilation of the fundamentals of art
history. The traditional masters like Goya, Rembrandt and Velázquez were seemingly
pristine inspirations for Valdés. Conceptions of reinventing the physical images
arose in his work as he strove to cement a new artistic vision. From Picasso to Brancusi, from Degas to El
Greco, Valdés took aim at achieving a constant experimentation of art making, culling
from traditional and conceptual. Timeless images appear in artworks as
manipulated assemblages, hand-torn paper collages, casted figures, and
resin-coated sculptures.
Installation image of Manolo Valdes sculpture with Roberto Matta on the left and Bill Beckley on the right. |
Valdés walked a new line of artistic freedom, fusing
aspects of Pop Art with social and political commentary –an artistic state
where contemporary politics and community flourish.
“Cabez con Tocado de Mariposas”, a
casted aluminum sculpture by Valdés, is the
smallest sculpture in the exhibition. At eighteen inches tall, “Cabez con Tocado de Mariposas”, is an intimate and seemingly delicate woman’s head adorned full of
casted and affixed metal butterflies. Striking
in its simplicity, its presence demands attention. This Brancusi-esque portrait
is majestically elegant, constructed in Valdés’s signature reductive aesthetic.
“Dama a
Caballo”, or “Lady on Horse”, is
the only non-head and bust sculpture in the exhibition. Grandiose in its white
knight appeal, the sculpture’s true integrity is secured to the white alabaster
stone material. A sense of purity resonates from the noble steed and its seated
rider– a Dama equestrian, complete
with flowing skirt and elongated saddle blanket. Purposefully absent are the
rider’s hands and the horse’s feet…a minimalistic approach rendered by Valdés
to create a relic derived from antiquity. Sweeping lines, angular definitions,
and diminutive details creates a dynamic flow across the sculpture’s
composition. The crest of the figure’s
head, a seemingly half circle, or an angelic halo, brings a sense of deipotent charisma to the otherwise anonymous rider.
Dama a Caballo” |
“Juno
1”, by Valdés is a bronze casting and one of the only
sculptures on display that does not have butterflies or organic appendages
emanating from the crown of the subject. Historically, Juno was the Roman
goddess of marriage and maternity. In “Juno
1”, Valdés graces the model’s head with four ridged circular shapes,
affixed at right angles and cross-sectioned; a ornamental headpiece that speaks
volumes of sophistication. Like some turn of the century aristocrat, “Juno 1” is an image of female
empowerment. In an age of social and political correctness with the hash-tag
movements of reform and rage, social justice, victimization, gender
power-struggles, and community conformity, Valdés remains stoic as well as historically
relevant with this sculpture.
Juno 1 |
“Helechos”,
or “Ferns”, is a three-part bronze sculpture by Valdés that includes a
utilitarian pedestal, a miniature head and casted fern leaves that encase the
figure. A nod to the environment with the preserved and casted foliage, Valdés
captures a seemingly pagan essence. Gaia,
in Greek Mythology was the goddess of the earth and its personification. She
was also the primal mother goddess. “Helechos”
could indeed be a comment on the inspirational contexts of women in art and
history, as well as the historic significances of the ideals of woman as Mother Earth.
Helechos |
Overall, the variety of aesthetics found in the
figurative sculptures by Manolo Valdés at Rosenbaum Contemporary run a gamut of
art historical influences. Each piece dominates its own physical space but maintains
a sense of inviting allurement that relinquishes them to be more ephemeral and
delicate than a casted permanency.
Manolo Valdés: “Pequeñas Esculturas” will run through May 7, 2018 at Rosenbaum Contemporary Gallery,
150 Yamato Rd Boca Raton, Florida 33431. More information can be found on the
gallery’s website at www.rosenbaumcontemporary.com or
by calling 561-994-9180 ext.127
For more information on the artwork of Manolo Valdés, email Rosenbaum Contemporary Assistant Director, Gabriel Diego Delgado at gabrield@rosenbaumcontemporary.com
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