• Buenos Aires: Crisis and Rebirth – Xil Buffone and Eduardo Costa

    Date posted: May 1, 2006 Author: jolanta

    Buenos Aires: Crisis and Rebirth

    Xil Buffone and Eduardo Costa

    Sometimes art blooms
    in poverty, like some plants that refuse fertilizers, opting for their natural
    diet and a genuine growing rate. A somber political and financial picture in
    Argentina has doubled the creative response with the visual arts, the movies,
    music and the performing arts going into a good two years of renewed vitality.

    Through the nineties
    there were lots of shows with corporate sponsorship and foreign semi-blockbusters
    were offered to the public, at least in Buenos Aires, the capital. After December
    2001, the banks refused to allow their clients to withdraw their money, the president
    resigned, the country defaulted on foreign debt (of outrageously high interest,)
    and an interim government was installed by Congress, most were indignant, flabbergasted,
    paralyzed, and a wave of new migrants flocked to European countries. The arts
    were stunned as well, a brief vacuum followed, and then the reaction came.

    Two years after
    the peak of the crisis we can see how the imagination has been rerouted into
    healthier directions. This is not to recommend financial disaster as a tonic
    for the arts, rather to point out that art history does not run parallel to financial
    or political developments. In Buenos Aires, there is now very little money, taste
    does not take hints from foreign hip, introspection, reevaluation and fresh forms
    of not funded expression are the way. A network of artists-curators-critics is
    reestablished, and sensual and intellectual extremism is allowed.

    Not only the artists—who
    have historically been able to show superb indifference to wealth, but also curators,
    museum people, and collectors have embraced the cause of art and decided to breathe
    life into it. The art and the sales were strong at the two most recent editions
    of the Buenos Aires Art Fair, museum shows are sometimes fascinating and there
    is a strong alternative activity which has given birth to new exhibition philosophies
    and venue formats.

    Buenos Aires Museum of Modern Art (MAMBA) opened the season with several simultaneous
    shows. Alfredo Prior, a talented Argentine painter in his forties presented a
    retrospective of works between 1982 and 2002. Well known are his large oils on
    canvas of Teddy Bears from the eighties, renditions of subtle feeling and drama
    as expressed through slight changes in the toy’s face and surrounding atmosphere.
    To read the history of painting is to read the history of humanity declares Prior
    in the catalog. Other works in the exhibition were graphite drawings where the
    artist showed the tribulations of a Chinese guy in Rome, infinitely lively and
    delicate a2dventures assigned to his imaginary character. In Prior’s work,
    has written Monica Poggio, everything seems to be lacking meaning, thus allowing
    for the real word, the subconscious mind, to step in

    Also at MAMBA Colombian
    artists Oscar Muoz, Miguel Angel Rojas and Jos Alejandro Restrepo showed new
    work, as did Swiss photographer Gian Paolo Minelli. Muoz furthered his investigation
    of video portraiture on innovative supports, Restrepo presented videos on three
    big screen with narratives framed by the Colombian forest and Rojas, using his
    own technique of skillfully applying minute dots of coca leaves to the walls,
    draw a small replica of Liechtenstein’s iconic RATTATTAT painting of firing
    guns, and spelled out the title of Hamiltons Why Are American Homes So… on
    about 25 feet of white wall. As to Minelli, by means of his photographs he described
    an abandoned jail in Buenos Aires, empty of the inmates though still rich in
    vestiges of their presence. Minellis camera writes Mnica Poggio, highlights features
    unseen by the usual aye, revealing a narrative that shows the place of the absence.

    MALBA (Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires,) presented Selections of
    the Cisneros Collection, a show which originated in Brazil at Sao Paulos Museu
    de Arte Moderna and traveled first to the MAM in Rio de Janeiro. The Cisneros
    Collection is the most extensive and the smartest private selection of key works
    in the Latin American universe. Curated by Ariel Jimnez, works by Albers, Max
    Bill, Mondrian provided context for an astonishing presentation of the finest
    and most original geometric developments to have stemmed from the abstract current
    which heralded contemporary painting by the first decade of the XXth Century.
    A continuation of the Cubist/ Constructivist tradition, excellent works included
    those by Jess Rafael Soto, Joaqun Torres Garca, Toms Maldonado, Cruz Diez, Gego,
    Lygia Clark, Lygia Pape, Hlio Oiticica, Willis de Castro, Waltercio Caldas, Victor
    Grippo, and Eugenio Espinoza among others. This show should travel to Europe
    and the US.

    Other simultaneous
    MALBA shows were a selection of the dazzling permanent collection with marvelous
    examples by Tarsila de Amaral, Maria Martins, Berni, Frida Kahlo and many other
    Latin-American masters. There was also a show which paid attention and homage
    to the Latin American avant gardes in Europe. Astonishing and rarely seen examples
    of works by Norah Borges, Torres Garca, Pablof Curatella Manes, Emilio Pettoruti,
    Rafael Barradas and several others in a display of early pictorial irreverence
    and skill, curated by Marcelo Pacheco and Victoria Noorthoorn.

    In the meanwhile, the well established Galera Ruth Benzacar, the leading Argentine
    venue run by founders daughter, Orly Benzacar, presented op artist Rogelio Polesello
    who in a recent, gigantic mural for Buenos Aires Pistarini Airport added teeth
    to geometric abstraction. Polesello showed preparatory drawings and other works
    related to his mural, as well as some charcoal drawings under heavy acrylic from
    which chunks had been scooped out to generate a space of morbid and playful reflections.

    Eduardo Costas
    own performance plus show opened the same day at Benzacar. Several 3-D paintings
    of big fruits (a watermelon, a 24 x 10 x 12 inch squash-like fruit) some smaller
    fruit, two monochchromes, a portrait, and a fresh ostrich egg. The volumetric
    acrylics were first presented whole, then cut open to reveal the inside. As the
    artist carefully works the interiors (the green watermelon becomes red inside,
    and so on) the cutting of the paintings was a revelation. The climax was the
    opening of the fresh egg whose contents, made of liquid acrylic medium plus a
    ball of fresh yellow pigment, poured as yolk and egg white into a dish.

    Then there was
    the long-term installation of Marta Minujin at MAMBA. The remarkable Minujin
    has made a gigantic steel statue (about 40 Ft. tall) of a woman in usual clothes,
    the representation of a female prototype which seems to describe all women and
    is installed in one of the patios of the museum. I still do not know why an idea
    this basic and beautiful has not yet occurred to any of the artists so superbly
    promoted and funded in rich countries.

    Jorge Gumier Maier,
    artist and curator, showed the work of Alfredo Battistelli, a naif, recently
    deceased and fairly unknown artist, at the Rojas gallery of the University of
    Buenos Aires. The works are simply alive, the result of natural genius by a self-taught
    artist who didnt try art until retirement and then excelled at it . At the Museo
    de Arte latinoamericano de Buenos Aires (MALBA) Gumer Maier curated also Nahuel
    Vecino and the young Sandro Pereyra. Of the two large scale sculptures by Pereyra,
    The

    Bridegroom is a
    polyester self portrait where the artist is shown naked with the grooms suit
    painted on the skin and lots of rice all over like sesame seeds on bread. Vecino
    instead is a contemporary painter of war scenes that feature the mutilated bodies
    of combatants and semi naked women on ponds.

    Norberto Gmez, once a Benzacar artist, had an important show with Maman Fine
    Arts. He presented big polyester sculpture frequently representing revolting
    meat cuts and grooved on scale changes that made you wonder if the stakes were
    cow, dinosaur or hummingbird. The soft resin bowels made for some divine sculpture.
    A super Paul Tek, Gmez seems to want to nauseate the audience into vegetarianism
    while displaying a virtuoso menu of sculptural feats.

    Innovation rather
    than shock is well represented in the three main alternative spaces, artist run
    venues focusing on contemporary art. The three like to mix different generations
    and aesthetics, and to organize exhibitions in their own and other spaces. Sonoridad
    Amarilla bets on an integrated experience of poetic, sensorial and communal substance.
    Like an art disc jockey, the space integrates traditional visual arts with music,
    video, dinners, and psychedelically flavored tecno art.

    Galera Braga Menndez-Schuster features a post-conceptual, pictorial profile.
    Many of the works exhibited are group installations or works resulting from communal
    collaboration. Also frequent are panels on criticism and other forms of theoretical
    discourse. Belleza y Felicidad features as well very low prices on original art
    with witty and nostalgic overtones. The model of the high school fair seems to
    inspire their format which has grown in refinement and retro appeal. They also
    pursue an ambitious and totally alternative publication program.

    Openings at the
    Museo de Bellas Artes and the Palais de Glace, Galera Luisa Pedrousos presentation
    of three young and talented artists, Palatina with a show of classic Nigro were
    other highlights of the seasons opening. By the time one of the writers of this
    article had to leave Buenos Aires after a very busy and rewarding month, a lot
    was coming up we could hardly keep up with. We hope there is a next time soon.

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