Marc Selwyn Fine Art opens exhibition highlighting the underrecognized genius of Rodolfo Abularach
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Marc Selwyn Fine Art opens exhibition highlighting the underrecognized genius of Rodolfo Abularach
Rodolfo Abularach, Tunel - Entrada, 1970. Ink on paper, 30 x 30 in.



BEVERLY HILLS, CALIF.- Marc Selwyn Fine Art is presenting Rodolfo Abularach: A Cosmic Vision, an exhibiton of one of Latin America’s most significant yet under recognized artists. We are also pleased to announce publication of the first major monograph dedicated to the artist which includes essays by art historian and curator Gavin Delahunty, artist and curator Gabriel Rodríguez Pellecer, and curator Rudy F. Weissenberg. This exhibition is a bicoastal collaboration with David Nolan Gallery, New York, where a simultaneous presentation of Abularach’s work is on view through July 31.


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Throughout his six-decade career, Abularach created a fascinating spiritual world filled with images of planetary forms, mandalas, and earthly and psychological portals. His most famous subject was the eye, which he saw as a window into the soul. His interest in the mysteries of the natural world also led him to depict the volcano, an emblem of the artist’s Guatemalan homeland which he saw as a gateway to the inner Earth. Abularach mastered and explored a variety of styles, from hyper realistic to abstract, monochrome to multicolored, esoteric to surreal. He was known for his virtuosity in multiple media, including painting, drawing, and printmaking.
This exhibition will highlight the major themes Abularach explored throughout his career and illustrate the evolution of the artist’s imagery from enigmatic circular forms to the human eye in all its possible variations.


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A practitioner of meditation and Buddhism, Abularach once described his "eyes" as "a symbol of liberation, ascension, and peace.” In Hinduism and Buddhism, the third eye may represent the ability to go beyond the limitations of the physical senses and access higher realms of consciousness. To Abularach, the eye served as an icon for the multi-dimensional exploration of inner and outer worlds.

In Aparición, 1964-1967 Abularach depicts a circular form hovering over an abstracted horizon. Radiating rings of color evoke both an iris and a glowing celestial body, foreshadowing the artist's later more realistic explorations of the eye as a central and metaphysical motif.

In Centro Rosa, 1967, for example, a central pink orb, which might represent an eclipse or other celestial phenomenon, floats over an abstracted mountainous form. This and similar works were influenced by the culture and traditions of the Mayan people and their relationship to the cosmos and the forces of nature. Abularach saw this imagery as “an apparition in a mystical, poetic sense. It is like a light imprisoned…a frontal eye or a black disc, like an eclipse.”

From these abstractions, Abularach’s compositions evolved towards more recognizable ocular imagery. In Túnel - Entrada, 1970, for example, a luminous white circular orb rises like the sun over a landscape, the entire image evoking a large human eye. Even more realistic are Abularach’s meticulous ink drawings (Sirena, 1983) with their exquisite cross hatching in razor fine ink pen

Abularach was a classic, a modern, geometric painter; a figurative painter; but above all, he is unclassifiable. He communicated with the firmament and discovered the star we all carry in our faces: the eye. That eye which, when the eyelid is closed, is the entrance to the inner world… There is a unique zeitgeist in Abularach’s paintings—a revisitation of Western and Mesoamerican myths blended with an allusion to Eastern practices, such as meditation, and Western psychedelia. What he produced would levitate and transcend any territory and time period. His works hypnotize; they capture our sight like a pendulum. - Gabriel Rodríguez Pellecer, “Cosmic Abularach: Portrait of the Artist as a Mystic,” 2025

His work fluidly intertwines Mesoamerican symbolism, Renaissance precision, and Surrealist anthropomorphism, in addition to expressing spiritual and metaphysical ideals… Abularach once described his “eye” as a symbol of ascension and liberation—a physical organ that nevertheless has the ability to transcend the limits of the human body. Visionary and omniscient, Abularach’s eyes survey vast swathes of art history and visual culture, condensing the artist’s extraordinarily rich range of references into each keenly focused image. - Gavin Delahunty, “An Ocular Imagination,” 2025

Born in Guatemala City, Rodolfo Abularach showed remarkable draftsmanship from a young age. In 1946, he began his formal training at the Escuela Nacional de Artes Plásticas, then moved on to the Faculty of Architecture at the Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala and Pasadena City College in California. Between 1955 and 1957, he was hired by the Museo Nacional de Arqueología y Etnología to draw pre-Columbian masks and musical instruments from the museum’s collection. It was then that Abularach began looking to Mayan forms as inspiration for modernist compositions with the encouragement of the influential Guatemalan artist Carlos Mérida. In 1958, while teaching drawing and painting at the Escuela Nacional de Artes Plásticas, Abularach earned a scholarship from Guatemala’s Directorate of Fine Arts to study at the Art Students League in New York. He remained in New York for 40 years, initially supported by scholarships, including two Guggenheim Fellowships in 1959 and 1960. In the 1960s, Abularach began exploring the human eye, which became an iconic motif of his. By the end of 1960, his work had been exhibited at the Art Institute of Chicago, the 5th São Paulo Art Biennial, the Milwaukee Art Museum, and the Museum of Modern Art, New York, which acquired his work for its permanent collection. In 1998, the artist returned to Guatemala City, where he remained until his death in 2020.

Abularach’s work is held in an extraordinary number of major collections and institutions worldwide, including The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Modern Art, El Museo del Barrio, and Brooklyn Museum in New York; Smithsonian American Art Museum and Art Museum of the Americas in Washington, D.C.; Art Institute of Chicago; High Museum of Art in Atlanta, Georgia; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and Los Angeles County Museum of Art in California; Museum of Modern Art in Bogotá, Colombia; Museum of Modern Art in Guatemala City; Museum of Contemporary Art in São Paulo, Brazil; National Gallery of Denmark (SMK) in Copenhagen; and Museum of Art and History in Geneva, Switzerland, among others.



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