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Sunday, October 6, 2024 |
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Wifredo Lam in North America at the Museum of Latin American Art |
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Wifredo Lam, Untitled, ca. 1947 Oil on Canvas 49 x 59 ¼ in. (124.5 x 150.5 cm) W. Lam, cat. raisonné, vol. 1, no. 47.31
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LONG BEACH, CA.- The Museum of Latin American Art (MoLAA) is proud to be the only venue on the West Coast to present Wifredo Lam in North America. This comprehensive national traveling exhibition of Lams work is the first in over 30 years to be seen in the United States. Also on view, will be Carlos Luna: El Gran Mambo. Both Lam, the first Cuban to be recognized as a master among the mid-20th century modern artists, and Luna, a contemporary rising star, share a Cuban nationalism in their art which is filled with the rhythms of religious ritual, political satire and cultural heritage. Both exhibitions will be on display from June 15 August 31, 2008.
The Afro-Chinese Cuban artist Wifredo Lam (Cuba, b. 1902, Cuba; Paris, d.1982) is the most celebrated artist of the Caribbean region. Associated with Pablo Picasso during the time of Cubism and Andre Breton in the time of surrealism, Lam contributed a non-European Afro-Cuban voice to the evolution of Western art. His visual language is a synthesis of Cubism, Surrealism, primitivism, Negritude, Afro-Cuban history and ethnicity and the religious practice of Santería. Lam was born of a polyglot heritage; his mother was African, indigenous Cuban and Spanish and his father was a Cantonese Chinese businessman. This cross-hybridization is the basis of Lams artistic style, more celebrated today than during his lifetime.
The exhibition Wifredo Lam in North America presents 65 of the most important paintings, gouaches and drawings by Lam represented in United States collections. The selected works were curated by Mr. Curtis Carter, former Director of the organizing institution, the Haggerty Museum of Art in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The exhibition is accompanied by an illustrated color catalog available in the museum store.
Carlos Lunas art, influenced by Wifredo Lam, references the artistic traditions of the Cuban Havana School, the European Cubist paintings of French artist, Ferdinand Leger, the storytelling of Mexican muralism and even the horror vacui of the Latin American baroque. A rising star of the contemporary art world, Lunas work deals in part with the duality of Cuban and Mexican heritage. This can be observed in War-Giro which is currently on view in The Robert Gumbiner Sculpture Garden & Event Center. The double-sided figure standing over 7 feet tall depicts this Cuban and Mexican heritage and embodies the internal struggles of an artist who has been uprooted.
Born in Cuba in 1969, Luna was a part of the 1980s artistic rebellion, and he relocated to Puebla, Mexico in 1991. During the decade in Mexico, Luna enriched his unique style incorporating Cuban icons such as his Guajiro-Man and Rooster-Man with a Mexican bravado of cultural practice and language.
This exhibition presents a selection of seventeen paintings recently created by the artist. The central masterpiece is Lunas most recent work titled, Gran Mambo, filled with power-packed imagery of history, culture, symbolism and drama. Luna is a storyteller merging themes of fable and mysticism, eroticism and prejudice and religiosity and anthropology in the iconographic discourse he depicts.
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