Dialogue between the Sculptors Julio González and David Smith at IVAM in Valencia

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Monday, May 6, 2024


Dialogue between the Sculptors Julio González and David Smith at IVAM in Valencia
Julio González, Femme au miroir (Mujer ante el espejo), 1936-37. IVAM Institut Valencià d'art Modern. Generalitat.



VALENCIA.- This exhibition, Julio Gonzalez and David Smith. A dialogue about sculpture which has benefited from the inestimable collaboration of the David Smith Estate, sets out to explore the curious cluster of convergences and affinities, borrowings and discrepancies that marked a fruitful and unexpected artistic conversation at a difficult time, when there were already signs of the decisive change of course that was to lead to contemporary sculpture: the work of art set in opposition – not without sharp frictions – to the art object. In other words, the moment of the imaginative affirmation of plastic forms in space, going beyond the servitudes of style, trend, school or conceptual affiliation. An art of free forms as opposed to the customary sequel of restrictive artistic identities and attachments that had been characteristic of what we might call historical European art since the confused conclusion of the nineteenth century. The mere succession of perceptual correctives stimulated by Cubism and contextualised by an equally conditioning narrative scheme, although, properly considered, more from the temporal than the artistic viewpoint. The dazzling emergence of the avant-garde at the beginning of the twentieth century.

The art of these two sculptors has in common an insistence on good workmanship and, in turn, a conviction that this commitment forms the basis for an inescapable ethical proposal which makes a call on society as a totality of determined professionals united by the moral imperative to demonstrate solidarity in their work. Julio González’s La Montserrat, an extreme premonition at the first glimmer of the Civil War, just as David Smith’s Medals for Dishonor was on the threshold of the World War that followed. Two artists who, despite the distance that separated them, mark a turning point in the understanding of contemporary sculpture and share a number of decisive convictions. At least, when considered from the vantage point of the twenty-first century.

Julio González (1876–1942) was an artist strongly linked to Barcelona’s version of modernity, a friend of Picasso and an early exile in Paris, but brought up on the figurative, realist aesthetics of time-honoured craftsmanship that soon assessed the subversive aspect suggested by the new art. His experience began with working with metal – iron sculpture – with the complicity of Pablo Picasso, but from a twofold perspective. Firstly, derived from the masks that powerfully evoked African ethnic art, then recently made known to the public in Paris as a result of the legendary expedition to Djibouti exhibited at the Musée de l’Homme, which immediately led to the creation of compact constructions of Cubist geometrisation in his workshop. Later, the idea of open sculpture held together by industrial welding, tempering its volumetric solidity and extending space into a structure of clusters of interconnected forms with a distant figurative pattern. An organic art of bold perceptible signs in space.

David Smith (1906–1965), born in Indiana, also underwent a hard apprenticeship in welding on an industrial assembly line. But his artistic training came from the exuberant sensibility that distinguished the Art Students League in New York, together with Arshile Gorky and Willem de Kooning, and he soon became acquainted with the contagious derivations of the second European avant-garde, which was beginning to disembark in America. In 1933 David Smith became a sculptor and set out on the experimentation with form in welded iron which led him to the discovery of the sculptures in iron made by Julio González, to whom he was indebted for his “technical liberation”. For Smith, González was “the first master of the torch”, the bold imaginer of perceptible forms, discovered during Smith’s initiatory journey from Indiana to Paris in the period between the two World Wars. Years later David Smith put forward the argumentation that suggested critical appreciation of Julio González and a privileged place for him in modern sculpture: he was the creator of abstract sculpture in iron, which he succeeded in shaping and articulating brilliantly as “drawing in space”. David Smith’s new art gave fresh life to random urban fragments in an elaborate sculptural programme based on unencumbered linear metal sculpture, in a kind of “three-dimensional calligraphy”, always original and controversial, which was to make him a classic representative of the American sculpture of his century.

The works exhibited take us back to the magic moment of the “heroic sculpture” of which Clement Greenberg spoke, a powerful iconic urge which, admittedly, to a merely frontal gaze takes on a hieratic vertical dimension, but one that is immediately transformed into a felicitous configuration obtained by a harmonious balance of an amalgam of metal. Powerful works, conceived and constructed slowly in the case of Julio González, yet, as has aptly been observed, defying gravity “by means of their slender, vacant materiality”, and attaining the stature of subtle industrial assemblages responding to a hushed rhythmical cadence in the case of David Smith. Always with the stimulus of sculptural drawing surprised in space, which adds a succinct, fleeting, elusive dimension to the three-dimensional work.










Today's News

January 21, 2011

Iconic 19th Century Orientalist Painting by Jean Léon Gérôme Creates Pre-Auction Buzz

Dialogue between the Sculptors Julio González and David Smith at IVAM in Valencia

Finding Would Reveal Contact between Humans and Gomphotheres in North America

Smithsonian Chief Wayne Clough Says Banned Video by David Wojnarowicz a Work of Art

Magnificent Qing Monochrome Porcelains from the Gordon Collection at Christie's New York

Kunsthaus Bregenz Presents Exhibition by the South Korean Artist Haegue Yang

The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts Names Harry Philbrick as Director of Museum

The Diary: Three Centuries of Private Lives on View at The Morgan Library and Museum

Cyprus' Orthodox Christian Church Thanks Singer Boy George for Icon's Return

£2 Million Gift from the Hintze Family Charitable Foundation Received by The National Gallery

New Salvador Dali Museum is the Centerpiece of Arts-Filled Tampa Bay Area

130 Belgian and International Exhibitors at this Year's Brussels Antiques & Fine Arts Fair

Los Angeles County Museum of Art Appoints Curators to Chinese and Korean Art Department

Gagosian Gallery Presents a Mise-en-Scène of New Paintings by Piotr Uklański

VIP Art Fair: World's First Online Art Fair Launches Its Inaugural Edition on Saturday

Nailya Alexander Gallery Presents The Extra/Ordinary World of Pentti Sammallahti

Check Mate: Chess Sets from Around the World Exceed Estimates at Bonhams

Nicolas Krupp Contemporary Art Presents the Documentary Allegory of Peter Friedl

Museum Recovers $50K Civil War Gun Stolen in 1975

Pilar Luna, Pioneer of Mexican Underwater Archaeology, Given J.C. Harrington Award

John Beech: The State of Things on Display at Peter Blum Gallery in Chelsea

Smithsonian Secretary Wayne Clough Defends Decision to Remove Controversial Video

The World's Greatest Toy and Train Collection Now on View for the First Time at Sotheby's

Seattle Art Museum's Picasso Exhibition Surpasses 400,000 Visitors, Breaks Record

The Famous Thames Whale Goes on Display at the Natural History Museum at Tring

New Dinosaur Hall to Create Landmark Experience at Natural History Museum of Los Angeles

Exhibition of Photographs by Dorothea Lange at Brigham Young University Museum of Art

Cain Schulte Starts the New Year with Exhibitions by Matthew Barney and Sandra Munzel

Rosenbach Museum & Library to Deaccession Paintings by Walter Greaves




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful