AUSTIN, TX.- The Blanton Museum of Art at The University of Texas at Austin and the Fundação Iberê Camargo, Porto Alegre, Brazil, have joined together to organize the first comprehensive career survey of one of Brazils most important contemporary artists, Waltercio Caldas. Comprised of over 75 worksincluding several that have never before been publicly exhibitedThe Nearest Air: A Survey of Works by Waltercio Caldas explores highlights of the artists production since the 1960s through the present. It investigates Caldass centrality within modern Brazilian art, his role on the international stage, and his unique position on art and its ethos. Following its recent presentation at two Brazilian venuesthe Fundação Iberê Camargo in Porto Alegre and the Pinacoteca do Estado de São Paulothe expanded exhibition has its North American premiere at the Blanton and is accompanied by the first major publication of the artists work in the United States.
For decades, Caldas has been a central figure in Brazilian art, states Blanton Director Simone Wicha. While his influence extends across much of the art world, he has remained largely under recognized in the United States. This exhibition brings his work to a broader audience and highlights one of the Blanton Museum of Arts core commitments: to identify exceptional artists from Latin America and to highlight the importance of their work within a global context to students and the public.
Caldass work defies typical interpretation and classification. Using materials that range from the refined to the commonplace, his sculpture, installations, and drawings examine the physical qualities of objects and spaces, often challenging the assumptions viewers bring to the act of looking. He defines his practice as the act of sculpting the distance between objects, inverting the conventional definition of sculpture as a dense, self-contained volume. Above all, simplicity and formal precision define his art, qualities that speak to his aim to produce what he describes as maximally present work through minimal action. His installation The Nearest Air (1991), in which suspended lengths of red and blue yarn radically transform empty space, epitomizes these concerns and exemplifies Caldass predilection for poetic and ambiguous titles. Another hallmark of his practice is the production of artists books, a body of work that illustrates Caldass playful use of the written word and his interest in art history, philosophy, and systems of knowledge.
Elaborating on the work of numerous modernist predecessors, Caldas draws knowingly from a wide range of Brazilian and international references. The Nearest Air: A Survey of Works by Waltercio Caldas brings to light an artist whose work broadens the scope of traditional art historical discourse, while actively challenging viewers to question their perceptions of space and notions of reality.
The exhibition catalog, Waltercio Caldas, is the first illustrated English-language publication to fully explore Caldass four-decade artistic trajectory, his influences, and his impact. The book, to be co-published by the Blanton Museum of Art and The University of Texas Press, features insightful essays by distinguished art critics Richard Shiff and Robert Storr, as well as by exhibition guest curator, Gabriel Pérez-Barreiro.
The Nearest Air: A Survey of Works by Waltercio Caldas is co-organized by the Blanton Museum of Art and the Fundação Iberê Camargo and is guest-curated by Gabriel Pérez-Barreiro.
Waltercio Caldas was born in Rio de Janeiro in 1946. He has had solo exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art in Rio, the Kanaal Foundation, Belgium, the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, the Christopher Grimes Gallery, Santa Monica, and other spaces. He showed at the Venice Biennale in 1997 and 2007, and has also shown in several Mercosul and São Paulo Biennials. His work is included in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; Museu de Arte Moderna, São Paulo; Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros, Venezuela/New York; the Bruce and Diane Halle Collection, Scottsdale; and the Blanton Museum of Art, University of Texas, Austin.