BROOKLYN, NY.- Eighty-four paintings and works on paper by Oller, his predecessors, and his contemporaries in the Caribbean, Europe, and the United States are on view from October 2, 2015. through January 3, 2016, at the
Brooklyn Museum. This exhibition brings together masterpieces from the Museums collection and paintings from private collectors and museums in Paris, Puerto Rico, Miami, Washington, D.C., and the New York City area. The exhibition examines the exchange between Europe and the Caribbean in the eighteenth century and presents the Caribbean as a region of intense creativity (where local artists intermingled with those from abroad) from the eighteenth to the twentieth century. The European and North American presence and influence is represented through works by such eminent artists as Camille Pissarro (an intimate friend of Oller in Paris) and Frederic Edwin Church, among many others. The exhibition celebrates Ollers important contributions to both the Parisian avant-garde and the Puerto Rican school of painting within a larger artistic, geographic, and historical context.
Included in the exhibition is a plein air portrait of Ollers friend Paul Cézanne, illustrating Ollers place in avantgarde circles abroad and highlighting his embrace of Barbizon school painting practices. Also featured is Ollers mature masterpiece Hacienda La Fortuna, an Impression-inspired depiction of one of southern Puerto Ricos large sugar-mill complexes. Oller was commissioned by the Barcelona émigré José Gallart to paint a series of portraits of his five Puerto Rican sugar plantations. This landscape is an early morning view of Gallarts most significant plantation, showing rural AfroPuerto Rican laborers gathering sugar cane in the foreground and the planters home, flanked by his warehouses (former slave quarters) and his sugar mill, in the middle distance.
Oller had much in common with artists from Europe and other parts of the Caribbean. Nonetheless, Puerto Rico served as his most important source of inspiration. This deep connection is observed in his iconic paintings of tropical landscapes, still lifes with local fruits and vegetables, and portraits of the islands distinguished artists, teachers, and intellectuals. Oller was an artist with a highly developed social consciousness, and his key role in educational reform is attested to by the many schools he founded on his islandseveral of which were tuition-free and open to womenand his influential treatises on art and ethics.
Oller trained first in Puerto Rico, then in Spain under the painter Federico de Madrazo, and finally in France in the celebrated Paris ateliers of Charles Gleyre and Thomas Couture. In the French capital, he joined the avant-garde circles of Gustave Courbet, Pissarro, Cézanne, Claude Monet, and Pierre-Auguste Renoir and exhibited, as a disciple of Courbet, at the annual Salon exhibitions and the 1875 Salon des Refusés. Ollers twenty-one years in Europe informed his novel Realist-Impressionist idiom, which he transmitted to his students and other painters in Puerto Rico and Cuba.
In addition to iconic paintings by Oller, the exhibition includes rarely seen watercolors of the Caribbean by Winslow Homer, portraits of prominent Spaniards in late eighteenth-century San Juan by the AfroPuerto Rican master José Campeche, and portraits of British Jamaican sugar planters by Benjamin West. Also featured are paintings by Ollers contemporaries in ParisCouture, Courbet, Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot, Cézanne, Alfred Sisley, and Monet, among many othersthat enrich our understanding of Ollers unique approach to international modernism.