NEW YORK, NY.- Americas Society and the Hunter College Art Galleries are presenting Boundless Reality: Traveler Artists Landscapes of Latin America from the Patricia Phelps de Cisneros Collection, a selection of rarely seen paintings, works on paper, photographs, and books that describe the beauty and complexity of life in Mexico, Central, and South America in the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries.
The exhibition is curated by Dr. Harper Montgomery, the Patricia Phelps de Cisneros Professor of Latin American Art at Hunter College, and students from her masters course, Curatorial Practicum: Subjectivity and the Nineteenth-Century Latin American Landscape. Boundless Reality features more than 150 works by artists from Europe, the United States, and Latin America, ranging from 1638 to 1887. It is being shown simultaneously at the Americas Society Art Gallery and the Bertha and Karl Leubsdorf Gallery at Hunter College through January 23, 2016.
Boundless Reality is the culmination of a multiyear collaborative effort between Hunter College, The Graduate Center at City University of New York (CUNY), Americas Society, and the Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros (CPPC). The exhibition is a selection of major works from the collection Traveler Artists to Latin America, which Gustavo Cisneros and Patricia Phelps de Cisneros began in 1997. The works span three and a half centuries of Latin American landscape art, from the arrival of Dutch Colonial artist Frans Post to Brazil, and continuing with the visits of numerous traveling artists from Europe and the United States. By the late nineteenth century native-born artists were adopting landscape painting as the language of the new republics, forging a new sense of national identity.
"When my wife Patty and I began collecting landscapes of Latin America by traveler artists to and within the region, we recognized that the images they recorded represented a way to perceive a world whose boundaries transcended political borders. They further provided an understanding of Latin America as a network of interconnected ideas, traditions, and fruitful exchange," said Fundación Cisneros/Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros Co-founder Gustavo Cisneros. "The responsibility of the collector to preserve the heritage of artworks involves more than the crucial work of caring for them physically. It involves giving them new avenues of correspondence with other works of art and other traditions, and creating new scholarship that reveals previously unseen connections and discovers new facts. Patty and I are especially proud of the students whose research and curatorial work contributed to this exhibition. Their work has added important gains to the intellectual preservation that will allow these works to live for a new generation, who will no doubt discover in them national identities with more in common than previously imagined."
The show includes drawings, watercolors, paintings, photographs, and books by key figures including Ferdinand Bellermann, Frederic Edwin Church, Marc Ferrez, Auguste Morisot, Camille Pissarro, and José María Velasco among others. Two paintings in the exhibition by Frans Post predate the nineteenth century, but most of the works in the exhibition were made during the 1830s, 40s, and 50s, the years following the Latin American wars of independence.
Boundless Reality serves as an exploration into a genre that is receiving increasing scholarly attention. While Alexander von Humboldts observations on the aesthetics of the continents extraordinary scenery were influential, it was only after the colonies obtained independence from Spain that the New World opened up to the gaze of foreign artists who arrived individually, drawn by their own aesthetic interests, or collectively in commercial missions dispatched by foreign governments. The artists renderings document the ways in which travelers encountered and experienced the region as well as the challenges they faced to describe an aesthetic reality for which the language of conventional Western art was inadequate.
The title of the exhibition is inspired by a reflection by the Nobel Prize-winning Colombian novelist Gabriel García Márquez, who stated that language was not enough to describe the "boundless reality" that is conveyed by the extraordinarily rich nature of Latin America and the Caribbean. Boundless Reality reveals that the landscape tradition was not reserved to artists who traveled great distances to record the geography and the people they encountered in the Torrid Zone. It includes native-born artists who drew in the European landscape tradition to reflect on their own culture, as exemplified by José María Velascos paintings of Mexico, which not only embrace the European enlightenment sensibility, but also a growing sense of national identity.
"This project brings to light new research on an area whose enormous artistic interest and scholarly importance are just now coming to be recognized by art historians and scholars. Viewing these landscapes by artists of many different origins suggests that, even though their orientations may differ, the demands of representing Latin America generated a transnational language that was well suited to the new nineteenth-century capability for enormous mobility," said Dr. Montgomery.
Boundless Reality: Traveler Artists Landscapes of Latin America from the Patricia Phelps de Cisneros Collection is organized in two distinct but related sections. Hunter Colleges Leubsdorf Gallery presents works that convey to what extent the European tradition of landscape painting underwent changes in the process of being applied to represent Latin American landscapes. Auguste Morisots 1886 expedition up the Orinoco River serves as the centerpiece of Americas Society Art Gallerys component of the exhibition, which includes photographs, drawings, and prints. Morisots archive exemplifies the emergence of photography in the nineteenth century and its relationship to the conventions of painting and representing the exotic landscape.
"The Latin American and Caribbean traveler artists were influenced in a big way by the ideas of the extraordinary eighteenth-century scientist and explorer Alexander von Humboldt, who was the subject of a major exhibition at Americas Society in 2014," said Americas Society/Council of the Americas President and CEO Susan Segal. "Boundless Reality is a very ambitious project in terms of the scope of the artists included and the territory covered in what was then an unknown world. We are proud to continue our historical and artistic exploration of the Latin American landscape, this time with the very unique contribution of the Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros."
Highlights of the exhibition include:
Frans Posts View of Frederica City in Paraíba (1638) and Landscape with Chapel (ca. 1663).
Cotopaxi (1853) by Frederick Edwin Church, and Sunset: A Scene in Brazil (1864 65) by Martin Johnson Heade.
Fritz George Melbyes depictions of Venezuela (1866, 1853) and José María Velascos depictions of Mexico (1870s).
Works from the CPPCs extensive holding of photographs and drawings from Auguste Morisots 1886 expedition up the Orinoco River.
Traveler Artists: Landscapes of Latin America from the Patricia Phelps de Cisneros Collection, an authoritative new book on the early history of landscape painting in Latin America, is published on the occasion of this exhibition. This richly illustrated volume introduces informative new essays on the paintings and drawings from the Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisnerosincluding some works that are not on view in the exhibition. The publication contributes new scholarship to this burgeoning field and offers original research on fifty-two artworks by such key figures as Frans Post, Frederick Edwin Church, José María Velasco, and Auguste Morisot, many of which are reproduced for the first time.