WASHINGTON, DC.- Rufino Tamayo (18991991), one of the most celebrated artists of the 20th century, was drawn to New York City at a time when unparalleled transatlantic and hemispheric cross-cultural exchange was taking place. Tamayo: The New York Years is the first exhibition to explore the influences between this major Mexican modernist and the American art world. It reveals how a Mexican artist forged a new path in the modern art of the Americas and contributed to New Yorks dynamic cultural scene as the city was becoming a center of postwar art.
Tamayo: The New York Years brings together 41 of Tamayos finest artworks, including a number of key loans from public and private collections in Mexico, that place Tamayo at the center of a major shift in the history of 20th-century art. The exhibition offers a unique opportunity to trace Tamayos artistic developmentfrom his urban-themed paintings depicting the modern sights of the city to the dream-like canvases that show an artist eager to propel Mexican art in new directions.
E. Carmen Ramos, the museums deputy chief curator and curator of Latino art, organized the exhibition, which is on view at the museums main building from Nov. 3 through March 18, 2018. Tamayo: The New York Years is the latest in a series of projects at the museum that situates the art of the United States in a global context.
Tamayo: The New York Years offers a new understanding of American modernism, said Stephanie Stebich, The Margaret and Terry Stent Director at the
Smithsonian American Art Museum. Carmen brilliantly traces Tamayos myriad influences and impacts on the burgeoning New York art scene with subtlety and nuance.
Tamayo lived in New York intermittently from the late 1920s to 1949. During this period, he befriended and exhibited with Reginald Marsh, Stuart Davis, Yasuo Kuniyoshi, Berenice Abbott and other New York-based artists who wanted to capture modern urban life. Tamayo, who had been interested in popular entertainment in Mexico, found in Coney Island a unique locus of modernity and the American experience. He depicted Coney Island several times, including in Carnival (1936), which was recently acquired by the museum.
Tamayos exposure to international modernism in New York, coupled with his firsthand study of pre-Columbian and Mexican folk art, led him to his own synthesis of modernist styles and Mexican culture. Tamayo also crossed paths with younger American artists including Jackson Pollock and Adolph Gottlieb who, like him, would break ground with new modes of representation befitting the seismic social transformations of the midcentury period.
This exhibition considers how New Yorkits sights, artists, critics, collectors and art venuesnurtured Tamayos vision of modern Mexican art. In this context, he created an art that resisted clear narratives, emphasized the creative rather than political underpinnings of art making and mined the ancient myths and forms of indigenous art to express the existential crisis of World War II. In 1939, Tamayo saw Pablo Picassos Guernica (1937) at the Valentine Gallery and the influential artists retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art. Inspired by Picassos imagery and reliance on African art, Tamayo reconsidered the forms and myths of Mexicos pre-Hispanic and folk art as the basis for a series of wartime paintings featuring aggressive and deprived animals. By the 1940s, his richly colored and abstracted compositions modeled an alternative American modernism that challenged social realism and dovetailed with a rising generation of abstract expressionists who were also seeking a visual language that fit their uncertain times.
Tamayos New York story is a complex one that reveals how his immersion in the U.S. art world shaped his art and how in turn his presence had ripple effects in the broader art world, said Ramos. The rising abstract expressionists may not have emulated Tamayos style, but as they were beginning to assert a new direction in contemporary art, they drew resolve from his prominent example as an American artist driven by aesthetic and not overt sociopolitical concerns. Influence, in other words, comes in many forms. Tamayo, who absorbed the New York artistic scene and was transformed by it, also helped redefine notions of the national across the Americas at a crucial time in history.