Basque sculptor Eduardo Chillida (1924–2002) and Hispano-Philippine painter Fernando Zóbel (1924–1984), two key Post-War Post-War artists in Spain are brought together in an exhibition that reveals the creative links and mutual admiration that existed between these two artists. The exhibition Zóbel-Chillida: Crisscrossing Paths, curated by Alfonso de la Torre, presents Zóbel's paintings and Chillida's sculptures at Mayoral's gallery in Paris from 12 September 2020 to 9 January 2021.
Both born in 1924, Fernando Zóbel and Eduardo Chillida met in 1964 thanks to Zóbel's desire to commission Chillida to create a work for his Museo de Arte Abstracto Español in Cuenca, a medieval town located to the east of Madrid, which Zóbel helped turned into an artists' village.
Born in Manila to Spanish parents, Zóbel studied Philosophy and Literature at Harvard University. A self-taught artist and true intellectual, his encounter with Rothko's art in 1955 at an exhibition at the Art of Institute of Chicago was a pivotal moment for the artist, heralding a definitive turning point towards abstraction. In all of his paintings, an essential place is given to gesture, line, and writing through a true search for light. The artist also uses a delicate technique employing a hypodermic needle to distribute solvent and paint. In the late 1950s, he participated in major international exhibitions: Before Picasso; After Miró at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York in 1960, the Venice Biennale in 1962 and Modern Spanish Painting at the Tate in London in the same year.
After extensively travelling the world, he settled permanently in Spain in 1960. In 1959, he exhibited for the first time at the Galería Biosca in Madrid, whose director, Juana Mordó, became his gallerist. He also exhibited at Bertha Schaefer (New York, 1965 and 1968) and Galerie Jacob (Paris, 1977). In addition to his work as an artist, he undertook the creation of the first democratic museum in Spain during the Franco period which opened in 1966 in Cuenca. It is famous for its suspended houses and classified as a historical monument by UNESCO.
While tenaciously exercising his extraordinary talent as a painter, he set a single objective for himself: artistic activity. His extremely intense devotion to art was his motto.
—Alfonso de la Torre
By 1960, Chillida was already well-known worldwide, notably in France where he had first moved in 1948. In 1954, he received an award at the 10th Triennale de Milan. In 1956, he presented his iron sculptures at the Galerie Maeght, where he later exhibited several times. He participated in the exhibition Sculptures and Drawings from Seven Sculptors (1958) at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York and that same year he received the International Grand Prize for Sculpture at the XXIXe Venice Biennial. In 1959, important exhibitions in the United States, Canada, and at Documenta II in Kassel were dedicated to his work. From then on, he started working with wood, concrete, alabaster and mud.
Many retrospective exhibitions of his work have been presented in major international museums, and his sculptures can be found in cities around the world. In 2000, the artist inaugurated the Chillida Leku Museum in Hernani, which reopened to the public in April 2019.
In this exhibition Crisscrossing Paths, Chillida's monochrome and mineral sculptures with hollowed surfaces, incised with lines, and covered with elements that search for light will respond to Zobel's poetic paintings, whose lines and punctuated plots allow light to invade the canvas. Mayoral will reanimate the intimate dialogue that linked these two great figures of the Spanish Post-War period whose intention undeniably lay in their ability to stimulate our vision, and perhaps even our vision of the world...
We discover a dialogue between two of the major figures of the Post-War period, in which the lyrical facet of Fernando Zóbel and the informal sculpture of Eduardo Chillida are combined. It is an encounter between artists who knew how to rise up, as in the battle of hope against the long night of Franco's regime.
—Alfonso de la Torre
Press release courtesy Galeria Mayoral.
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