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ARTISTIC REFERENCES:
Velasquez's
"The Needlewoman" (c. 1640-50) is part
of a 140-piece exhibition of Spanish
paintings spanning five centuries that
is on display at the Guggenheim Museum.
Curators of the retrospective have
grouped an impressive collection of
masterworks by theme rather than
chronology, illustrating how themes and
sensibilities have spanned the
centuries.
NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART,
WASHINGTON, DC |
A journey to the soul of Spanish painting
At the Guggenheim, an innovative exhibition sheds new light on
the legacy of Spain's masters.
By Carol Strickland | Correspondent of The Christian Science
Monitor
NEW YORK
As an exhibition of five centuries of Spanish painting
unfurls up the ramps of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, you
can almost hear castanets clacking and shouts of "¡Olé!"
"Spanish Painting from El Greco to Picasso: Time, Truth, and
History" (through March 28, 2007) is like time-traveling through
the length, breadth, and depth of Spain.
The 140 paintings panoramically present the three "F's" of
Spanish culture: faith, family, and food. But the true glory of
the show, where it achieves that flamenco quality of duende
- a spark that transcends mere skill - is in the portraits.
Gasp-inducing masterpieces freeze you in your tracks again and
again, leaving one rooted in front of supremely animated
portraits by the likes of El Greco, Velásquez, Zurbarán, and
Goya. And not just a paltry few. There are 12 paintings by
Velásquez, 11 by Zurbarán, 22 by Goya, and 35 Picassos.
Yet the exhibition "is not about masterpieces," says Carmen
Giménez, one of the show's two curators. "It's about ideas." She
and her fellow curator Francisco Calvo Serraller, former
director of Madrid's Prado Museum, intend nothing less than to
rewrite the history of art. To stimulate new insights, they
arrange the paintings not chronologically, but in groupings by
content and genre, such as landscape, still lifes, and
portraits.
According to the conventional view, avant-garde movements
such as Cubism and Surrealism made a complete break with past
art. By mixing paintings on similar subjects from the 16th to
20th centuries, the curators stress continuity rather than
disjunction.
The installation, Mr. Serraller says, "challenges the viewer
to see how a theme is interpreted by artists of different
centuries. When we confronted paintings on the same subject from
five different centuries, it was a big revelation to see the
cross-dialogue between the past and avant-garde artists."
Call it a dialectical dialogue, since 20th-century painters
such as Picasso, Miró, and Dalí radically transformed the Old
Masters from Spain's Golden Age of painting (the period from El
Greco to Goya). Certainly the modern masters, who painted in
exile (mostly in Paris), were early imprinted with the sights
and smells of Spain.
"Modern art," says Serraller, "would not exist without the
Prado." At the famed museum, these artists studied the art of
their predecessors from the royal collections.
Certainly, too, Picasso and Dalí paid homage to the greats of
the Spanish past such as Velásquez, whom they both emulated and
reinterpreted in a spirit of rivalry and tribute. Miró's debt is
less evident, but his economy - maximum impact through minimal
means - and his constant allusions to Spanish flora and fauna
show the shared aesthetic and cultural heritage. (Juan Gris
comes off as a weak stepbrother in this roundup of superstars,
although his Cubist still lifes have the crisp geometric
emphasis and flatness of early Spanish still lifes.)
An art-history jest describes two prevailing types of
aesthetic: German, which is alleged to be superficially deep,
full of Sturm und Drang; and French, said to be deeply
superficial - all about style, gaiety, and sophistication (think
of the frivolous froth of Fragonard).
To coin another quip, you could say Spanish art is seriously
emotional. The examples from 500 years evince common traits:
passion, intensity, austerity, concentrated focus, elimination
of detail, torsion of figures, religiosity that borders on
fanaticism. In a word, soul.
Spain, isolated from Europe from the 17th century until the
death of the dictator Francisco Franco in 1975, went its own way
in art. While the rest of Europe explored neoclassicism,
humanism, and rationality, Spain was deeply skeptical.
Humanity, under the iron hand of the Counter-Reformation, was
seen as frail and corruptible. Spanish portraits present the
individual realistically, warts and all, rather than idealized.
"A paradox at the heart of Spanish painting from El Greco to
Goya," Serraller says, is "that it is modern because it looks
backward."
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"WOMAN IRONING" (1904):
Painted
during Picasso's Blue Period, this work
also is reminiscent of the stylized
figures of El Greco.
DAVID HEALD/ESTATE
OF PABLO PICASSO/ARS
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There is an affinity between old-fashioned and modern art in
the juxtaposition of Velásquez's "The Needlewoman" (c. 1640-50)
with Picasso's "Woman Ironing" (1904). The expressive poses and
intensity of both converse across the centuries. This painting
from Picasso's Blue Period owes much to El Greco's elongated,
angular figures as well.
Spanish Golden Age art, in its mysticism, rejection of
classicism, and naturalism, was so out of step with the rest of
European art that it seemed to be a jolt of freshness to modern
masters. Of course, they had to flee Spain before they could let
their imaginations run riot with native traditions.
Modern Spain's futuristic bridges, opera houses, and museums
by native son Santiago Calatrava coexist with red-tile-roofed
stucco monasteries. Past and present constantly jostle each
other, seeming to spring from entirely different roots. Yet
Calatrava's bone-white airport in Bilbao brings to mind a dove's
wings, a traditional Spanish motif. Similarly, displaying
portraits of women spanning 500 years in the intimate alcoves of
the Guggenheim drives home the formal and cultural connections
of Spanish identity, along with its twists and turns.
The impeccable credentials of the exhibition's curators, who
are leading scholars and connoisseurs of Spanish art, and their
six-year effort organizing this show have resulted in
unprecedented loans. It's a dazzling array of important works,
as dense and delicious as churros and chocolate.
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