|
|
| FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
| A
FINE FIGURE: CONTEMPORARY MEXICAN and LATIN AMERICAN ART
@ Susan Eley Fine Art | presented
by
the International Cultural Exchange (ICE) and Susan Eley Fine
Art, New York
March
11 - April 17, 2008
46
West 90th Street | New York NY 10024
917.952.7641
Gallery Hours: Monday-Friday by appointment
|
CONTACT:
Susan Eley: 917.952.7641
susie@susaneley.com
| www.susaneley.com |
|
 |
Edgar
Cano
(Mexican,
b.1977
Untitled III
mixed media on wood
27.5 x 19.7 inches |
| |
 |
Yoel
Diaz
(Mexican,
b. 1977 - lives in Mexico)
You
oil on canvas
41.3 x 31.5 inches |
| |
 |
Alfonso
Martí
(Mexican,
b. 1973)
Personages 2
mixed media on chamois leather
43.3 x 57.15 inches |
| |
|
The
exhibition A Fine Figure: Contemporary Mexican
and Latin American Art
is presented by the International Cultural Exchange
(ICE), which is dedicated to supporting and
advancing the work of artists from the Americas,
and by Susan Eley Fine Art, an important Upper
West Side Gallery in New York City that focuses
on contemporary art by emerging artists. This
exhibition follows the one at the New York Academy
of Art in 2007, and is part of a series to introduce
the creative accomplishments of Mexican and
Latin Americans artists to other nations.
Suzanne Schachter (USA) and Antonio Arelle (Mexico),
creators and founders of ICE, have co-curated
this exhibit with Eley. The show will include
about 30 works of art by artists from Mexico
and other countries from Latin America.
The opening night reception for “A
Fine Figure: Contemporary Mexican and Latin
American Art” will take place at Susan
Eley Fine Art on Tuesday, March 11th 2008 from
6:00pm to 8:00pm. Cocktails are graciously
offered at the generosity of Casa Cuervo. The
exhibition will remain on view at the Gallery,
46 West 90th street, 2nd floor, through April
17th from Monday to Friday by appointment. The
Gallery is located between Central Park West
and Columbus Avenue.
The featured artists have been specially selected
from the more than 200 that ICE promotes in
various countries. Some of them are: Alfonso
Marti, Claudia Ramos, Daniel Romero, Daniela
Manzur, Edgar Cano, Emmanuel Cruz, Gustavo Villegas,
Luis Morales, Rocío Saenz, Roman Miranda
and Yoel Diaz.
Invitees for the reception include some of the
most prestigious members of the Latin and Hispanic
Community of New York. The Consul General of
Mexico in NY, Ambassador Ruben Beltrán,
the Executive Director of the Mexican Cultural
Institute of New York, Mr. Raúl Zorrilla,
the Queen Sophia Spanish Institute, Spain Consulate,
Consulates and Embassies of the Latin American
countries of some of our artists, The Mexican
American Chamber of Commerce, Association of
Hispanic Arts, Hispanic Society of America,
The Americas Society, National Hispanic Business
Group, New York University, Columbia University,
New School University, Hunter College, Trinity
College, Barnard College, El Museo del Barrio,
Casa Puebla New York, Hispanic Federation, Mano
a Mano: Mexican Culture Without Borders, The
King Juan Carlos I of Spain Center at New York
University, Hispanic owned cafes, restaurants
and stores, Time Warner Inc, The Bravo Group,
All members of the Hispanic Association of Advertising
Agencies based in NYC, and the Hispanic Lawyers
Firms based in New York City.
THE FIGURE IN CONTEMPORARY MEXICAN
& LATIN AMERICAN ART - MARCH 2008
Why
do artists paint the figure? Asking this is
like asking why biologists study the body or
why psychologists analyze the inner workings
of the brain. In rendering the figure, artists
create a likeness of themselves, their loved
ones, strangers or imagined or fantastical forms
to make sense of their communities and their
world.
“A Fine Figure: Contemporary Mexican
and Latin American Art” covers a
broad range of ways in which artists represent
the form—some abstract universal depictions,
exemplified by Alfonso Marti’s idealized
figures in frieze like profile, evocative of
ancient Greek temple décor, or specific
portraits such as Rocio Saenz’s haunting
paintings of her husband having supper or reading.
Whether one or the other, the paintings on view
reflect a fascination with the mystery of the
human form—how the artist wants to be
perceived, or conversely, how he looks out at
the world.
Among the some 30 paintings on view are Claudia
Ramos’ Mar Dorado, a stunning
classical nude rendered in earth tones, Miguel
Angel Orta’s Baños del Chopo,
a parade of impossibly blonde dancers festooned
in identical chorus girl costumes, and Edgar
Cano’s untitled portraits of enigmatic
men.
Some paintings depict a real place and time
such as Daniela Manzur’s Sabado Distrito
Federal, showing an officer directing traffic
at a busy intersection in Mexico City, or Gustavo
Villegas’ sun dappled street in Santiago,
created in a loosely photo realist style.
This exhibition also features renowned Mexican
painter Julia López’s Comunion,
an iconic portrait of a young girl in a white
gown on her communion day, the type of religious
portrait ubiquitous in homes throughout Mexico.
|
| for
more information and to see more works by the artists:
click
here |
|
|
|