“Discovering beauty always changes you.”
Fernando de Szyszlo
Fernando de Szyszlo
The Peruvian lyrical abstract artist Fernando de Szyszlo
has a profound attachment to the land of his birth and the pre-Columbian art that informs it. His adoption
of the European aesthetics associated with cubism, surrealism and abstraction when
combined with the aesthetic of his local art has
enabled him to produce work that has been collected far beyond the borders of his
South American home.
As he told Santa Monica’s Latin
American Masters gallery “The content was everything and the content
was the one that gave me form…the form is the result of a very powerful
content.”
Szyszlo was in his mid 20’s when he first came face to face with the
masters of European art like Rembrandt and Van Gogh. “It was a shock to discover the modern
world,” is how he described the experience
to The
Economist. Prior to his arrival in Europe Szyszlo had only been
exposed to pre-Columbian pottery and textiles about which he lamented as being “the only
original art that was within our reach.”
During the first half of the 1950’s, mostly spent in Paris and Florence,
Szyszlo immersed himself in artistic movements of the time with a particular
interest in the European adoption of African motives. It was a process he would
invert upon his return the Peru adopting aspects of cubism, surrealism and
abstraction that could enhance the reproduction of pre –Columbian masks, feather mantles, clay figurines, symbols and
colors in a modernist style that he made distinctly his own.
Such was his success that the
2010 Nobel laureate for literature, Mario Vargas Llosa wrote in his
essay Szyszlo
in the Labyrinth “Like Latin America itself, Szyszlo’s art dips
into the night of ancient civilizations as it rubs elbows with more recent ones
that have arisen throughout the globe. His art stands squarely at a
cross-roads: eager, curious, craving, devoid of prejudice, open to any
influence. And at the same time, he is stubbornly loyal to the secret
depths of his heart, to that submerged and ardent intimacy where experiences
and lessons metabolize in a place where the rational is at the service of the
irrational, where the personality and genius of an artist can emerge.”
Szyszlo’s current self-titled
exhibition is on show at Medellin’s Duque
Arango Galeria until the 18th of August.
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