“At the end of the
day, technique is very important in the context of my work.”
Beatriz Milhazes
Beatriz Milhazes
The cutouts of Henri Matisse, the op-art of Bridget Riley and the colors
of Brazil’s world famous Carnival are all influences that the Brazilian abstract
artist Beatriz
Milhazes crowds into her paintings in an explosion of color and form.
About which the Deutsche Bank Collection’s Achim Drucks wrote in his 2012 essay No
Fear of Beauty “Milhazes's paintings hover between a stunning
ornamental beauty and an overload of forms, colors, styles, and quotes. It is
not the kind of beauty in which the eye can rest, however; instead, it absorbs
the gaze and threatens to overpower the viewer.”
It is in stark contrast to the majority of her contemporaries in Brazilian art scene.
As she explained in the catalogue for her 2009 exhibition at Paris’
Fondation Cartier "We
don't have a strong tradition of painting in Brazil, and especially not
painting with color. When I became internationally known as a Brazilian
painter, the international audience thought that I came out of a strong
tradition of Brazilian painting. This is because there is a general lack of
information on Latin American art. Due to Spanish colonization, some countries
like Mexico or Venezuela have a strong painting tradition. This is not the case
for Brazil. The most important and well-known Brazilian art is conceptual and
constructivist. There is no special interest in color. Brazil is a colorful
country, but its art isn't. That is why people get confused. I use elements
from my culture, and color is one of them, but I'm the only one to do so."
Enthralled by Matisse’s collaged cutouts and equally impressed by the
smoothness of Riley’s op-art renderings Milhazes has developed a unique
approach to applying paint to her canvases. She first paints a motif for
inclusion in a work on plastic which she then glues to the canvas. When the
paint has dried Milhazes then peels off the plastic. A process she repeats
until the work is complete.
And about which she has said "I like the
resulting smooth texture, the way in which the painting seems 'frozen' in time.
I love painting, but I do not want the texture of the brushstrokes or the
'hand' of the painter to be visible on my canvases."
Milhazes motifs are abstracted renderings inspired
by Brazilian culture, ceramics, lacework, carnival decoration, music, and
Colonial baroque architecture.
As she told Dirimart Gallery’s bi-annual
publication RES Art
World/World Art “I need to have all these elements and put them together.
They are in some sort of a conflict that will never really end up anywhere.
There are not peaceful surfaces. There should be some struggle on the surface
and then create some activities for your eyes.”
Milhazes’ current exhibition Marola
is on show at New York’s James
Cohan gallery until the 28th of November.
1 comment:
Wonderful colours and collage. Many thanks for showing us :-)
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