Miquel Barceló.

"5 mauvais portraits".

37,5 x 50,2 cm.

Size as framed (with museum quality frame): 57 x 42,5 cm

Drawing.

1982

PROVENANCE: Gallery Estrany de la Mota (former representative of Miquel Barceló).

CERTIFICATE: Original certificate by gallery Àngels de la Mota, 2023.

DESCRIPTION:

MIQUEL BARCELÓ
Over the past four and a half decades, the Spanish artist Miquel Barceló (born 1957) has worked across a wide range of mediums, from paintings to works on paper, ceramics, and bronze sculptures to large-scale installations and performances. Despite his deep-rooted connection to Spain, Barceló draws inspiration from his time spent in varying locations, having worked in Barcelona, Portugal, Palermo, Paris, Geneva, New York, the Himalayas, and West Africa in addition to his native Mallorca. The varied terrain of his travels have influenced and shaped his work, with his art transforming as he experiences new environments around the world, from the arid deserts of Africa to the rocky landscape and underwater marine universe of the Balearic Islands. An artistic nomad, Barceló’s fascination with the natural world has inspired richly textured canvases that recall the earthly materiality of Catalan painters such as Antoni Tapies and Joan Miró, as well as compositions that study the effects of light and the ever-changing colors of the sea. Always experimenting with the materials of his art, Barceló has remained focused on the expressive qualities of his materials to explore texture, touch, and surface.

Born in 1957 in Felanitx on the island of Mallorca, Barceló was introduced to art through his mother, who was a painter. In 1974, he traveled to Paris, leaving the constrained environment of Franco’s Spain for the first time, where he was particularly impressed by the work of Jean Dubuffet and Art Brut. After taking classes at the Decorative Arts School in Palma de Mallorca that year, Barceló enrolled at the School of Fine Arts in Barcelona in 1975, where he attended classes for a few months before returning to Mallorca. Back in Mallorca, Barceló joined the conceptual avant-garde group, “Taller Lunatic,” participating in their demonstrations and happenings made possible by the changed political climate after Franco’s death. At this time, Barceló experimented with making conceptual works that explored the behavior of matter and decomposition; early works included wooden and glass boxes that contained decaying foods and unorthodox, organic materials.

In the early 1980s, Barceló earned international renown as one the foremost Spanish painters, rising to fame after representing Spain at the Documenta exhibition in Kassel in 1982. Throughout the 1980s, Barceló’s work was included in many international exhibitions; his work was embraced as part of the international neo-expressionist movement, which rejected the prevailing trend against imagery (the so-called “death of painting”) in favor of portraying recognizable subjects in an expressive, gestural aesthetic. By the mid to late 1980s, Barceló had begun to eliminate the narrative elements from his paintings, a reduction culminating in his series of abstract white paintings begun after the artist spent six months traveling across the Sahara Desert in 1988. After living for a number of years in Paris, Barcelona, and New York, Barceló was invigorated and fascinated by both the cultural and physical environment of West Africa. Inspired by the dramatic African light, scorched earth, and rocky landscape, Barceló made a series of pale, intensely textured canvases that recall the arid, rugged terrain of the desert. After his first trip to Africa, the artist kept a small house and studio in Mali for many years, living without electricity or running water among the local rural population. Relying on cultural and geographical diversity for inspiration; to him “Africa represents a kind of overall cleansing. The first reaction I always have when I arrive in Mali is to realize the uselessness of things…In Paris or here (in Mallorca), by always painting in the same studio, you come to forget the essence of the affair. In Mali I get back in touch with the essence of the act of painting.” In addition to his white paintings, he has made series of portraits, still lifes, and domestic scenes inspired by daily life in sub-Saharan Africa.

In 1990, Barceló began a series of bullfight scenes inspired by a commission to create a poster for the Nîmes bullfighting festival in 1988. In these paintings, Barceló depicts the concentric rings of the bullfighting arena, creating remarkably textured, impastoed surfaces bursting with dynamism and swirling energy. Barceló draws parallels between how he creates his painterly surfaces and how the toreador works through the sand in the arena, with the canvas recording the marks of the painter as the sand tracks the movements of the bull and the fighter: “the most important thing is what happens on the sand. In a bullfight, you can read what happened in the sand; it's a beautiful metaphor of painting because my paintings are like traces of what has happened there, all that happens in the head, in fact. The picture object is a bit like the sand of the arena, a sort of detritus of what took place there.” In adopting this culturally resonant theme, long symbolic of Spanish national identity, Barceló continues in the tradition of great Spanish painters from Francisco de Goya to Pablo Picasso and Salvador Dali. Before bullfighting was banned in Catalonia in 2012, after nearly 700 years of fights, Barceló designed the official poster for Barcelona’s last bullfight.


Since 2000, Barceló has continued to explore themes inspired by his extensive travels and has completed various major commissions, including the Santísimo chapel of the cathedral in Palma de Mallorca and the dome in the Human Rights and the Alliance of Civilizations at the United Nations in Geneva. For the cathedral in Palma, Barceló worked for six years to cover the entire chapel in terracotta, illustrating the miracle of the loaves and the fishes in elaborate ceramic with the figure of Christ hovering over the tabernacle. The extraordinary detail of the project recalls the modernist style of Catalan architect Antoni Gaudi, who also once worked on the interior of the Palma cathedral. Barceló's elaborate work at the Palma cathedral demonstrates his mastery of ceramic, which has played a central role in the artist's work since the mid-1990s.

In Barceló's remarkable installation at the United Nations, which was presented to the public in November of 2008, he covered the massive domed ceiling of the room in vibrant, multi-colored stalactite forms. Together with a team of twenty assistants, Barceló created these cave-like forms with a plaster base, to which they then applied colorful paints made from pigments sourced from all over the world. Atop this radiant, multi-colored surface, Barceló applied a directional spray of blue-gray paint, which causes the ceiling’s appearance to shift depending on the viewer’s perspective in the room. From some angles, the blue-gray hue predominates, and then from others, the installation radiates with vivid rainbow hues; this emphasis on perspective speaks to the importance of looking at the work from different viewpoints, just as perspective informs issues being discussed in the United Nations.

Barceló has exhibited his work widely in group and solo exhibitions; important shows and retrospectives have been shown at the CAPC, Bordeaux, Palacio de Velazquez in Madrid and Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston (1986); Musée d’Art Contemporain de Montreal in Montreal (1988); Musée d’Art Contemporain de Nimes (1991); Galerie du National du Jeu de Paume (1996); Centre Pompidou (1996); Whitechapel in London (1994); Museo Reina Sofia (1999), Musée des arts décoratifs, Paris (2000); Fondation Maeght in Saint-Paul de Vence (2002); Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Moderna (Rome) (2002-2003); Musée du Louvre in Paris (2004); the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Dublin (2008); joint exhibitions at the Musée Picasso and the Bibliothèque Nationale de France (2016); the International Museum of Ceramics, Faenza (2019); the Museo Picasso, Málaga (2021); and, most recently, a traveling museum retrospective across Japan with shows in Tokyo, Nagasaki, Tsu, and Osaka (2022). When Barceló's watercolors illustrating Dante's Divine Comedy were shown at the Louvre Museum in Paris in 2004, he became the youngest artist ever shown in the museum.


Historie sprzedawców

Galeria Sztuki Antycznej - Archeologia z siedzibą w Barcelonie z ponad piętnastoletnim doświadczeniem. Specjalizował się w sztuce klasycznej, egipskiej, azjatyckiej i prekolumbijskiej. Gwarantuje autentyczność wszystkich elementów. Uczestniczy w najważniejszych targach sztuki w Hiszpanii, takich jak Feriarte, a także w targach zagranicznych, BRAFA, Parcours des Mondes, Cultures Brussels. Wszystkie prace wysyłane są z pozwoleniem na eksport wydanym przez hiszpańskie Ministerstwo Kultury. Szybko wysyłamy za pośrednictwem DHL Express lub Direct Art Transport.
Przetłumaczone przez Tłumacz Google

Miquel Barceló.

"5 mauvais portraits".

37,5 x 50,2 cm.

Size as framed (with museum quality frame): 57 x 42,5 cm

Drawing.

1982

PROVENANCE: Gallery Estrany de la Mota (former representative of Miquel Barceló).

CERTIFICATE: Original certificate by gallery Àngels de la Mota, 2023.

DESCRIPTION:

MIQUEL BARCELÓ
Over the past four and a half decades, the Spanish artist Miquel Barceló (born 1957) has worked across a wide range of mediums, from paintings to works on paper, ceramics, and bronze sculptures to large-scale installations and performances. Despite his deep-rooted connection to Spain, Barceló draws inspiration from his time spent in varying locations, having worked in Barcelona, Portugal, Palermo, Paris, Geneva, New York, the Himalayas, and West Africa in addition to his native Mallorca. The varied terrain of his travels have influenced and shaped his work, with his art transforming as he experiences new environments around the world, from the arid deserts of Africa to the rocky landscape and underwater marine universe of the Balearic Islands. An artistic nomad, Barceló’s fascination with the natural world has inspired richly textured canvases that recall the earthly materiality of Catalan painters such as Antoni Tapies and Joan Miró, as well as compositions that study the effects of light and the ever-changing colors of the sea. Always experimenting with the materials of his art, Barceló has remained focused on the expressive qualities of his materials to explore texture, touch, and surface.

Born in 1957 in Felanitx on the island of Mallorca, Barceló was introduced to art through his mother, who was a painter. In 1974, he traveled to Paris, leaving the constrained environment of Franco’s Spain for the first time, where he was particularly impressed by the work of Jean Dubuffet and Art Brut. After taking classes at the Decorative Arts School in Palma de Mallorca that year, Barceló enrolled at the School of Fine Arts in Barcelona in 1975, where he attended classes for a few months before returning to Mallorca. Back in Mallorca, Barceló joined the conceptual avant-garde group, “Taller Lunatic,” participating in their demonstrations and happenings made possible by the changed political climate after Franco’s death. At this time, Barceló experimented with making conceptual works that explored the behavior of matter and decomposition; early works included wooden and glass boxes that contained decaying foods and unorthodox, organic materials.

In the early 1980s, Barceló earned international renown as one the foremost Spanish painters, rising to fame after representing Spain at the Documenta exhibition in Kassel in 1982. Throughout the 1980s, Barceló’s work was included in many international exhibitions; his work was embraced as part of the international neo-expressionist movement, which rejected the prevailing trend against imagery (the so-called “death of painting”) in favor of portraying recognizable subjects in an expressive, gestural aesthetic. By the mid to late 1980s, Barceló had begun to eliminate the narrative elements from his paintings, a reduction culminating in his series of abstract white paintings begun after the artist spent six months traveling across the Sahara Desert in 1988. After living for a number of years in Paris, Barcelona, and New York, Barceló was invigorated and fascinated by both the cultural and physical environment of West Africa. Inspired by the dramatic African light, scorched earth, and rocky landscape, Barceló made a series of pale, intensely textured canvases that recall the arid, rugged terrain of the desert. After his first trip to Africa, the artist kept a small house and studio in Mali for many years, living without electricity or running water among the local rural population. Relying on cultural and geographical diversity for inspiration; to him “Africa represents a kind of overall cleansing. The first reaction I always have when I arrive in Mali is to realize the uselessness of things…In Paris or here (in Mallorca), by always painting in the same studio, you come to forget the essence of the affair. In Mali I get back in touch with the essence of the act of painting.” In addition to his white paintings, he has made series of portraits, still lifes, and domestic scenes inspired by daily life in sub-Saharan Africa.

In 1990, Barceló began a series of bullfight scenes inspired by a commission to create a poster for the Nîmes bullfighting festival in 1988. In these paintings, Barceló depicts the concentric rings of the bullfighting arena, creating remarkably textured, impastoed surfaces bursting with dynamism and swirling energy. Barceló draws parallels between how he creates his painterly surfaces and how the toreador works through the sand in the arena, with the canvas recording the marks of the painter as the sand tracks the movements of the bull and the fighter: “the most important thing is what happens on the sand. In a bullfight, you can read what happened in the sand; it's a beautiful metaphor of painting because my paintings are like traces of what has happened there, all that happens in the head, in fact. The picture object is a bit like the sand of the arena, a sort of detritus of what took place there.” In adopting this culturally resonant theme, long symbolic of Spanish national identity, Barceló continues in the tradition of great Spanish painters from Francisco de Goya to Pablo Picasso and Salvador Dali. Before bullfighting was banned in Catalonia in 2012, after nearly 700 years of fights, Barceló designed the official poster for Barcelona’s last bullfight.


Since 2000, Barceló has continued to explore themes inspired by his extensive travels and has completed various major commissions, including the Santísimo chapel of the cathedral in Palma de Mallorca and the dome in the Human Rights and the Alliance of Civilizations at the United Nations in Geneva. For the cathedral in Palma, Barceló worked for six years to cover the entire chapel in terracotta, illustrating the miracle of the loaves and the fishes in elaborate ceramic with the figure of Christ hovering over the tabernacle. The extraordinary detail of the project recalls the modernist style of Catalan architect Antoni Gaudi, who also once worked on the interior of the Palma cathedral. Barceló's elaborate work at the Palma cathedral demonstrates his mastery of ceramic, which has played a central role in the artist's work since the mid-1990s.

In Barceló's remarkable installation at the United Nations, which was presented to the public in November of 2008, he covered the massive domed ceiling of the room in vibrant, multi-colored stalactite forms. Together with a team of twenty assistants, Barceló created these cave-like forms with a plaster base, to which they then applied colorful paints made from pigments sourced from all over the world. Atop this radiant, multi-colored surface, Barceló applied a directional spray of blue-gray paint, which causes the ceiling’s appearance to shift depending on the viewer’s perspective in the room. From some angles, the blue-gray hue predominates, and then from others, the installation radiates with vivid rainbow hues; this emphasis on perspective speaks to the importance of looking at the work from different viewpoints, just as perspective informs issues being discussed in the United Nations.

Barceló has exhibited his work widely in group and solo exhibitions; important shows and retrospectives have been shown at the CAPC, Bordeaux, Palacio de Velazquez in Madrid and Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston (1986); Musée d’Art Contemporain de Montreal in Montreal (1988); Musée d’Art Contemporain de Nimes (1991); Galerie du National du Jeu de Paume (1996); Centre Pompidou (1996); Whitechapel in London (1994); Museo Reina Sofia (1999), Musée des arts décoratifs, Paris (2000); Fondation Maeght in Saint-Paul de Vence (2002); Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Moderna (Rome) (2002-2003); Musée du Louvre in Paris (2004); the Irish Museum of Modern Art in Dublin (2008); joint exhibitions at the Musée Picasso and the Bibliothèque Nationale de France (2016); the International Museum of Ceramics, Faenza (2019); the Museo Picasso, Málaga (2021); and, most recently, a traveling museum retrospective across Japan with shows in Tokyo, Nagasaki, Tsu, and Osaka (2022). When Barceló's watercolors illustrating Dante's Divine Comedy were shown at the Louvre Museum in Paris in 2004, he became the youngest artist ever shown in the museum.


Historie sprzedawców

Galeria Sztuki Antycznej - Archeologia z siedzibą w Barcelonie z ponad piętnastoletnim doświadczeniem. Specjalizował się w sztuce klasycznej, egipskiej, azjatyckiej i prekolumbijskiej. Gwarantuje autentyczność wszystkich elementów. Uczestniczy w najważniejszych targach sztuki w Hiszpanii, takich jak Feriarte, a także w targach zagranicznych, BRAFA, Parcours des Mondes, Cultures Brussels. Wszystkie prace wysyłane są z pozwoleniem na eksport wydanym przez hiszpańskie Ministerstwo Kultury. Szybko wysyłamy za pośrednictwem DHL Express lub Direct Art Transport.
Przetłumaczone przez Tłumacz Google
Edycja
Unikalne
Era
1900-2000
Sprzedawane przez
Właściciel lub sprzedawca
Artysta
Miquel Barceĺó (1957)
Tytuł dzieła
5 mauvais portraits
Technika
Rysunek
Podpis
niesygnowany
Kraj pochodzenia
Hiszpania
Rok
1982
Stan
W Dobrym Stanie
Wysokość
37,5 cm
Szerokość
50,2 cm
Głębokość
3 cm
Sprzedawany z ramą
Nie
Okres
1980-1990

Liczba komentarzy: 2362 (841 w ciągu ostatnich 12 miesięcy)
  1. 831
  2. 9
  3. 1

muy contento con la compra y el envío, rápido y seguro, como merecen las 4 piezas históricas que adquirí, con toda su documentación, vendedor muy muy recomendable, un placer

Zobacz tłumaczenie
user-b07f81bcb6a6

oggetto imballato perfettamente e con tutti i documenti legali necessari alla vendita. È monotono 😀 😃 ma acquistare dalle ditte che collaborano con catawiki è sempre una sicurezza ed un piacere

Zobacz tłumaczenie
user-1c4fb4c824ca

It's always a pleasure. Until next time. Thank you.

Zobacz tłumaczenie
user-75a3846c91a6

Happy with the purchase, the order arrived intact. Item is in good condition, and advertised, everything went great

Zobacz tłumaczenie
user-549ef21cbefb

Excelente vendedor. Todo muy bien. El envío muy rápido. Recomendable. Muchas gracias

Zobacz tłumaczenie
user-00186c3d807a

Très beaux objets de qualité avec certificats d'authenticité et explications.vendeur au Top. Merci

Zobacz tłumaczenie
user-cb25b79

bellissimoooooo grazie top 💯💯💯 come sempre

Zobacz tłumaczenie
user-a1739a8e7293

Great purchase! Very well packaged; arrived very fast with all the necessary paperwork. Thank you!

Zobacz tłumaczenie
user-1b01123bfe33

Vendeur réactif. Délai de livraison respecté . Merci! Monique

Zobacz tłumaczenie
kerfany

This is the second time I order with this seller and I am very positive. The terracotta item comes in a small box packed in bubble wrap. delivery is a bit expensive but safe and extremely fast.

Zobacz tłumaczenie
user-492d85e

Una garantía total comprar en una tienda de objetos arqueológicos de prestigio en pleno centro de Barcelona, con toda la documentación perfectamente editada y con un trato personal muy bueno.

Zobacz tłumaczenie
user-1f6b2d0570a8

oggetto bellissimo corrispondente alla descrizione. Ottima confezione e dettaglio della certificazione

Zobacz tłumaczenie
user-48ccd56c1796

Magnífica la entrega y el objeto. Perfecta la sonido del sibato

Zobacz tłumaczenie
jlpp

very well packed with all the documents included, thnks

Zobacz tłumaczenie
user-7e2859b5bd8e

Great object. Really beautiful. Quick delivery. Excellent.

Zobacz tłumaczenie
user-9567dceff0be

Superbe objet, Service d'Arqueologia Ancient Art excellent et rapide. Jaume Bagot toujours parfait .

Zobacz tłumaczenie
Domidogan
Zobacz wszystkie opinii

Liczba komentarzy: 2362 (841 w ciągu ostatnich 12 miesięcy)
  1. 831
  2. 9
  3. 1

muy contento con la compra y el envío, rápido y seguro, como merecen las 4 piezas históricas que adquirí, con toda su documentación, vendedor muy muy recomendable, un placer

Zobacz tłumaczenie
user-b07f81bcb6a6