Rubem Valentim
Past exhibition
Overview
Mendes Wood DM São Paulo is pleased to present the first solo exhibition of Rubem Valentim in the gallery.
Rubem Valentim began to produce work in the late 1940s. A self-taught painter. Valentim’s works unite various sources of Brazilian cultural heritage; referencing popular traditions from Northeastern ceramic production in Bahia to Southwest modernist proposals and the idea of cultural anthropophagy. In the case of Valentim, the formal development of constructivist ideas being recreated for the Brazilian standards in what concerns not only the formal artistic production but historical and political thought.
Valentim explored the Brazilian religious universe, these signs or emblems are originally geometric. In his work, it’s reorganized by an even more rigorous geometry, composed of horizontal and vertical lines, triangles, circles and cubes. In this way, the artist developed a personal repertoire that together with the notion of pictorial space and chromatic study, opens up to several possibilities. His chromatic study enables a language for the presented elements, a new signography, allowing their works to be revealed iconographically for those who have references of Afro-Brazilian religions and for those who do not. The semiology present in his work propose the union of the sacred and the Cartesian, he references spiritual questions almost mathematically.
The search for an artistic language exemplified by the Brazilian cultural miscegenation can also be reinforced by the fact that the artist is a Afro-Brazilian descent, seeking to portray in a pictorial way his cultural connections. The repetitive use of these elements is in the set of pure and vivid colors. For highlight chromatic intensity, white often appears as background. His work has an intrinsic meaning from the rite, the ceremony, also appropriate geometric abstract forms to compose his work.
Valentim lived in Rio de Janeiro between 1957 and 1963 where he became an assistant professor of Carlos Cavalcanti, teaching History of Art at the Institute of Fine Arts. He moved to Rome in 1963, with the prize to travel abroad, obtained in the National Salon of Modern Art - SNAM. In 1966 Valentim participated in the Global Festival of Black Arts in Dakar. Returning to Brazil, he moved to Brasilia and taught painting at the Arts Institute of the University of Brasília - UnB. In 1972, he made a marble mural for the government headquarters in Brasilia.
In 1979, Valentim sculpt a massive concrete sculpture, installed at the Praça da Sé, in São Paulo, defining it as the ‘Syncretic Framework’ of Afro-Brazilian Culture and, in the same year and is appointed, by a commission of critics, to execute five medallions of gold, silver and bronze, for which he recreated Afro-Brazilian symbols for an important public building. In 1998 the Museum of Modern Art of Bahia - MAM / BA inaugurates the Rubem Valentim Special Room in the Sculpture Park.
The work of Valentim makes the socio-political and historical factors that form the current popular understanding of Brazil tangible. The majority of which resound in the present day, as repercussions of the colonial process of the 16th century in Latin America and 19th century in Africa. Moreover, the works poignantly make reference to ever-present threat against a humanist progressive consciousness.
The solo exhibition of Rubem Valentim at Mendes Wood DM is presented in collaboration with Instituto Rubem Valentim and Almeida e Dale Galeria de Arte.
Rubem Valentim began to produce work in the late 1940s. A self-taught painter. Valentim’s works unite various sources of Brazilian cultural heritage; referencing popular traditions from Northeastern ceramic production in Bahia to Southwest modernist proposals and the idea of cultural anthropophagy. In the case of Valentim, the formal development of constructivist ideas being recreated for the Brazilian standards in what concerns not only the formal artistic production but historical and political thought.
Valentim explored the Brazilian religious universe, these signs or emblems are originally geometric. In his work, it’s reorganized by an even more rigorous geometry, composed of horizontal and vertical lines, triangles, circles and cubes. In this way, the artist developed a personal repertoire that together with the notion of pictorial space and chromatic study, opens up to several possibilities. His chromatic study enables a language for the presented elements, a new signography, allowing their works to be revealed iconographically for those who have references of Afro-Brazilian religions and for those who do not. The semiology present in his work propose the union of the sacred and the Cartesian, he references spiritual questions almost mathematically.
The search for an artistic language exemplified by the Brazilian cultural miscegenation can also be reinforced by the fact that the artist is a Afro-Brazilian descent, seeking to portray in a pictorial way his cultural connections. The repetitive use of these elements is in the set of pure and vivid colors. For highlight chromatic intensity, white often appears as background. His work has an intrinsic meaning from the rite, the ceremony, also appropriate geometric abstract forms to compose his work.
Valentim lived in Rio de Janeiro between 1957 and 1963 where he became an assistant professor of Carlos Cavalcanti, teaching History of Art at the Institute of Fine Arts. He moved to Rome in 1963, with the prize to travel abroad, obtained in the National Salon of Modern Art - SNAM. In 1966 Valentim participated in the Global Festival of Black Arts in Dakar. Returning to Brazil, he moved to Brasilia and taught painting at the Arts Institute of the University of Brasília - UnB. In 1972, he made a marble mural for the government headquarters in Brasilia.
In 1979, Valentim sculpt a massive concrete sculpture, installed at the Praça da Sé, in São Paulo, defining it as the ‘Syncretic Framework’ of Afro-Brazilian Culture and, in the same year and is appointed, by a commission of critics, to execute five medallions of gold, silver and bronze, for which he recreated Afro-Brazilian symbols for an important public building. In 1998 the Museum of Modern Art of Bahia - MAM / BA inaugurates the Rubem Valentim Special Room in the Sculpture Park.
The work of Valentim makes the socio-political and historical factors that form the current popular understanding of Brazil tangible. The majority of which resound in the present day, as repercussions of the colonial process of the 16th century in Latin America and 19th century in Africa. Moreover, the works poignantly make reference to ever-present threat against a humanist progressive consciousness.
The solo exhibition of Rubem Valentim at Mendes Wood DM is presented in collaboration with Instituto Rubem Valentim and Almeida e Dale Galeria de Arte.
Installation Views