Rubem Valentim
Emblema 84, 1984
acrylic on canvas
acrílica sobre tela
acrílica sobre tela
27 x 41 cm
10 5/8 x 16 1/8 in
10 5/8 x 16 1/8 in
Rubem Valentim’s career as a painter began in the late 1940s. His production combines several sources that are part of the Brazilian cultural legacy: popular traditions from the ceramic production...
Rubem Valentim’s career as a painter began in the late 1940s. His production combines several sources that are part of the Brazilian cultural legacy: popular traditions from the ceramic production of the Northeast, the modernist propositions from the Southeast and the idea of cultural anthropophagy. In his work, the formal development of constructivist ideas is recreated using Brazilian points of reference, both in formal and historical-political terms.
Valentim’s works are structurally organized and composed of abstract signs made from horizontal and vertical lines, circles, cubes and arrows. These elements are geometric reductions of Orixá, or deities, from the Afro-Brazilian religions Candomblé and Umbanda. These religions were originally brought to the Americas by enslaved Yoruba peoples from West and Central Africa. Once in Brazil, Candomblé and Umbanda developed further from the presence of indigenous groups and the influence of the Roman Catholic Church installed in Brazil by Portuguese colonizers. Alongside his notion of pictorial space and chromatic investigations, Valentims’ work opens up to a myriad of possibilities. His chromatic study generates a new language – a new ‘signography’ –, whose iconography is revealed both to those that are familiar and not familiar with the Afro-Brazilian religious references he uses. The semiology present in his production proposes the union of the sacred and the Cartesian, conjuring spiritual concerns almost mathematically.
In order to pictorially represent his cultural connection as an Afro-Brazilian descendent, Valentim sought for an artistic language able to illustrate Brazilian cultural miscegenation. Some elements appear repeatedly in his clusters of pure and lively colours. His work bears an intrinsic meaning of rite and ceremony, merging abstract and geometric forms appropriated from constructivism.
In Emblema 84, Valentim included, for instance, a trident-like structure that, at first glance, is reference to the ferramenta (sacred tool) of Exú, a Candomblé deity known for his role as a messenger between humans and the divine. This same logic applies to the symbol of the crescent moon, the representation of Iemanjá, the goddess of water and fertility. These figures, however, are often not unique in their compositional structures; they have been reimagined from the more traditional iconographies of Candomblé, and morphed into new icons.
Valentim’s works are structurally organized and composed of abstract signs made from horizontal and vertical lines, circles, cubes and arrows. These elements are geometric reductions of Orixá, or deities, from the Afro-Brazilian religions Candomblé and Umbanda. These religions were originally brought to the Americas by enslaved Yoruba peoples from West and Central Africa. Once in Brazil, Candomblé and Umbanda developed further from the presence of indigenous groups and the influence of the Roman Catholic Church installed in Brazil by Portuguese colonizers. Alongside his notion of pictorial space and chromatic investigations, Valentims’ work opens up to a myriad of possibilities. His chromatic study generates a new language – a new ‘signography’ –, whose iconography is revealed both to those that are familiar and not familiar with the Afro-Brazilian religious references he uses. The semiology present in his production proposes the union of the sacred and the Cartesian, conjuring spiritual concerns almost mathematically.
In order to pictorially represent his cultural connection as an Afro-Brazilian descendent, Valentim sought for an artistic language able to illustrate Brazilian cultural miscegenation. Some elements appear repeatedly in his clusters of pure and lively colours. His work bears an intrinsic meaning of rite and ceremony, merging abstract and geometric forms appropriated from constructivism.
In Emblema 84, Valentim included, for instance, a trident-like structure that, at first glance, is reference to the ferramenta (sacred tool) of Exú, a Candomblé deity known for his role as a messenger between humans and the divine. This same logic applies to the symbol of the crescent moon, the representation of Iemanjá, the goddess of water and fertility. These figures, however, are often not unique in their compositional structures; they have been reimagined from the more traditional iconographies of Candomblé, and morphed into new icons.