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Contemporary

Mexico City’s Moment

By: Edward M. Gomez

February 2007

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Informed by overlapping layers of history—ancient civilizations, Spanish conquest and the

Casa Lamm Cultural Center,
in the Colonia Roma Norte district.

shaping of a modern nation—Mexico City has long been an important cultural center for Latin America. Now, building on the strengths of world-class arts institutions and the allure of its unique history and setting, the Mexican capital is staking its claim as an international cultural center, too. For art collectors, it offers opportunities for unexpected discoveries set against a backdrop of richly blended indigenous, European and North American styles.

With a population of more than 20 million, the capital is a high-altitude megalopolis whose central zones were developed based on principles of European urbanism. Visitors tend to focus on these districts, where hotels, museums, markets and historic sites are concentrated. Among them are the Centro Histórico, or downtown historic center, which was built on the ruins of an Aztec city; the Zona Rosa; Colonia Roma; Colonia Condesa; and Colonia Polanco.

Most galleries are located in the latter three neighborhoods, and several important museums are situated in Chapultepec Park, just south of Polanco. They include the Museo de Arte Moderno (Museum of Modern Art), a repository of Mexican modernism (with works by Frida Kahlo, David Alfaro Siqueiros, Diego Rivera, Carlos Mérida and Francisco Toledo) and the internationally oriented Rufino Tamayo Museum. Also in the park is the renowned National Museum of Anthropology, whose vast collections document the rise and fall of the Mayans, the Olmecs and the Aztecs.

To gain a chronological sense of the scope and diversity of Mexico’s visual arts history, start with a visit to the anthropology museum to see such treasures as an Aztec carved-stone calendar; the Olmecs’ giant, stone heads from the jungles of Tabasco and Veracruz; and Mayan face masks made of jade. Before visiting the modern art museum right across the avenue that bisects the park, head north to Polanco for lunch at master chef Patricia Quintana’s Izote restaurant on Presidente Masaryk, the chic district’s main thoroughfare.

Quintana, a famed creator of nueva cocina Mexicana (new Mexican cuisine), literally wrote the book (Mulli: the Book of Moles) on one of Mexico’s exquisite national dishes: mole (pronounced “MO-leh”). The curry sauce of Mexico, mole is made with peppers, nuts, spices and a dash of unsweetened chocolate, and is normally served on chicken. Quintana offers a duck version, as well as tamales filled with huitlacoche, Mexico’s own black-corn truffle.

In Polanco, Praxis Arte Internacional showcases the work of young Mexican artists, like Hugo Lugo’s witty paintings of men in business suits wrestling with giant Life Savers and photographer Graciela Fuentes’ hallucinatory images of rivers. “Some of the most interesting work is being made by artists like these from beyond the capital region,” says Praxis director Alfredo Ginocchio.

Nearby, dealer Ubaldo Kramer’s KBK Arte Contemporáneo, a gallery in one of Mexico City’s classically modernist buildings, shows the work of Mexicans and other Latin Americans. Kramer’s artists include fellow Argentine Esteban Pastorino Diaz, who makes mysterious, black-and-white photographs of Art Deco-era buildings in Argentina’s provinces, and Guatemalan Darío Escobar, whose baseball bats sheathed in ornately decorated silver evoke the over-the-top style of the Spanish-colonial baroque.

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Alvaro Barrios: Dreams About Marcel Duchamp

The exhibition DREAMS ABOUT MARCEL DUCHAMP, comprises fourteen large-scale paintings and five works on paper dealing with Barrios’ fascination with Duchamp. Alvaro Barrios is known for his heterogeneous compositions, much influenced by Surrealism, Pop art and Conceptual art. In assimilating and adapting the lessons of these Twentieth Century art movements in his own personal and innovative manner, the artist creates a unique aesthetic style, which manifests in the realm of fantasy. Barrios draws upon the comic book popular culture theme by outlining his cartoon-like figures with bold black outlines, including text in his compositions and employing flat vivid colors. Appropriating imagery that illustrates the influence of Marcel Duchamp, Barrios creates an ambitious mélange that results in playful and original art. In the painting This Work is Already a Part of My Life, 2008 (59 x 59 in), the artist presents a scene in a movie theater, where the comic strip character Clark Kent watches a motion picture next to his love interest Lois Lane. “Clark, don’t you think your passion for Marcel Duchamp is going too far?” asks Lane. Kent, who preciously holds in his lap a replica of Duchamp’s famous porcelain readymade urinal titled Fountain (1917), responds, “this work is already a part of my life, Lois! I’ll always be with it!” Constant references to the French artist in Barrios’s work are used as “a pretext to talk about my distance from the conventional, and everything that signifies conservative positions in art and life, which ultimately, is what Duchamp’s myth represents,” explains the artist. Thus, in employing fiction characters and distinctive pieces and personalities of modern art in an unconventional context, Barrios challenges the imagination and the conscience of the spectator. It is the paradoxical subject matter and creative adaptation of his compositions that gives his work a humorous, yet clever and mysterious quality. Born in Cartagena, Colombia in 1945, Barrios attended the School of Fine Arts of the Universidad del Atlantico in Barranquilla, Colombia. He later studied in Italy at the Università di Perugia and in la Fondazione Giorgio Cini di Venezia, f. Since the 1970s, Barrios has been representing his country at the Sao Paulo Biennials as well as The Tokyo Print Biennial, The Paris Young Artists Biennial, The Havana Biennial, The Cracovia Print Biennial, The Buenos Aires Triennial and The Poligraphic Triennial of San Juan, among others. In 2001 he received a prize as the best Latin American Artist at the Buenos Aires Triennial. His work is represented in major international collections like The Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Brooklyn Museum, The Art Gallery of Western Australia in Perth and The Museum of Latin American Art in Washington. He has been included in numerous exhibitions such as “MOMA at El Museo: Latin American & Caribbean Art from the collection of The Museum of Modern Art” at Museo del Barrio in 2004 and in 2007, he was part of “New Perspectives in Latin American Art, 1930-2006: Selections from a Decade of Acquisitions” at the MOMA. In February 2008, he was invited to give a lecture on his texts “Dreams About Marcel Duchamp” at The Museum of Modern Art’s Celeste Barthos Theater, in New York. To accompany the exhibition, a Popular Print by Barrios will appear in the November 19th Edition of the Village Voice, as well as in its website. The artist will sign and number the prints on Saturday November 22nd from 10 a.m. to 12 p.m. They can also be sent to the gallery until December 30th for signing. ... more...

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