October 24, 2015 – April 1, 2016

SPACE

17666 Fitch

Irvine, CA, 92614

The monochrome as a focus in the SPACE Collection began in a spontaneous form and soon became a systematic field of research. This exhibition is about the contemporary monochrome in Latin America. The monochrome is one of the most elusive and complex art forms of modern and contemporary art. If we think about its origins or meaning, we find that the monochrome is many contradictory things. The monochrome is neither a movement nor a category; it is not an “ism” or a thing. It may be painting as object, the material surface of the work itself, the denial of perspective or narrative, or anything representational. The monochrome may be a readymade, a found object, or an environment—anything in which a single color dominates. The monochrome can be critical and unstable, especially when it dialogues critically or in tension with modernism. This exhibition is organized into four different themes: The Everyday Monochrome, The White Monochrome, The Elusive Monochrome and The Transparent Monochrome. These themes have been conceived to create context and suggest interpretations that otherwise might be illegible.  These may overlap at times, pointing to the multiplicity of content in many of the works. The unclassifiable and variable nature of the monochrome in Latin America today is borne of self-criticality and from unique Latin contexts, to exist within its own specificity and conceptual urgency.

Artists in this exhibition are Ricardo Alcaide, Alejandra Barreda, Andrés Bedoya, Emilio Chapela, Eduardo Costa, Danilo Dueñas, Magdalena Fernández, Valentina Liernur, Marco Maggi, Manuel Mérida, Gabriel de la Mora, Miguel Angel Ríos, Lester Rodríguez, Eduardo Santiere, Emilia Azcárate, Marta Chilindrón, Bruno Dubner, Rubén Ortíz-Torres, Fidel Sclavo, Renata Tassinari, Georgina Bringas, Abraham Cruzvillegas, Thomas Glassford, José Luis Landet, Jorge de León, Bernardo Ortiz, Martin Pelenur, Teresa Pereda, Pablo Rasgado, Ricardo Rendón, Santiago Reyes Villaveces, Mariela Scafati, Gabriel Sierra, Jaime Tarazona, Adán Vallecillo, Horacio Zabala.

Curated by Cecilia Fajardo-Hill

The catalogue Monochrome Undone accompanies the exhibition, with texts by Cecilia Fajardo-Hill and Carlos E. Palacios. 

Monochrome Undone

The monochrome as a focus in the Sayago & Pardon Collection began in a spontaneous form and soon became a systematic field of research. This exhibition is about the contemporary monochrome in Latin America. The monochrome is one of the most elusive and complex art forms of modern and contemporary art. If we think about its origins or meaning, we find that the monochrome is many contradictory things. The monochrome is neither a movement nor a category; it is not an “ism” or a thing. It may be painting as object, the material surface of the work itself, the denial of perspective or narrative, or anything representational. The monochrome may be a readymade, a found object, or an environment—anything in which a single color dominates. The monochrome can be critical and unstable, especially when it dialogues critically or in tension with modernism. This exhibition is organized into four different themes: The Everyday Monochrome, The White Monochrome, The Elusive Monochrome and The Transparent Monochrome. These themes have been conceived to create context and suggest interpretations that otherwise might be illegible.  These may overlap at times, pointing to the multiplicity of content in many of the works. The unclassifiable and variable nature of the monochrome in Latin America today is borne of self-criticality and from unique Latin contexts, to exist within its own specificity and conceptual urgency.

El monocromo, como enfoque de la colección Sayago & Pardon, comenzó de forma espontánea y a poco se convirtió en un campo de investigación sistemático. Esta exposición trata sobre el monocromo contemporáneo en América latina. El monocromo es una de las formas de arte más elusivas y complejas del arte moderno y contemporáneo. Si reflexionamos acerca de sus orígenes o su significado, nos encontramos con que puede albergar muchas cosas contradictorias. El monocromo no es un movimiento ni una categoría; no es un “ismo” ni una cosa. Puede ser la pintura como objeto, la superficie material de la obra, la negación de la perspectiva o de todo lo representativo o narrativo. El monocromo puede ser un readymade, un objeto encontrado, un cuadro o un ambiente: cualquier cosa definida como una superficie cromáticamente uniforme donde un solo color predomina. El monocromo puede ser crítico e inestable, especialmente cuando se dialoga críticamente o en tensión con el modernismo. Esta exposición está organizada en cuatro temas: el monocromo cotidiano, el monocromo blanco, el monocromo elusivo y el monocromo transparente. Estos temas han sido concebidos a fin de crear un contexto y sugerir interpretaciones que de otra manera podrían ser ilegibles. Éstos pueden superponerse a veces, apuntando a la multiplicidad de contenidos en muchas de las obras. La naturaleza indeterminada, inclasificable y variable del monocromo en Latinoamérica hoy en día es producto de la autocrítica y de los contextos propios, para existir dentro de su propia especificidad y urgencia conceptual.

More information: Monochrome Undone, an Abstraction in Action exhibition, SPACE, Irvine. 2015

Video:

Emilio Chapela,White Monochrome, 2012

Courtesy of the artist and Henrique Faria, New York.

“Monochrome Undone” (Exhibition view), SPACE, Irvine, California, 2015, Photo credit: SPACE Collection, Abraham Cruzvillegas, Autorretrato ciego cambiando pañales y perfeccionando el pulgar derecho para no enarbolar causas perdidas, 2013

“Monochrome Undone” (Exhibition view), SPACE, Irvine, California, 2015, Photo credit: SPACE Collection, Lester Rodríguez, Untitled, 2012

“Monochrome Undone” (Exhibition view), SPACE, Irvine, California, 2015, Photo credit: SPACE Collection, Velentina Liernur, Horacio Zabala, Gabriel de la Mora

“Monochrome Undone” (Exhibition view), SPACE, Irvine, California, 2015, Photo credit: SPACE Collection, Andres Bedoya, Sin título (Piel de oveja), 2013; Miguel Angel Ríos, Crítica post-colonial #13, 1993

“Monochrome Undone” (Exhibition view), SPACE, Irvine, California, 2015, Photo credit: SPACE Collection, Carlos Garcia, Artists pictured: Marta Chilindrón, Bruno Dabner, Fidel Sclavo, Emilia Azcárate.

“Monochrome Undone” (Exhibition view), SPACE, Irvine, California, 2015, Photo credit: SPACE Collection, Emilio Chapela, Eduardo Santiere, Lester Rodríguez

“Monochrome Undone” (Exhibition view), SPACE, Irvine, California, 2015, Photo credit: SPACE Collection, Carlos Garcia, Artists pictured: Teresa Pereda, Emilia Azcárate, Thomas Glassford, and Emilio Chapela

“Monochrome Undone” (Exhibition view), SPACE, Irvine, California, 2015, Photo credit: SPACE Collection, José Luis Landet,  Gabriel Sierra, Marila Dardot, Danilo Dueñas

“Monochrome Undone” (Exhibition view), SPACE, Irvine, California, 2015, Photo credit: SPACE Collection, Marco Maggi, Gabriel de la Mora, Magdalena Fernández, Eduardo Costa

“Monochrome Undone” (Exhibition view), SPACE, Irvine, California, 2015, Photo credit: SPACE Collection, Manuel Mérida, Cercle rouge de chine, 2011

more information: http://abstractioninaction.com/projects/monochrome-undone/

Cecilia Fajardo-Hill with Andrea Giunta, editors, Radical Women: Latin American Art, 1960-1985, Los Angeles: Hammer Museum, University of California, and Munich, London and New York: Delmonico Books – Prestel, 2017 (General Writings)