Neo-Surrealism & Magic Realism: A Conversation: San Antonio

Feb 15, 2022 to May 7, 2022
  • Neo-Surrealism & Magic Realism

  • Neo-Surrealism & Magic Realism includes dreamlike and figurative works that reference and react to the current political and ecological context; fantastical visions, mythology, and magical thinking influence the genres. Featured artists include: Juan Alcazar, RF Alvarez, Bruno Andrade, Victor Chaca, Juan de Dios Mora, Pedro Friedeberg, Luis Gal, Irma Guerrero, Roger Von Gunten, Rodolfo Morales, Katie Pell, Gugger Petter, Jose Luis Rivera-Barrera, Shinzaburo Takeda, Leticia Tarrago, Patssi Valdez, and Bettie Ward.

  • Neo-Surrealism, defined as a revival of the Surrealism literary and artistic genre, seeks to emulate the complex and often irrational...
    Katie Pell
    Waiting for You, 2018
    Pastel and charcoal on paper in mirrored plexiglass frame
    58 x 46 x 1 in
    147.3 x 116.8 x 2.5 cm

    Neo-Surrealism, defined as a revival of the Surrealism literary and artistic genre, seeks to emulate the complex and often irrational visions of the unconscious mind. As seen in Katie Pell’s dreamlike Waiting for You, in witty René Magritte fashion, Pell channels the sky and connects with surrealist themes of liminality. Pell described her work with "Some of us build our own mythology out of our environment, our desires, and our own furious defiance at our genetic mediocrity. I hope my work can ignite or describe the excitement of our pointless and forgettable lives, and reaffirm the value of our gorgeous desperation.”

  • In Homenaje a Sigmund Freud, Friedeberg honors Freud’s psychoanalysis theory, a source of great inspiration for Surrealists. Combining the old,...
    Pedro Friedeberg
    Homenaje a Sigmund Freud, 2021
    Signed on underside
    Carved, painted, gilt wood, and found object
    9 x 11.3 x 4 in
    22.8 x 28.5 x 10 cm

    In Homenaje a Sigmund Freud, Friedeberg honors Freud’s psychoanalysis theory, a source of great inspiration for Surrealists. Combining the old, the new, and the strange, Friedeberg composes a gilded wooden rocking horse and a red and blue bust of Freud nestled inside a wooden frame with feet.  In traditional Surrealist fashion, Friedeberg states, “Who knows what one does or why? I think of my work as a pastiche. There’s a little bit of everything I like in there.”

  • Gugger Petter is a Danish artist who has achieved international recognition for her innovative portraiture and scenes of everyday life....
    Gugger Petter
    The Mirror #3, 2005
    Signed, titled and dated on reverse
    Newspaper, hemp, acrylic, and varnish
    61 x 52 in
    154.9 x 132.1 cm

    Gugger Petter is a Danish artist who has achieved international recognition for her innovative portraiture and scenes of everyday life. “For the past twenty-five years, I have worked with newspapers as my main medium, creating both two and three-dimensional works with this material. My fascination with newspaper consists not only of it being ‘the diary of our lives,’ it also presents me with a black, white, and limited color palette, which has always been my choice. My work is most often based on an oversized image of an observation of daily life, which can be seen as an abstraction as well as a representational image, where surface, subject matter, color and content all convey tension between opposites.”

  • Luis Gal was born and raised in Mexico City, and received his artistic training in France. The artist learned the...
    Luis Gal
    Como Nostalgia, 2018
    Signed lower right
    Cold encaustic on canvas
    27.8 x 51.5 in
    70.5 x 130.8 cm

    Luis Gal was born and raised in Mexico City, and received his artistic training in France. The artist learned the painting technique of encaustic during his time in France. This very old technique uses cold wax mixed with pigment, and was popularized in the Renaissance. His colors translate the essence of things, the landscapes and the beings he loves, while at the same time attesting to his emotions,an exercise in artfully disguised melancholy. His paintings are quiet, slow, deliberate and poetic.

     

    "Gal takes us on a journey through a new side of Mexico with the soft and dreamlike environments that he creates.The artist occupies himself with a subject matter that is at the same time alive and vulnerable; he celebrates forms but he also records the corrosive passage of the hours. ” – Juan Villoro

  • Using a surrealistic approach, Juan de Dios Mora addresses the varied economic, social, and cultural issues of life on the...
    Juan de Dios Mora
    Partido en Dos (Torn in Half), 2009
    Linocut and woodcut
    15 x 16 in
    38.1 x 40.6 cm
    Edition of 15

    Using a surrealistic approach, Juan de Dios Mora addresses the varied economic, social, and cultural issues of life on the border. In a world of their own, the characters interact with customized devices and vehicles that are created to facilitate the daily life, duties, responsibilities, obligations, and entertaining events of the operators. Though ramshackle, decked out, or shabby in appearance, the structure of each device shows the ingenuity and capability of the characters and their will to survive. “Above all, the devices symbolize the freedom, hope, and style of the crafty owners, which will last forever.” – Juan de Dios Mora

  • Rodolfo Morales is best known for vividly colored, dreamlike images that portray everyday peasant life. He is celebrated as a...
    Rodolfo Morales
    Sueños, 1999
    Signed and dated lower right, numbered lower left
    Lithograph
    30.5 x 23.5 in
    77.5 x 59.7 cm
    PT 1 of 10

    Rodolfo Morales is best known for vividly colored, dreamlike images that portray everyday peasant life. He is celebrated as a prolific painter of Mexican village life who merged aspects of surrealism with magic realism. The artist stated, "Nostalgia and melancholy are very important to me.” He often said he derived great satisfaction from watching others find something of themselves in his mystical settings. Until his death, he was considered one of the greatest living Mexican artists.

  • 'One of Mexico’s premiere modern artists, Tarragó infuses her work with a sense of magical realism, that colorful space between...
    Leticia Tarrago
    Mundo de Juguetes, 1998
    Signed and dated (lower right)
    Oil on linen
    35.5 x 47.3 in
    90.2 x 120 cm

    "One of Mexico’s premiere modern artists, Tarragó infuses her work with a sense of magical realism, that colorful space between dream and reality where even the ordinary become holy...Tarragó is clearly bound to her local roots, with the bright, almost outlandish colors...reflecting both Mexican religious folk art and the inescapable influence of the likes of Mexican modern art giants Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera. Hers is not just visual art, but art for all the senses. You can almost taste it. This enormously expansive quality makes Tarragó less a painter than a poet who has found her comfort in the visual world." - Stephanie Saldaña

  • Through fantastical multicultural themes, Juan Alcazar explores all kinds of diversity in his work. From Greek Mythology to Mythological beasts...
    Juan Alcazar
    La Cama Azul, 2001
    Signed and dated lower right, numbered lower left
    Lithograph
    26.5 x 20 in
    67.3 x 50.8 cm
    Edition of 50

    Through fantastical multicultural themes, Juan Alcazar explores all kinds of diversity in his work. From Greek Mythology to Mythological beasts of Mesoamerica like the Nahuatl, a shapeshifting wizard who can take various forms, Alcazar is interested in touching the viewer by creating artistic experiences that have hearts, souls, and tell stories beyond readymade myths. 

  • A part of the movement known as Generacion de la Ruptura (Breakaway Generation), Roger Von Gunten was one of the...
    Roger Von Gunten
    Mar de Cortez, 2005
    Signed lower right
    Acrylic on paper
    23.8 x 41.5 in
    60.5 x 105.4 cm

    A part of the movement known as Generacion de la Ruptura (Breakaway Generation), Roger Von Gunten was one of the many of his time to breakaway from Mexican muralism. Leaving behind social expression and introducing a more personal form of abstract expressionism, Von Gunten evokes whimsical and moody colors that dabble in everyday emotions and engage with spirituality and surrealist expressions. 

  • Magic realism combines real world narratives with magical and fantastical elements as seen in Irma Guerrero’s painting Viento y Agua...
    Irma Guerrero
    Viento y Agua (Wind and Water), 2004
    Signed lower right
    Oil and mixed media on canvas
    35.5 x 27.5 in
    90.2 x 69.8 cm

    Magic realism combines real world narratives with magical and fantastical elements as seen in Irma Guerrero’s painting Viento y Agua (Wind and Water), where Guerrero uses nature as a symbol for beauty and balance. Guerrero reveals a personal moment between hummingbirds that reflects the whimsical world that exists all around us. Wind and water play a valuable role as they create mysticism of alchemical proportions, and create magic within the canvas.

  • Patssi Valdez's paintings and graphics are brightly colored and often emotive with a sense of magical realism woven in. In...
    Patssi Valdez
    Cactus Queen, 1992
    Signed and dated lower right, numbered lower left
    Stone lithograph on Arches Paper
    30 x 22 in
    76.2 x 55.9 cm
    Edition 88 of 100

    Patssi Valdez's paintings and graphics are brightly colored and often emotive with a sense of magical realism woven in. In Cactus Queen, Valdez captures an indigenous woman dressed in an ornate red gown and cactus crown standing in a desert landscape framed by saguaros, prickly pear cactus pads, and the night sky. The illusion of a frame creates a sense of theatricality and pageantry, in which this empowered woman reigns supreme. A Chicano art icon, Valdez has been internationally recognized for her pioneering artwork that uses magic realism to reject negative representations of the Latinx community. The artist states, “Nothing in the world is static. Nothing is solid. Everything is always in flux and in motion.”

  • “My art tells stories about listening, growth, change, romances, fragmentation, transformation, natural phenomenon, sensations, sex, the earth as home, cycles,...
    Bettie Ward
    Memories Refrain: Remember laughter can change things, 2008
    Signed lower right
    Embroidery and gold leaf
    48 x 48 in
    121.9 x 121.9 cm

    “My art tells stories about listening, growth, change, romances, fragmentation, transformation, natural phenomenon, sensations, sex, the earth as home, cycles, relationships, and nature as it relates to man. My paintings are proof that I exist; they are the evidence of my personal energy. Art teaches me about the fragility of life and the benevolence and generosity of mankind. I make art in relentless pursuit of my life creating objects based upon my belief in Human possibilities." - Bettie Ward

  • Before the COVID-19 pandemic RF Alvarez' work focused on 'depictions of abstracted, anonymous figures in these Eden-like spaces: dreams of...
    RF. Alvarez
    Somewhere Else, 2021
    Signed on reverse
    Acrylic and natural earth pigment on canvas
    36 x 48 in
    91.4 x 121.9 cm

    Before the COVID-19 pandemic RF Alvarez' work focused on "depictions of abstracted, anonymous figures in these Eden-like spaces: dreams of some alternate reality where bodies are confident and comfortable, heritages are blended, nature is lush and overgrown. These depictions were allegorical – mythical even – something to strive for, or perhaps hold our own reality up for juxtaposition." Now the artist states, "I’ve moved away from allegory, turned the lens onto the room I dream in rather than the dream itself. What dreams I do paint are distant now, faded, almost coming undone the longer time passes..." Alvarez' recent work is an example of how a pandemic affects a studio practice.

  • Jose Luis Rivera-Barrera has been sculpting for the last sixty years. Using the mystical power of mesquite wood as his...
    Jose Luis Rivera-Barrera
    Pata de Caballo, 2018
    Mesquite wood
    11 x 11 x 7 in
    27.9 x 27.9 x 17.8 cm

    Jose Luis Rivera-Barrera has been sculpting for the last sixty years. Using the mystical power of mesquite wood as his primary medium, the artist reveals personal impressions of the social and political issues concerning the Chicano community and of the spiritual forces found in nature. Pata de Caballo is a sculpture of a horse's leg. Isolated and extremely polished, Rivera-Barrera studies the iconographic qualities associated with horses such as luck, labor, and beauty.

  • Described as an 'eccentric visionary,' Bruno Andrade opens a world of Matisse-like color and memory based reproductions fueled by aesthetics...
    Bruno Andrade
    Into Memory, 2009
    Signed and dated lower right
    Oil on canvas
    48 x 36 in
    121.9 x 91.4 cm

    Described as an "eccentric visionary," Bruno Andrade opens a world of Matisse-like color and memory based reproductions fueled by aesthetics and a sense of abstraction. Andrade depicts the natural world as an experience that echoes with wonder and realism. 

    • Bruno Andrade Apple of My Eye, 1999 Signed and dated lower right Oil on canvas 36 x 48 in 91.4 x 121.9 cm
      Bruno Andrade
      Apple of My Eye, 1999
      Signed and dated lower right
      Oil on canvas
      36 x 48 in
      91.4 x 121.9 cm
  • Shinzaburo Takeda observes and captures the customs and everyday practices of Mexico's indigenous peoples and translates them into his own...
    Shinzaburo Takeda
    Mujeres de Mayo, 2010
    Signed and dated lower right, numbered lower left
    Metal plate lithograph with charcoal
    17 x 23 in
    43.2 x 58.4 cm
    Edition 3 of 30

    Shinzaburo Takeda observes and captures the customs and everyday practices of Mexico's indigenous peoples and translates them into his own visual vocabulary of traditional Mexican imagery. The ​Nahual​ is one aspect of indigenous cultures and belief systems that Takeda repeatedly returns to and conjures up in his prints. With origins in ancient Zapotec and Mixtec mythologies of Southern Mexico, the ​Nahual​ acts as as spirit guardian to each individual and reveals itself in the animal-human figures that permeates Takeda’s work. The duality of the ​Nahual​ is expressed through the totem-like forms he builds, where they can appear playful or almost menacing in nature. 

    • Shinzaburo Takeda Mangos, 2004 Signed and dated lower right Oil on canvas 23.5 x 31.5 in 59.7 x 80 cm
      Shinzaburo Takeda
      Mangos, 2004
      Signed and dated lower right
      Oil on canvas
      23.5 x 31.5 in
      59.7 x 80 cm
  • Victor Chaca's work deals with the circus of life, both thematically and in pictorial terms. He comes from a family...
    Victor Chaca
    Personajes y Escaleras, 2004
    Signed and dated (lower right)
    Oil and mixed media on Canvas
    31.5 x 39.5 in
    80 x 100.3 cm

    Victor Chaca's work deals with the circus of life, both thematically and in pictorial terms. He comes from a family of carpenters and "Chaca" in fact means carpenter in Zapotec. He frequently includes imagery from that profession: chairs and ladders play a very important role. Unlike Max Beckman, the German Expressionist painter whom the artist admires, Chaca does not see the world as a tragedy of man's inhumanity to man. He sees life as a merry-go-round and carnival of human chaos.