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Carlos Alfonzo, United States (born Cuba), 1950-1991

Lifetime [Curso de la Vida], 1988

oil on linen
84 x 96"

Gift of Friends of Art in honor of Ira Licht's 10th Anniversary at the Lowe Art Museum, 88.0004

 

As its title indicates, Lifetime is autobiographical. Its stream-of-consciousness imagery records the artist’s thoughts, impressions, and experiences, his joys and anxieties, and the kaleidoscopic variety of his everyday life. Carlos Alfonzo came to the United States via the Mariel boat lift in 1980 and settled in Miami. Lifetime incorporates many elements from the artist’s complex, symbolic language: disembodied eyes, grinning mouths, hands, heads, and skulls; tears, drops of blood, and other body fluids; and phalluses and testicles. The latter often assume the form of the figure eight, the symbol for infinity. Other key elements are a ballerina’s legs, symbolizing artistic inspiration and grace; a spiral, representing vital forces of creation and destruction; and squares or cubes, standing for perfection and eternity. The loud colors and rhythms of Cuba and symbols from Afro-Cuban folklore and religion, such as the daggers and arrows, are also found in Lifetime and other works. The crucified Christ, the martyrs, and the images of death found in Baroque Christian iconography were also important sources for the artist.

 

Fernando Botero, Colombia, b. 1932

Las Frutas, 1964

oil on canvas
49 1/2 x 50 1/4"

Gift of Esso Inter-America, Inc., 70.024.030

 

Painted in New York City in conscious rejection of American color-field painting, which was then in favor, Las Frutas is a bloated still life that reiterates Botero’s belief in the paramount importance of volumetric, objective form. Botero takes imagery derived from the academic tradition and parodies the ideal through gross plasticity and massive scale. Here, golden, swollen fruit of heroic size pays tribute to the sensuality of shape and form. Rebuffing the post-war trend toward the deconstruction of the object, and ignoring abstraction and conceptualism, Botero prefers that viewers absorb the sheer physicality of his forms rather than struggle with their meaning. Alternately called a Surrealist and a naive realist, Botero, has created an art that resists stylistic and cultural classification.

 

José Bedia, United States (born Cuba), b. 1959

Nkunia, Gajo o Rama [twig, cutting or branch], 1995

acrylic, tempera, charcoal and collage on paper
50 x 38"

Donation from the Cuban Museum of the Americas, Gift of the Artist, 99.0009.097

 
José Bedia, a member of Miami’s Cuban-American exile community, references the Afro-Hispanic-Amerindian cultural identity of his Cuban heritage, in both personal and universal terms. He is particularly interested in the merging of African ancestral spirits with his own. He was initiated into the African Regla de Congo religion in Cuba, where he received his artistic training.
 

Arnaldo Roche-Rabell, Puerto Rico, b. 1955

Untitled, 1991

oil on canvas
78 x 78"

Museum purchase through the 2002 Director's Circle, the Linnie Dalbeck Memorial Endowment and the Lowe Acquisition Endowment, 2002.10

 
In Roche-Rabell’s color-rich compositions, a figure, usually a self-portrait, is portrayed as a protagonist, but his identity as victim or victimizer depends on one’s interpretation. Tropical leaves native to Puerto Rico, are an essential motif of the imagery, which, stresses the complexities of the relationship between the United States and its Caribbean dependency.




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