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Play your Lace

Robin Rice on Visual Art: Encantamientos/Enchantments at Painted Bride Arts Center

Published: Feb 24, 2010

Guest curator Anabelle Rodriguez-Gonzalez's inspired pairing at the Painted Bride — Rodriguez Calero and Henry Bermudez — looks gorgeous and generates a rich, thoughtful visual dialogue. Both artists are best categorized as painters, but each moves in a different direction beyond traditional painting: Calero layers in external elements, while Bermudez pointedly pierces his surfaces.

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Using a technique she calls "acrollage," Calero employs a hauntingly somber palette. Rather frontal symmetrical compositions anchor freely painted color areas and lyrical decorative counterpoint. The moody intensity of Francisco Goya, in particular, comes to mind in works like Cuerpo Y Alma (pictured); Moorish tile work and Spanish lace are suggested by the intricate flourishes Calero superimposes over almost every piece of her puzzle.

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The paintings of Venezuelan Henry Bermudez also suggest lace, but a much less delicate kind. Bermudez relates his work to tattoos: "[I find] a celebration of love in the way tribes in the Amazon and around the world use the tattoo for decoration and for ceremonies," he says. Even in contemporary Philadelphia, "I remember how impressed I have been looking at the tattoos of young people in ordinary places like Whole Foods. I think they show off cultural attitudes that have been forgotten in this society."

Three years of passionate work went into Bermudez's show, which features labor-intensive craftsmanship with a strong message behind it. The French Kiss, a primal encounter between two mythic animals with human bodies, measures 9 by 10 feet, and is composed entirely of curling tendrils painstakingly cut out and painted dimensionally. The flat blackness of The Four Sad Tigers suits a wrenching image that suggests Bermudez's concerns about our planet's obsession with environmentally unfriendly amenities like cars and air conditioning. "I don't want to be protected in the bubble of a studio," he says, "but to make people reflect and think."

(r_rice@citypaper.net)

Encantamientos/Enchantments | Through March 14, Painted Bride Arts Center, 230 Vine St., 215-925-9914, paintedbride.org

Comments

I would like to highlight the fact this is an exhibition that was curated as an independent project for Philagrafika 2010, the theme of which is "The Graphic Unconscious". There is a LOT in these artists' work that responds to this graphic undercurrent that permeates our daily lives. In the case of Rodriguez Calero she uses photographic references and "samples" fashion and hip-hop images into her work. Of course her own invention of her "acrollage" technique is precisely based on bringing together disparate textures and fragments and making coherent beautiful art with them. Bermudez also references graphic traditions through his bold use or line and through his allusions to things like tattoos and his aggressive use of positive and negative space. All in all this is a very strong show, and we're thrilled your chose to highlight it among the dozens of excellent shows that are up around town for Philagrafika 2010. Cheers! ~Anabelle Rodriguez Gonzalez, Curator
by decibelle on February 26th 2010 2:38 PM

Excellent review by Ms. Rice. I am from Venezuela and the article made me want to go see the exhibition. The pictures in the paper do not give justice to Bermudez's work. He is extraordinary. Thank you for bringing a piece of Caracas to Philadelphia.
by Concha on March 10th 2010 1:26 PM



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