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León Ferrari, Gego, Liliana Porter, and Jesús Rafael Soto

Man (To Be Embroidered), 1968. Liliana Porter (Argentinian, b. 1941). Etching, aquatint, and soft-ground etching with yarn embroidery on wove paper; sheet: 77 x 57.7 cm. The Cleveland Museum of Art, Jo Hershey Selden Fund, 2019.173. © Liliana Porter

A Graphic Revolution: Prints and Drawings in Latin America 

Sat, 03/14/2020 to Sun, 08/02/2020

James and Hanna Bartlett Prints and Drawings Gallery | Gallery 101
 

This exhibition is the first to highlight the museum’s collection of works on paper produced in Latin America over the past century. Representing a wide range of countries, including Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Cuba, and Mexico, the works survey how artists have explored national and cultural identity during periods of political upheaval and dramatic social change. In particular, prints and drawings provided artists such as Roberto Matta, José Clemente Orozco, Jesús Rafael Soto, and Rufino Tamayo with a means of self-expression well suited for formal experimentation and reaching the broadest possible audience. 

A Graphic Revolution begins with the realist style of Mexican muralists such as David Alfaro Siqueiros and Diego Rivera. Artists in their generation and in the ones that followed used the themes of people, politics, and abstraction to express the complexity of Latin American identity. Featuring approximately 50 works from the museum’s collection, the exhibition also highlights several important recent acquisitions by modern and contemporary Latin American artists, including León Ferrari, Gego, Wifredo Lam, and Liliana Porter.

Presenting Sponsors


Linda and Jack Lissauer        

The Print Club of Cleveland

 

Additional news articles: 

Latin Post - 7 Must-See Latino Exhibitions You Can Visit This 2020