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Curro Gonzalez: Galeria Distrito CU4TRO.


The evocation EVOCATION, French law. The act by which a judge is deprived of the cognizance of a suit over which he had jurisdiction, for the purpose of conferring on other judges the power of deciding it. This is done with us by writ of certiorari.  of symbolic physical space is an essential part of the painting tradition in Seville, a Baroque city where images carry enormous weight. This highly significant use of space goes back as far as the renowned Sevillean Tenebrists of the seventeenth century and must now be expanded with the arrival of Guillermo Perez Villalta, a powerful and heterodox het·er·o·dox  
adj.
1. Not in agreement with accepted beliefs, especially in church doctrine or dogma.

2. Holding unorthodox opinions.
 Andalusian painter who recently moved to the city.

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

There might seem to be little relation between Perez Villalta and Curro Gonzalez, a Sevillean artist a generation younger who began his career at the height of the Transayanguardia movement. At that time Gonzalez was making paintings that were very synthetic in appearance, though their cluttered backgrounds provided a subtle counterpoint counterpoint, in music, the art of combining melodies each of which is independent though forming part of a homogeneous texture. The term derives from the Latin for "point against point," meaning note against note in referring to the notation of plainsong. . Since then, his way of painting has changed a great deal, tending toward a dense accumulation of figures and the portrayal of real objects and spaces imbued with meaning. These objects and spaces are never explicit, always suggestive. Furthermore--and this is fundamental--his art is founded on a belief in painting's ability to construct meaning through images.

It is this faith in the medium's ability to forge powerful and allegorical al·le·gor·i·cal   also al·le·gor·ic
adj.
Of, characteristic of, or containing allegory: an allegorical painting of Victory leading an army.
 images--indeed, in the fact that any image can be painted--that relates these paintings to those of a more seasoned artist like Perez Villalta. Indeed, the treatment of the figures and space in a surprising piece like Gonzalez's Los conocedores (The Connoisseurs; all works 2004) suggests a direct influence through a shared recourse to the Baroque, even though this painting is placed in a contemporary setting, whereas those of Perez Villalta tend to elide e·lide  
tr.v. e·lid·ed, e·lid·ing, e·lides
1.
a. To omit or slur over (a syllable, for example) in pronunciation.

b. To strike out (something written).

2.
a.
 specific reference to the present. Nonetheless, his work still tends toward more intimate concerns that often deal with the relation (or lack thereof) between artist and social context.

In a text written in 2001, Gonzalez recognized feeling socially isolated. In the present exhibition, "La herida" (The Wound), he further explores this feeling through paintings that continue to make use of his habitual Regular or customary; usual.

A habitual drunkard, for example, is an individual who regularly becomes intoxicated as opposed to a person who drinks infrequently.
 method of juxtaposing two different spaces on a single visual plane. In Why Not? he depicts a shop window full of dolls and other old objects, evoking the ominous and oppressive weight of the past and memory. In that same piece, it is possible to see a reflection in the window of the urban and social space behind the hypothetical painter. Other times, he alludes to the past or the persistence of its traces by making use of a single spatial plane. Such is the case in Atractor (Attractor) and Chatarra (Scrap Metal), with its allegory allegory, in literature, symbolic story that serves as a disguised representation for meanings other than those indicated on the surface. The characters in an allegory often have no individual personality, but are embodiments of moral qualities and other abstractions.  of reality and the art depicted. A theme that hangs over the exhibition is probably most clearly and directly represented in Coda, a painting where a female musician plays a cello cello or 'cello: see violin.
cello
 or violoncello

Bowed, stringed instrument, the bass member of the violin family. Its full name means “little violone”—i.e., “little big viol.
, oblivious to her grotesque, even apocalyptic surroundings.

Translated from Spanish by Jane Brodie.
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Article Details
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Author:Llorca, Pablo
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:4EUSP
Date:Apr 1, 2005
Words:464
Previous Article:"Vino Ramona": Galeria Alberto Sendros.
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