Francesc Catala-Roca: Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia.Spanish culture grew lethargic after the civil war. Economic hardship, the absence of great figures such as Bunuel Garcia Lorca Gar·cí·a Lor·ca , Federico 1898-1936. Spanish poet and playwright. Considered Spain's leading modern poet for works such as Lament for the Death of a Bullfighter (1935) and Poet in New York , and Dali, among others, who were either in exile or dead, and an oppressive social environment constituted a fertile terrain for cultural mediocrity me·di·oc·ri·ty n. pl. me·di·oc·ri·ties 1. The state or quality of being mediocre. 2. Mediocre ability, achievement, or performance. 3. One that displays mediocre qualities. . That's why the fresh and energetic contribution of Francesc Catala-Roca (1922-98) was so unusual; his direct way of making images had few immediate precedents in the country's culture. He was the first of a brilliant generation of photographers that emerged in the '50s. Until recently denied any real public recognition, they are now considered one of the most important creative phenomena in recent Spanish culture. Gabriel Cuallado, Ramon Massats, Francisco Ontanon, Joan Colom, and Carlos Perez Siquier were among Catala-Roca's creative peers, and, like him, they embraced the documentary and neorealist photography of the time, evidenced as well in W. Eugene Smith's and Inge Morath's reportage on Spain in the early '50s. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Son of Pere père n. 1. Used after a man's surname to distinguish a father from a son: Dumas père primarily wrote novels, while dramas occupied Dumas fils. 2. Catala i Pic, a Catalan photographer associated with the Republicans and author of a well-known image of a peasant's shoe stepping on a swastika swastika Equilateral cross with its arms bent at right angles, all in the same rotary direction, usually clockwise. It is used widely throughout the world as a symbol of prosperity and good fortune. , Catala-Roca set up his professional studio at a very young age. While his beginnings were far from glorious--he started out doing portraits of cadavers--he soon demonstrated a facility for constructing visually pleasing images that evoked stories, somewhat in the manner of Cartier-Bresson. In 1954 he was commissioned to illustrate books by Luis Romero and Juan Antonio Cabezas on Barcelona and Madrid, respectively. While not directly related to one another, these two commissions allowed him to show his vision of these cities or, more accurately, what they provoked in a creator sensitive to their signals. This exhibition, "Barcelona-Madrid: Anos cincuenta" (Barcelona-Madrid: The '50s), explored the long-standing relationship of contrast between these two capitals. Always tempted to see itself in a French mirror, the Catalan capital is showily show·y adj. show·i·er, show·i·est 1. Making an imposing or aesthetically pleasing display; striking: showy flowers. 2. cosmopolitan and open to new ideas "New Ideas" is the debut single by Scottish New Wave/Indie Rock act The Dykeenies. It was first released as a Double A-side with "Will It Happen Tonight?" on July 17, 2006. The band also recorded a video for the track. ; its rival is a conservative, administrative city. Thus Catala-Roca's images of Barcelona (much more numerous, thanks to the photographer's direct connection with the city) reflect a sophisticated metropolis on its way to modernity, while those of Madrid place it in a postwar era characterized by poverty and backwardness. In both cases, a precise and distant eye dissects the given facts and attests to something as elusive as Spanish reality at the time. Catala-Roca does this not only by placing his camera in the busiest city streets but also by exploring others where more obscure aspects of life emerge: Barcelona's Barrio bar·ri·o n. pl. bar·ri·os 1. An urban district or quarter in a Spanish-speaking country. 2. A chiefly Spanish-speaking community or neighborhood in a U.S. city. Chino Chino (chē`nō), city (1990 pop. 59,682), San Bernardino co., S Calif.; founded 1887, inc. 1910. It is the business and processing center of a diversified farming (notably dairying) area. , for example, or the shantytowns on the hills surrounding the city. At times--and this would happen repeatedly throughout his career--Catala-Roca was tempted by a certain formalism Formalism or Russian Formalism Russian school of literary criticism that flourished from 1914 to 1928. Making use of the linguistic theories of Ferdinand de Saussure, Formalists were concerned with what technical devices make a literary text literary, apart , but he did not mix this with his documentary work; it was a separate project. It must not be forgotten, after all, that a new school of "subjective photography" had also begun to take hold in the '50s--Otto Steinert would soon have great influence on the Spanish scene--and that, through his father, the artist had had direct contact with the vanguard photography of the early decades of the century. --Pablo Llorca Translated from Spanish by Jane Brodie. |
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