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MIGUEL ANGEL CAMPANO.


In the late '60s and early '70s, a group of young figurative painters figurative painters
about figurative drawings and paintings
There has been a noticeable gap between figurative art and art loving people for a long time. As time passes by we encounter larger amounts of artistic information, emergence of new styles and drawings.
 living in Madrid--Guillermo Perez Villalta, Manolo Quejido, Carlos Alcolea, and Rafael Perez Minguez, among others--emerged as a generation of artists who freely mixed intellectual gamesmanship games·man·ship  
n.
1. The art or practice of using tactical maneuvers to further one's aims or better one's position:
 and art-historical references with veiled autobiographical allusions and an often strong psychoanalytic component. Although they enjoyed much critical support, they are, thirty years later, something of a "lost generation." Perhaps because their work was so conceptual and laden with personal references, it had little influence on the artists of the '80s, though there are some affinities (for example, the use of autobiographical elements and an interest in psychoanalysis).

Born in 1948, Miguel Angel Campano is one of the younger members of that lost generation. His work makes constant reference to the history of painting and contains a strong, if cryptic, autobiographical component. However, his influences are not those of a Pop artist. A great admirer of the American Abstract Expressionists, Campano has often explored the tension between figuration fig·u·ra·tion  
n.
1. The act of forming something into a particular shape.

2. A shape, form, or outline.

3. The act of representing with figures.

4. A figurative representation.

5.
 and abstraction. In the early '80s, he painted a series entitled "Vocales," inspired by a Rimband poem, in which clear references to AbEx emerge.

Later in the '80s, Campano moved away from abstraction and took up the legacies of Cezanne, Poussin, and Delacroix, with several series of landscapes painted "after" the masters. As the decade drew to a close, however, Campano began increasingly to purge the figure from his work, a progression most clearly manifested, perhaps, in the series "Ruth y Booz," 1989-93. The last cycle of the series, painted in '92 and '93, comprises mostly paintings with black fields on white grounds. Simple yet intense, these works, with their expansive black-and-white surfaces, are arguably ar·gu·a·ble  
adj.
1. Open to argument: an arguable question, still unresolved.

2. That can be argued plausibly; defensible in argument: three arguable points of law.
 his best to date. With Franz Kline Noun 1. Franz Kline - United States abstract expressionist painter (1910-1962)
Franz Joseph Kline, Kline
 now as his historical model, Campano created a series that synthesizes in exemplary fashion his interest in formal construction and his desire for self-expression.

The recent exhibition mounted by the Reina Sofia Reina Sofia (Queen Sophia) can refer to:
  • Queen Sofía of Spain
or several buildings and places named after her:
  • Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía
  • Tenerife South Airport (Reina Sofía)
 at the Palacio de Velazquez presented sixty-five paintings realized between 1991 and 1998. The show reveals the extent to which his recent work is a variation on those "black paintings," although he never again reaches the same level of intensity, and his explorations of the earlier series at times feel mannered man·nered  
adj.
1. Having manners of a specific kind: ill-mannered children.

2.
a. Having or showing a certain manner: a mild-mannered supervisor.
.

Campano also showed Elias (d'apres Daniel Buren Daniel Buren (born March 25, 1938 in Boulogne-Billancourt) is a French conceptual artist.

In 1986 he created a 3,000 m² sculpture in the great courtyard of the Palais Royal, in Paris: "Les Deux Plateaux", more commonly referred to as the "Colonnes de Buren
), 1996-99, an installation on which he has been working for four years. A painting-based construction made up of 3,003 small oils on canvas, the montage montage (mŏntäzh`, Fr. môNtäzh`), the art and technique of motion-picture editing in which contrasting shots or sequences are used to effect emotional or intellectual responses.  climbs over the walls and doors of the space, thematizing ascension through painting--and its dangers. Twenty-five years after his beginnings, Miguel Angel Campano continues to be an artist interested in the influence of painting (its practice and knowledge) on personal life.

--Pablo Llorca

Translated from Spanish by Vincent Martin.
COPYRIGHT 1999 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:painting, Palacio de Velazquez, Madrid, Spain
Author:Llorca, Pablo
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:4EUSP
Date:Nov 1, 1999
Words:453
Previous Article:PAULA REGO.(painting, Fundacao Calouste Gulbenkian)
Next Article:JEAN-MICHEL BASQUIAT.(paintings, Fondazione Bevilacqua La Masa/Museo Revoltella, Trieste, Italy)
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