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NUNO DE CAMPOS.


CLIFFORD SMITH GALLERY

For his first exhibition in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , Nuno de Campos Nuno de Campos (1969 in Porto, Portugal - ) is a Portuguese painter known for his luminous tempera paintings.[1] He currently lives and works in New York City. Selected exhibitions
  • 2001 Clifford-Smith Gallery, Boston, Ma.
 presented five intimately scaled tempera paintings (all titled Lap, 1999), each of which pictures the same seated woman from just above her breasts to slightly below the knees. Headless but not truncated, the model appears from panel to panel in a blue floral-print housedress house·dress  
n.
A simple washable dress worn for housework.
 from the '70s, positioned frontally on a white, padded swivel chair. Shown in various states of animation, the figure expresses an emotional content through the strong arms, work-worn hands, and subtle shifts in body torsion torsion, stress on a body when external forces tend to twist it about an axis. See strength of materials. , always with the lap as the compositional and symbolic center of focus.

The fifteen-by-fifteen-inch panels, installed above eye level, reference the icons of Campos's Roman Catholic heritage. The Portuguese artist's deliberate and painstaking egg-tempera technique also pays homage to the long tradition of religious panel painting. (He labored for three to four months on each image, painting onto gessoed linen with a tiny oo brush.) Working from a selection of five mediumformat photographs taken in his studio, Campos produced images of delicate texture and translucent color that depart entirely from the harshness of Photorealism photorealism, international art movement of the late 1960s and 70s that stressed the precise rendering of subject matter, often taken from actual photographs or painted with the aid of slides. . As the artist, a recent graduate of the School of the Museum of Fine Arts Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, chartered and incorporated (1870) after a decision by the Boston Athenaeum, Harvard, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology to pool their collections of art objects and house them in adequate public galleries. , suggests in his statement for the show, the "Lap" paintings are a hybrid of film still and religious icon.

Here, rather than the objectified passive figure one might expect to find in photo-based work, the seated model is active, speaking boldly through her gestures. In the first and least technically refined composition, she grips the chair cushion with her left hand, while resting her right forearm on her crossed leg, her powder-white hand floating gracefully above her lap. In another, she is more inviting and somewhat coquettish co·quette  
n.
A woman who makes teasing sexual or romantic overtures; a flirt.



[French, feminine of coquet, flirtatious man; see coquet.
, placing her left hand on her hip, while the right hand caresses the knee. A third panel shows her as more aggressive, clutching both thighs with determined hands, and in a fourth she is similarly defiant as she folds her arms below her breasts and squeezes her knees together. In contrast, a fifth panel shows both hands resting together, thumbs crossed, in the center of her relaxed lap. With diligent attention to detail, Campos compellingly articulates every line, wrinkle, and shadow: The curving of the fingers, the swirls of light blue veins Blue Veins is based in Peshawar, NWFP, Pakistan. It is a women's advocacy group that has dedicated itself for providing medical information to poor and rural women's of Pakistan.  (which echo the patterns and folds of the d ress), and the tiny white parallel lines on the fingernails all add to the hands' eloquence. The woman's image is both still life and sculpture.

The abilities to protect, seduce, confront, retreat, and comfort are all revealed in the various gestures of the woman s long arms and powerful hands. Campos insists that his gaze is one of artistic reverence, yet the Oedipal oed·i·pal or Oed·i·pal
adj.
Of or characteristic of the Oedipus complex.
 dimension is implicit. The model's lap is never full, nor is it waiting to be filled. Lap presents a contemporary Madonna whose empty lap has the potential for security and warmth as well as the power to speak, act, and even control.
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Author:Miller, Francine Koslow
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Feb 1, 2000
Words:495
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