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Jorge de la Vega

Jorge de la Vega (27 March 1930 – 26 August 1971) was an Argentine painter, graphic artist, draftsman, singer, and songwriter.[1]

Jorge de la Vega
Born(1930-03-27)27 March 1930
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Died26 August 1971(1971-08-26) (aged 41)
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Known forPainter, Songwriter, Author
MovementNueva Figuración
SpousePauleta de la Vega

Although de la Vega studied architecture in Buenos Aires for six years, he then became self-taught as a painter. From 1961 to 1965 he was a member of the art movement called Nueva Figuración. During his involvement in this movement, he became a member of the Otra Figuración group. In the final years of his career and life he wrote and sang popular protest songs which expressed his humorous view of the world. In addition to museums in Argentina, his works hang in the Phoenix Art Museum, the Museum of Modern Art in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and the Art Museum of the Americas at the OAS in Washington, DC.

Biography edit

Jorge de la Vega was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina on March 27, 1930. From about 1948 to 1952 he studied architecture at the Universidad de Buenos Aires before quitting to pursue his true passion: art. He began creating his first art in the mid-1940s, and during the 1950s he created both representational and abstract geometric paintings.[2] In 1961 he and three other Argentine artists created the Otra Figuración group which he worked with from 1961-1965. He traveled to Europe with this group where they were inspired to create a new form of art all their own. He later traveled to the United States on his own, and was greatly influenced by the Pop Art movement in New York City. During his time in the U.S., he also worked at Cornell University as a visiting professor/artist. Upon returning to Argentina he gave up the visual arts, and spent the last few years of his life as a popular singer/lyricist. He died in Buenos Aires on August 26, 1971.

As an artist, de la Vega may be best described in this quote by his Otra Figuración colleague, Luis Felipe Noé, after de la Vega's death (as a farewell to his close friend):

Jorge was a painter, Jorge sang, Jorge was a lyricist of the absurd and of chaos. That chaos which almost swallowed him at some point in his life. But with much sense of humor, with a great desire for health, for clean air, he overcame it; he redefined himself, through his constant method of turning things around. He started by turning painting around, showing a freedom very few have had. If one does not do what one wants in painting, where will he do it? he told me once. Then he painted a world of twisted and turned—around persons: that of the apparent consumerist society. With his eyes of artist from an underdeveloped country he looked at the most developed country and x-rayed it cruelly. He then sang that things should be turned upside down. He died when he was becoming aware that what had to be overturned was much more than painting, much more than himself: the entire society.[3]

Education edit

De la Vega began his education studying architecture at the Universidad de Buenos Aires in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He studied there from 1948-1952 before deciding to pursue art instead, as a self-taught painter. He explored many styles (including Geometric Abstraction and Realism before joining the Otra Figuración group in the early 1960s. De la Vega received a Fulbright Scholarship to teach at Cornell University in 1965 and worked there as a visiting professor and artist. [1]

Otra Figuración edit

In the 1960s, de la Vega was a member of the Otra Figuración (other figuration), also called the Nueva Figuración (new figuration), group of Argentine artists. The group was founded in 1961 as a reaction against the dominant tradition of Argentine geometric abstraction during that period [2] and consisted of four men: Jorge de la Vega, Luis Felipe Noé, Rómulo Macció, and Ernesto Diera. The artists shared many goals, the primary one being the creation of a new art which would bring back the use of human form without simply mimicking the old styles, or slipping into the decorative styles of many other Informalist abstract painters. Their use of the figure allowed them each to express individual existential anxieties in their own way.[4] Many of their artworks not only showed ideas from their personal psyches, but also their political views and general critiques of society; "the group's emblematic whale thus stands for spontaneity, creativity, and risk; in other words, all the qualities that capitalism took away from art."[2]

The artist's first group exhibition, titled "Otra Figuración", was held at the Peuser Gallery from August 23 to September 6, 1961. At this exhibition, they published a public statement which said: "We are not a movement, nor are we a group, or a school. We are simply a few painters who feel the need to incorporate the freedom of the figure into our own freedom of expression. And, because we strongly believe in that freedom, we do not wish to restrict it with any dogmatic limitations, thus enslaving ourselves to ourselves. That is why we are eschewing a prologue. There is, however, a reason for being, an artistic driving force that has stimulated us to hold this exhibition. Through there is a common root to that artistic will, it is expressed individually, so each of us will examine ourselves elsewhere, and let the exhibition speak for itself."[5]

In 1962, the artists traveled to Europe together, settling in Paris. Here they planned how they would create new forms of art and acted as creative influences to each other in their close proximity, de la Vega and Noé living together, and Diera and Macció sharing a studio.[6] Unlike other artists of the figuration movement in Latin American art at the time (like José Luis Cuevas in Mexico), Otra Figuración wanted to explore psychological rather than objective conditions when exploring the nature of humankind. They did not see themselves as simply observers of the spectacle of the world, but active participants, believing that "the only way to adventure into is by adventuring into man himself".[2]

While the group was often referred to as "Nueva Figuración" (New figuration), they did not like this name and much preferred to be called "Otra Figuración" (Other figuration). The difference may seem subtle, but they truly did not want to be mistaken for simply bringing back the old style in new artworks. Luis Felipe Noé described this best in the preface to the exhibition's catalogue, saying:

When I say otra figuración, I don't mean a reciprocated figuration. These days, men's faces are no different from the faces of their great-grandparents, yet man's image is not the same today as it was yesterday. In our time, man is not shielded by his own image; he lives in a constant existential relationship with his fellow men and with things. I think the element of relationship is essential to the idea of otra figuración. Rather that fading into nothing, things tend to blend together. I think of chaos as a virtue. Within the framework of that chaos, the figure in my work should be considered neither random nor incidental. Certainly, I believe that the human figure is worth pondering, but I am not endorsing a return to figurative.[5]

As Noé describes here, the real figures themselves have not changed but the image of them never stops doing so. The figure, as it always was, must be looked at as it never has been before, taking into account the ever-changing social, economical, and political contexts of Argentina and Latin America as a whole.

Visual art styles edit

A brief look at the different stylistic phases of de la Vega's artwork throughout his career (see below for example paintings).

Formación edit

1946-1952. "Pinto sólo cuando tengo ganas. Utilizo modelo, que me gusta dejar en libertad, para sorprenderlo en su gesto menos forzado. Creo que, en pintura, el tema es sólo un pretexto para lo que uno quiere decir. (I paint only when I want to. I use model, which I like to set free, in order to catch him in his gesture without it being forced. I believe, in painting, the subject is only a pretext for what you want to say.)" - Jorge de la Vega.[7]

This phase of de la Vega's art was his first. It consisted of portraiture and was where he (as a self-taught artist) first began exploring a possible style for himself after leaving a prospective career in architecture. The paintings in this period used muted colors and often featured close-up views of detailed human faces with obvious emotions. This is a stark contrast to his later figures; colorful beast-like creatures and satirical Pop Art images.

Geometría edit

1953-1960. "Poco a poco, estructuré la imagen de manera cada vez más geométrica hasta llegar a despojar mis obras de todo contacto con la realidad visual física, buscando encontrar nuevos modos de relaciones en el dominio de los colores, de las texturas y las formas. (Gradually, I structured the image in an increasingly geometric way to strip down my work of all contact with physical visual reality, seeking to find new modes of relations in the domain of colors, textures and forms.)" - Jorge de la Vega.[7]

These paintings are very characteristic of the Geometric Abstraction movement which was very influential on Latin American art at this time. Nothing about this phase was very political or made any kind of statement as to de la Vega's views (which he would later express more clearly in other styles).

Otra Figuración edit

1960-1962. "No fui exactamente yo quien introdujo figuras humanas en mi pintura; creo que fueron ellas mismas las que me utilizaron para inventarse; no fue una imposición involuntaria sino un encuentro natural y ahora no podría prescindir de ellas sin sentir cercenada mi voluntad expresiva. (It was not exactly me who introduced human figures in my painting, I think it was they themselves who used me to invent themselves, it was not an involuntary imposition but a natural meeting and now I could not do without them without feeling my expressive will severed.)" - Jorge de la Vega.[7]

This phase characterized the early years of de la Vega's work with Luis Felipe Noé, Rómulo Macció, and Ernesto Diera (see Otra Figuración section above). His paintings in this time were informalist and colorful, and looked somewhat like the soon to come "bestario (bestiary)" phase, only without the use of collage, assemblage, or frottage (styles incorporated in the next phase).

Bestiario edit

1963-1966. "Quiero que mis obras choquen con el espectador con la misma intensidad con que chocan todas sus partes entre sí, por pequeñas que sean. Una ficha de nácar sobre una mancha. Un número junto a una piedra. Una bestia de oropel. Una quimera de humo. (I want for my works to collide with the viewer with the same intensity with which all parts collide with one another, however small. A sheet nacre on a stain. A number beside a stone. A beast of tinsel. A chimera of smoke.)" - Jorge de la Vega.[7]

This style was characterized by the use of nontraditional techniques such as collage and assemblage to create "beastlike" figures which de la Vega called "Esquizobestias (schizobeasts)" or "Conflíctos anamórficos (anamorphic conflicts)". Anamorphic, in this case, means "something made unrecognizable by distortion, unless viewed from a particular angle", and many of these bestiarios were exactly that. De la Vega wanted the viewing of these distorted paintings to be like what one sees in a trick mirror.[2] These paintings used glued, folded, and stretched fabrics and canvases, combined with paint and small objects, sometimes used to create a frottage effect.[6] This technique allowed de la Vega to incorporate reality into his artworks, while still majorly exploring his own fantasies. He said about this style (in the catalogue of the 1963 Di Tella awards): "I want my painting to be natural, without limitations or formulas, improvised in the same way as life, growing in all places and doing whatever it wants, even if I don't want it to." His goal was never to narrate history, using these real life objects as a connection to reality, but rather to add them to his imagination.[6]

Pop edit

1966-1971. "Los cambios me movilizan. En Nueva York cambié la temática: adiós a las figuras mitológicas y búsqueda del hombre. Norteamérica es un mundo tan poderoso y artificial que por contraste el hombre adquiere relieve. (Changes move me. In New York I changed the subject: goodbye to mythological figures and man's search. North America is a powerful and artificial world which by contrast man acquires relief.)" - Jorge de la Vega.[7]

Upon moving to the United States for several years in the mid-1960s, de la Vega was greatly influenced by the Pop Art movement in New York City. In this phase, he strayed dramatically from his usual figurative style and began to attach faces from television, newspapers, magazines, advertisements, and other forms of popular media to "fluidly deformed bodies which entangled and intermeshed".[5] This phase truly showed de la Vega's sense of humor, as a comical critique of consumer society.

Singing and songwriting edit

In de la Vega's later years he became a popular singer/lyricist after giving up the visual arts. Two great examples of his work at this time of life are "Proximidad (Proximity)" and "El gusanito en persona (the little worm in person)". The editor's note preceding these works (as published in Inverted Utopias) clarifies: "This document and the preceding one are of interest not for their importance as poems, but because they illustrate one of the creative outlets chosen by Argentinean artists who, at the end of the 1960s, quit painting to circumvent the institutionalization of art. By then, the medium of painting had fallen short of their expectations, and their arguments had hit bottom."[5]

Proximidad edit

"To be close, to be near each other, to come together, to hold and embrace each other, to brush against each other, to skirt and mingle with each other, to hold tight and squeeze each other, to huddle and cuddle each other, to gather breath, to approach and be included, to pile up, wrapped and knotted together, and renew, settle, and coexist together.

Let us unite and unify, let us combine and join ourselves, and blend together, let us gather and bind and collect ourselves, let us ally and link ourselves, let us reconcile and couple, adhere amalgamate, and shuffle, let us be screwed, steeped, and inserted, intertwined, intermingled and interwoven.

My mate: my companion, consistent, inseparable, conniving, confusing, approximate, converging, juxtaposed and adjacent, bordering and inherent, inclusive, included and subsequent: imagine how much people could do if the dictionary were less imposing.

Buenos Aires, 1968

Lyrics from "Proximidad", presented during the painter's first public performance as a songwriter-singer in De la Vega expone canciones (De la Vega exhibits songs) at Galería Bonino, 1968.[5]

El gusanito en persona edit

For some time now the little worm has been squirming around not giving a damn about drawing at his feet that's slowly appearing in the grass that looks just like the little worm yet inside down.

Then one fine day he got so fed up with the enigma drawn that he started pulling at it and rolled up the lines into a ball that he used to have a simple suit woven on a loom.

When he presents himself like that, dressed as "himself" and brimming with optimism, we are obliged to ponder that the little worm "in person" is different to almost everyone in real life.

And this is what he has grasped well: A topsy-turvy world makes sense Only if you look at it all together and all at once and if you don't scatter your life: a fraction comme il faut, a fraction upside down.

Buenos Aires 1968.

Lyrics from "El gusanito en persona," included in his Olympia record Jorge de la Vega canta sus canciones, whose cover dressed the walls of Galería Bonino in its presentation (Buenos Aires, October 16–31, 1968).[5]

Selected artwork edit

(Formación phase) Retrado de su padre, 1952, óleo s/ cartón (oil on cardboard), 70 x 50 cm. César de la Vega, Bs. As.

(Geometría phase) Sin título, 1960, óleo s/ tela (oil on canvas), 100 x 100 cm. Museo de Arte Contemporáneo, Bs. As.

(Otra Figuración phase) El rescate, 1961, óleo s/ tela (oil on canvas), 195 x 129,5 cm. Marta y Ramón de la Vega, Bs. As.

(Bestiario phase) El día ilustrísimo, 1964, técnica mixta s/ tela (mixed media on canvas), 249,55 x 199,5 cm. Marta y Ramón de la Vega, Bs. As.

(Pop phase) Rompecabezas, 1969/70, acrílico s/ tela (acrylic on canvas), 100 x 100 cm, cada panel (each panel). Teresa Zavalía, Bs. As. (3 panels), Col. Jorge y Marion Helft, Bs. As. (2 panels), Marta y Ramón de la vega, Bs. As. (12 panels).

References edit

  1. ^ a b Standish, Peter. Dictionary of Twentieth Century Culture : Hispanic Culture of South America. New York: Gale Research, 1995. Print.
  2. ^ a b c d e Rasmussen, Waldo, Fatima Bercht, and Elizabeth Ferrer. Latin American Artists of the Twentieth Century. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1993. Print.
  3. ^ Glusberg, Jorge, Ernesto Deira, Rómulo Macció, Luis Felipe Noé, and Jorge De La Vega. Argentine New Figuration. Buenos Aires, Argentina: Argentine Association of Art Critics, 1986. Print.
  4. ^ Garrels, Gary. Drawing from the Modern: 1945-1975. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 2005. Print.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Ramírez, Mari Carmen, and Héctor Olea. Inverted Utopias: Avant-garde Art in Latin America. New Haven: Yale UP, 2004. Print.
  6. ^ a b c Giunta, Andrea. Avant-garde, Internationalism, and Politics: Argentine Art in the Sixties. Durham: Duke UP, 2007. Print.
  7. ^ a b c d e Pacheco, Marcelo Eduardo., and Jorge De La Vega. Jorge De La Vega: Un Artista Contemporáneo. Buenos Aires, Argentina: El Ateneo, 2003. Print.

External links edit

  • "Jorge de la Vega" ArtFacts.net

jorge, vega, march, 1930, august, 1971, argentine, painter, graphic, artist, draftsman, singer, songwriter, born, 1930, march, 1930buenos, aires, argentinadied26, august, 1971, 1971, aged, buenos, aires, argentinaknown, forpainter, songwriter, authormovementnu. Jorge de la Vega 27 March 1930 26 August 1971 was an Argentine painter graphic artist draftsman singer and songwriter 1 Jorge de la VegaBorn 1930 03 27 27 March 1930Buenos Aires ArgentinaDied26 August 1971 1971 08 26 aged 41 Buenos Aires ArgentinaKnown forPainter Songwriter AuthorMovementNueva FiguracionSpousePauleta de la Vega Although de la Vega studied architecture in Buenos Aires for six years he then became self taught as a painter From 1961 to 1965 he was a member of the art movement called Nueva Figuracion During his involvement in this movement he became a member of the Otra Figuracion group In the final years of his career and life he wrote and sang popular protest songs which expressed his humorous view of the world In addition to museums in Argentina his works hang in the Phoenix Art Museum the Museum of Modern Art in Rio de Janeiro Brazil and the Art Museum of the Americas at the OAS in Washington DC Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Education 1 2 Otra Figuracion 2 Visual art styles 2 1 Formacion 2 2 Geometria 2 3 Otra Figuracion 2 4 Bestiario 2 5 Pop 3 Singing and songwriting 3 1 Proximidad 3 2 El gusanito en persona 4 Selected artwork 5 References 6 External linksBiography editJorge de la Vega was born in Buenos Aires Argentina on March 27 1930 From about 1948 to 1952 he studied architecture at the Universidad de Buenos Aires before quitting to pursue his true passion art He began creating his first art in the mid 1940s and during the 1950s he created both representational and abstract geometric paintings 2 In 1961 he and three other Argentine artists created the Otra Figuracion group which he worked with from 1961 1965 He traveled to Europe with this group where they were inspired to create a new form of art all their own He later traveled to the United States on his own and was greatly influenced by the Pop Art movement in New York City During his time in the U S he also worked at Cornell University as a visiting professor artist Upon returning to Argentina he gave up the visual arts and spent the last few years of his life as a popular singer lyricist He died in Buenos Aires on August 26 1971 As an artist de la Vega may be best described in this quote by his Otra Figuracion colleague Luis Felipe Noe after de la Vega s death as a farewell to his close friend Jorge was a painter Jorge sang Jorge was a lyricist of the absurd and of chaos That chaos which almost swallowed him at some point in his life But with much sense of humor with a great desire for health for clean air he overcame it he redefined himself through his constant method of turning things around He started by turning painting around showing a freedom very few have had If one does not do what one wants in painting where will he do it he told me once Then he painted a world of twisted and turned around persons that of the apparent consumerist society With his eyes of artist from an underdeveloped country he looked at the most developed country and x rayed it cruelly He then sang that things should be turned upside down He died when he was becoming aware that what had to be overturned was much more than painting much more than himself the entire society 3 Education edit De la Vega began his education studying architecture at the Universidad de Buenos Aires in Buenos Aires Argentina He studied there from 1948 1952 before deciding to pursue art instead as a self taught painter He explored many styles including Geometric Abstraction and Realism before joining the Otra Figuracion group in the early 1960s De la Vega received a Fulbright Scholarship to teach at Cornell University in 1965 and worked there as a visiting professor and artist 1 Otra Figuracion edit In the 1960s de la Vega was a member of the Otra Figuracion other figuration also called the Nueva Figuracion new figuration group of Argentine artists The group was founded in 1961 as a reaction against the dominant tradition of Argentine geometric abstraction during that period 2 and consisted of four men Jorge de la Vega Luis Felipe Noe Romulo Maccio and Ernesto Diera The artists shared many goals the primary one being the creation of a new art which would bring back the use of human form without simply mimicking the old styles or slipping into the decorative styles of many other Informalist abstract painters Their use of the figure allowed them each to express individual existential anxieties in their own way 4 Many of their artworks not only showed ideas from their personal psyches but also their political views and general critiques of society the group s emblematic whale thus stands for spontaneity creativity and risk in other words all the qualities that capitalism took away from art 2 The artist s first group exhibition titled Otra Figuracion was held at the Peuser Gallery from August 23 to September 6 1961 At this exhibition they published a public statement which said We are not a movement nor are we a group or a school We are simply a few painters who feel the need to incorporate the freedom of the figure into our own freedom of expression And because we strongly believe in that freedom we do not wish to restrict it with any dogmatic limitations thus enslaving ourselves to ourselves That is why we are eschewing a prologue There is however a reason for being an artistic driving force that has stimulated us to hold this exhibition Through there is a common root to that artistic will it is expressed individually so each of us will examine ourselves elsewhere and let the exhibition speak for itself 5 In 1962 the artists traveled to Europe together settling in Paris Here they planned how they would create new forms of art and acted as creative influences to each other in their close proximity de la Vega and Noe living together and Diera and Maccio sharing a studio 6 Unlike other artists of the figuration movement in Latin American art at the time like Jose Luis Cuevas in Mexico Otra Figuracion wanted to explore psychological rather than objective conditions when exploring the nature of humankind They did not see themselves as simply observers of the spectacle of the world but active participants believing that the only way to adventure into is by adventuring into man himself 2 While the group was often referred to as Nueva Figuracion New figuration they did not like this name and much preferred to be called Otra Figuracion Other figuration The difference may seem subtle but they truly did not want to be mistaken for simply bringing back the old style in new artworks Luis Felipe Noe described this best in the preface to the exhibition s catalogue saying When I say otra figuracion I don t mean a reciprocated figuration These days men s faces are no different from the faces of their great grandparents yet man s image is not the same today as it was yesterday In our time man is not shielded by his own image he lives in a constant existential relationship with his fellow men and with things I think the element of relationship is essential to the idea of otra figuracion Rather that fading into nothing things tend to blend together I think of chaos as a virtue Within the framework of that chaos the figure in my work should be considered neither random nor incidental Certainly I believe that the human figure is worth pondering but I am not endorsing a return to figurative 5 As Noe describes here the real figures themselves have not changed but the image of them never stops doing so The figure as it always was must be looked at as it never has been before taking into account the ever changing social economical and political contexts of Argentina and Latin America as a whole Visual art styles editA brief look at the different stylistic phases of de la Vega s artwork throughout his career see below for example paintings Formacion edit 1946 1952 Pinto solo cuando tengo ganas Utilizo modelo que me gusta dejar en libertad para sorprenderlo en su gesto menos forzado Creo que en pintura el tema es solo un pretexto para lo que uno quiere decir I paint only when I want to I use model which I like to set free in order to catch him in his gesture without it being forced I believe in painting the subject is only a pretext for what you want to say Jorge de la Vega 7 This phase of de la Vega s art was his first It consisted of portraiture and was where he as a self taught artist first began exploring a possible style for himself after leaving a prospective career in architecture The paintings in this period used muted colors and often featured close up views of detailed human faces with obvious emotions This is a stark contrast to his later figures colorful beast like creatures and satirical Pop Art images Geometria edit 1953 1960 Poco a poco estructure la imagen de manera cada vez mas geometrica hasta llegar a despojar mis obras de todo contacto con la realidad visual fisica buscando encontrar nuevos modos de relaciones en el dominio de los colores de las texturas y las formas Gradually I structured the image in an increasingly geometric way to strip down my work of all contact with physical visual reality seeking to find new modes of relations in the domain of colors textures and forms Jorge de la Vega 7 These paintings are very characteristic of the Geometric Abstraction movement which was very influential on Latin American art at this time Nothing about this phase was very political or made any kind of statement as to de la Vega s views which he would later express more clearly in other styles Otra Figuracion edit 1960 1962 No fui exactamente yo quien introdujo figuras humanas en mi pintura creo que fueron ellas mismas las que me utilizaron para inventarse no fue una imposicion involuntaria sino un encuentro natural y ahora no podria prescindir de ellas sin sentir cercenada mi voluntad expresiva It was not exactly me who introduced human figures in my painting I think it was they themselves who used me to invent themselves it was not an involuntary imposition but a natural meeting and now I could not do without them without feeling my expressive will severed Jorge de la Vega 7 This phase characterized the early years of de la Vega s work with Luis Felipe Noe Romulo Maccio and Ernesto Diera see Otra Figuracion section above His paintings in this time were informalist and colorful and looked somewhat like the soon to come bestario bestiary phase only without the use of collage assemblage or frottage styles incorporated in the next phase Bestiario edit 1963 1966 Quiero que mis obras choquen con el espectador con la misma intensidad con que chocan todas sus partes entre si por pequenas que sean Una ficha de nacar sobre una mancha Un numero junto a una piedra Una bestia de oropel Una quimera de humo I want for my works to collide with the viewer with the same intensity with which all parts collide with one another however small A sheet nacre on a stain A number beside a stone A beast of tinsel A chimera of smoke Jorge de la Vega 7 This style was characterized by the use of nontraditional techniques such as collage and assemblage to create beastlike figures which de la Vega called Esquizobestias schizobeasts or Conflictos anamorficos anamorphic conflicts Anamorphic in this case means something made unrecognizable by distortion unless viewed from a particular angle and many of these bestiarios were exactly that De la Vega wanted the viewing of these distorted paintings to be like what one sees in a trick mirror 2 These paintings used glued folded and stretched fabrics and canvases combined with paint and small objects sometimes used to create a frottage effect 6 This technique allowed de la Vega to incorporate reality into his artworks while still majorly exploring his own fantasies He said about this style in the catalogue of the 1963 Di Tella awards I want my painting to be natural without limitations or formulas improvised in the same way as life growing in all places and doing whatever it wants even if I don t want it to His goal was never to narrate history using these real life objects as a connection to reality but rather to add them to his imagination 6 Pop edit 1966 1971 Los cambios me movilizan En Nueva York cambie la tematica adios a las figuras mitologicas y busqueda del hombre Norteamerica es un mundo tan poderoso y artificial que por contraste el hombre adquiere relieve Changes move me In New York I changed the subject goodbye to mythological figures and man s search North America is a powerful and artificial world which by contrast man acquires relief Jorge de la Vega 7 Upon moving to the United States for several years in the mid 1960s de la Vega was greatly influenced by the Pop Art movement in New York City In this phase he strayed dramatically from his usual figurative style and began to attach faces from television newspapers magazines advertisements and other forms of popular media to fluidly deformed bodies which entangled and intermeshed 5 This phase truly showed de la Vega s sense of humor as a comical critique of consumer society Singing and songwriting editIn de la Vega s later years he became a popular singer lyricist after giving up the visual arts Two great examples of his work at this time of life are Proximidad Proximity and El gusanito en persona the little worm in person The editor s note preceding these works as published in Inverted Utopias clarifies This document and the preceding one are of interest not for their importance as poems but because they illustrate one of the creative outlets chosen by Argentinean artists who at the end of the 1960s quit painting to circumvent the institutionalization of art By then the medium of painting had fallen short of their expectations and their arguments had hit bottom 5 Proximidad edit To be close to be near each other to come together to hold and embrace each other to brush against each other to skirt and mingle with each other to hold tight and squeeze each other to huddle and cuddle each other to gather breath to approach and be included to pile up wrapped and knotted together and renew settle and coexist together Let us unite and unify let us combine and join ourselves and blend together let us gather and bind and collect ourselves let us ally and link ourselves let us reconcile and couple adhere amalgamate and shuffle let us be screwed steeped and inserted intertwined intermingled and interwoven My mate my companion consistent inseparable conniving confusing approximate converging juxtaposed and adjacent bordering and inherent inclusive included and subsequent imagine how much people could do if the dictionary were less imposing Buenos Aires 1968Lyrics from Proximidad presented during the painter s first public performance as a songwriter singer in De la Vega expone canciones De la Vega exhibits songs at Galeria Bonino 1968 5 El gusanito en persona edit For some time now the little worm has been squirming around not giving a damn about drawing at his feet that s slowly appearing in the grass that looks just like the little worm yet inside down Then one fine day he got so fed up with the enigma drawn that he started pulling at it and rolled up the lines into a ball that he used to have a simple suit woven on a loom When he presents himself like that dressed as himself and brimming with optimism we are obliged to ponder that the little worm in person is different to almost everyone in real life And this is what he has grasped well A topsy turvy world makes sense Only if you look at it all together and all at once and if you don t scatter your life a fraction comme il faut a fraction upside down Buenos Aires 1968 Lyrics from El gusanito en persona included in his Olympia record Jorge de la Vega canta sus canciones whose cover dressed the walls of Galeria Bonino in its presentation Buenos Aires October 16 31 1968 5 Selected artwork edit Formacion phase Retrado de su padre 1952 oleo s carton oil on cardboard 70 x 50 cm Cesar de la Vega Bs As Geometria phase Sin titulo 1960 oleo s tela oil on canvas 100 x 100 cm Museo de Arte Contemporaneo Bs As Otra Figuracion phase El rescate 1961 oleo s tela oil on canvas 195 x 129 5 cm Marta y Ramon de la Vega Bs As Bestiario phase El dia ilustrisimo 1964 tecnica mixta s tela mixed media on canvas 249 55 x 199 5 cm Marta y Ramon de la Vega Bs As Pop phase Rompecabezas 1969 70 acrilico s tela acrylic on canvas 100 x 100 cm cada panel each panel Teresa Zavalia Bs As 3 panels Col Jorge y Marion Helft Bs As 2 panels Marta y Ramon de la vega Bs As 12 panels References edit a b Standish Peter Dictionary of Twentieth Century Culture Hispanic Culture of South America New York Gale Research 1995 Print a b c d e Rasmussen Waldo Fatima Bercht and Elizabeth Ferrer Latin American Artists of the Twentieth Century New York Museum of Modern Art 1993 Print Glusberg Jorge Ernesto Deira Romulo Maccio Luis Felipe Noe and Jorge De La Vega Argentine New Figuration Buenos Aires Argentina Argentine Association of Art Critics 1986 Print Garrels Gary Drawing from the Modern 1945 1975 New York Museum of Modern Art 2005 Print a b c d e f Ramirez Mari Carmen and Hector Olea Inverted Utopias Avant garde Art in Latin America New Haven Yale UP 2004 Print a b c Giunta Andrea Avant garde Internationalism and Politics Argentine Art in the Sixties Durham Duke UP 2007 Print a b c d e Pacheco Marcelo Eduardo and Jorge De La Vega Jorge De La Vega Un Artista Contemporaneo Buenos Aires Argentina El Ateneo 2003 Print External links edit Jorge de la Vega ArtFacts net Jorge de la Vega Sitio Oficial Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jorge de la Vega amp oldid 1150406849, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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