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Madí

Madí (or MADI; also known as Grupo Madí or Arte Madí) is an international abstract (or concrete) art movement initiated in Buenos Aires in 1946 by the Hungarian-Argentinian artist and poet Gyula Kosice, and the Uruguayans Carmelo Arden Quin and Rhod Rothfuss.[1][2][3]

The movement focuses on creating concrete art (i.e., non-representational geometric abstraction) and encompasses all branches of art (the plastic and pictorial arts, music, literature, theater, architecture, dance, etc.). The artists in the Madí movement consider the concrete, physical reality of the art medium and play with the traditional conventions of Western art (for instance, by creating works on irregularly-shaped canvases).[4] Artwork of Madí movement appeared in eight issues of its magazine, Arte Madí Universal, published between 1947 and 1954.

Historical Context edit

The Grupo Madí was one of two prominent groups of artists pursuing abstract art in Argentina. The other was Arte Concreto-Invencíon, or AACI, founded in 1945.[5] The Madí art movement formed as a reaction to the AACI, whose art was perceived by the Madí group as being too strict in their method of creating concrete art, resulting in a lack of expression in their artworks.

Operating under the rule of Colonel Perón, whose time in power was characterized by a volatile political climate, the Madí artists used their art to make statements with social and political implications. One of the most overt criticisms made by the Madí movement criticized cultural authorities in the Arte Madí Universal magazine, commenting "[t]he last submission to the Venice Biennial has signified for Argentina a blunt negation of the new [artistic] values. We invite competent authorities to stop and compare the true current of contemporary plastic arts with the submissions that today put us [our country] half a century behind", which vaguely attack the aesthetic choices of certain cultural officers under Perón. According to Pérez-Barreiro, Madí and Concrete art (referring to the Asociación Arte Concreto-Invención (AACI)) are the artistic parallel(s) of the political phenomenon of Peronism. These artists were also seen as combining modern art with Communist ideology. Some scholars, including Barreiro, saw the government was an outspoken critic against concrete art as a whole, whereas others such as Andrea Giunta assert that the Madí and Concrete groups were not victimized under Perón's regime; rather, they "coexisted on its margins".[6]

The political regime of Perón made use of both linguistic and visual images for propaganda purposes. This is seen in his use of an image, "the shirtless workers" (los descamisados), as an alternative to the concept of the working class. This image had strong connections and connotations with the male worker, shirtless and, unrealistically, without much affliction. In a speech given 17 October 1946 at Plaza de Mayo, Perón addressed the workers in speeches as "mis queridos descamisados" (my loving shirtless workers). At this speech, he declared 17 October the "Day of the Shirtless Workers" and stated "I don’t want to govern over men but over their hearts, because mine beats in unison with the heart of each shirtless worker, which I interpret and love above all things". The use of representations to create propaganda opened up a clear target for the Madí artists to oppose.

Origin of the name edit

Gyula Kosice, who also operated under the pseudonym Raymundo Rasas Pèt, has explained that the name for the movement is derived from the Republican motto in the Spanish Civil War, "Madrí, Madrí, no pasarán" ("Madrid, Madrid, they will not make it in", i.e., the Francoist forces will not invade Madrid).[7] The name is most typically understood as an acronym for Movimiento, Abstracción, Dimensión, Invención (Movement, Abstraction, Dimension, Invention).[8][6] It could be an acronym for Movimento de Arte De Invención (because the group was against static arts) or Marxisme/Matérialisme Dialectique, but it could also be a nonsense word.[9]

Characteristics edit

A Madí work is non-figurative and non-representational; it has a cut-out or irregularly-shaped form, which takes away the viewer's perception of spatial depth that a rectangular frame provides; its colors are flat and sharply defined; it is often three-dimensional and sometimes articulated and/or mechanical; and it is playful in spirit. Madí artists were concerned with creating artworks that were autonomous with functions that naturally transcend the physical features that constitute the work. Introducing elements of transformation and ambiguity were techniques commonly employed by these artists to avoid representation as well as avoid the fixity of representations. In painted works, some artists would intentionally lower the legibility of the design.

The incorporation of unusual materials into artworks is seen throughout the art movement movement; this includes Plexiglas, fluorescent tubes, neon lights, water, metal, and other materials. An example of this is seen in Kosice's first hydraulic piece, La arquitectura del agua: Hidro-escultura (The Architecture of Water: Hydro-Sculpture), which utilized light and water interaction.

Madí artists sought to combat representational forms because this art reflected and perpetuated class-based social organizations. They believed that representational images "forced others to relate to concepts, connotations, and feelings which were superfluous to the object itself... which enticed individuals into supporting class-based organizations". The Concrete art they produced was meant to have a reality that was self-contained. In other words, the reality of the art ended in the object. In the minds of the Madí artists, "Concrete art was worthy as a contribution to social liberation" because it helped its audience grasp true reality while standing against the concepts, connotations and feelings associated with art. To state this differently, exposing people to what is actually reality allows people to eventually confront myths perpetuated by the bourgeois that has suppressed revolution.[6]

Madí is perhaps the sole remaining art movement which can boast of a half-century of uninterrupted activity since its creation in Buenos Aires in 1946. Today, the MADI movement has over 60 members – painters, sculptors, architects and poets – working in France, Italy, Belgium, Spain, Hungary, Japan, Argentina and the United States. One prominent figure behind this fifty years of artistic creation is Carmelo Arden Quin.

The Madí Manifesto edit

The Madí Manifesto was created to defend the importance of invention in the light of limitations imposed on concrete art by the excessive rationalism of European concrete art. This strictness of form in concrete art was also demonstrated by the Asociación Arte Concreto-Invención (AACI). The manifesto also called for "the integration of the nonorthogonal framework into representational space".[10]

Madí Dictionary edit

In written works, artists "disrupted the construction of semantically coherent structures" to avoid attaching meaning to the art and the possibility of representation. The Madí created a dictionary that accomplished the opposite of what a normal dictionary does in that it confused and distorted the meanings of words and made up words. The following excerpt is from the Madí dictionary, which demonstrates a correct grammatical structure that relates ideas that are impossible to interpret meaningfully.[6] This is an example of this incoherent construction which prevents interpretation:

M

Maclode: Upward hill. / Slope to insinuate land.

Meril: Kidnapping of flat centimeters. / Madícional ['Madí-like' or 'of Madí origin'] opposition and resistance.

Miogue: Account of events in which the authors of great answers participated.

Molois: Site where the most varied adjectives are collected. / Fam. Insult.

Musver: About the manner to focus in photography the liveliest glare of a childhood memory. / Fixation.

Macichud: Line of shade that emits a loosening of gray beams.

N

Nandy: Arrangement for new personal cuño.

Nem-Er: Record of instances.

Nigs: Opening that is left so that a cluster of enchanted powder emigrates.

Novoh: Shooter that the riverside authority exercises to learn the coastal ruling

Selected Artists and Artworks edit

Representatives of the Madí movement, in addition to Kosice, Quin and Rothfuss, include Martín Blaszko, Volf Roitman, Waldo Longo, Juan Bay, Esteban Eitler, Diyi Laañ, Valdo Wellington, and Ladislao Pablo Győri, among others.

Gyula Kosice[10] edit

  • Röyi, 1944
  • Lámpara, 1961
  • Ciudad hidroespacial, 2005
  • Sobre Relieve, 1950
  • Pintura Madi, 1948
  • Hidroluz (Lampara de pie), ca. 1975
  • Coplanal, 1947
  • Parabolica, 1960
  • Gota de agua, 1960
  • Revolving water, 1964
  • Hidroluz [Hydrolight], 1975

Rhod Ruthfuss[10] edit

  • 3 circulos rojos, 1948

Diyi Laañ[6] edit

  • "La batalla de Inod", (short story) 1947
  • Tiagno, (play script) 1947

Others edit

  • Tomás Maldonado, Composition, 1951
  • Lidy Prati, Concrete Painting 2-B, 1948

Exhibitions[10] edit

  • Aug. 1946 – Instituto Francés de Estudios Superiores in Buenos Aires, where the MADI manifesto was read
  • Oct. 1945 – Concret invencion (French) Location: House of Dr. Enrique Pichon-Riveiere (leader of Psychoanalytic Societry of Argentina)
  • Dec. 1945 – El movimiento de arte concreto-invencion, a multimedia event which became the hallmark of Madí exhibitions. Location: House of Bauhaus- trained photographer Grete Stern
  • 1947 – Galerías Pacífico, Buenos Aires
  • 1948 – Salon des Réalités Nouvelles in Paris
  • 1958 – Art Madí International at the Galerie Denise René
  • 1996 - Madí Internacional: 50 Años Después, Centra de Exposiciones y Congresos, Saragossa
  • 2010 – Outside the Box: Eleven International MADI Artists, Polk Museum of Art, Florida

Why MADI? edit

To the question, "Why MADI?" Josee Lapeyrere, who met Arden Quin in 1962 and has since participated with her poem-objects in most of the events organized by the movement, replies: "MADI's goal is to be rigorous, inventive, gay and ludic."[11] By the importance to which they accord spiritual and imaginative games, even the most serious MADI artists can be described as playful. Already in 1795, Schiller focused on "the inborn playful nature of man" as an explanation for his production of art forms. In his essay, "Homo Ludens" ("Ludic Man") (1938), Johan Huizinga observed that, "Play reveals an aspiration to beauty. The terms we use to designate the elements of play are, for the most part, the same as those utilized in the aesthetic realm: beauty, tension, balancing, equilibrium, gradation, contrast, etc. Like art, play engages and delivers. It absorbs. It captivates, or, in other words, it charms. It is full of those two supremely noble qualities which man expresses through rhythm and harmony." The French art critic Dominique Jacquemin also remarks that, "It is possible that Arden Quin's passion for game playing led him to create MADI, the only remaining contemporary art movement which can pride itself in possessing both coherence and a truly international outlook."

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Riccardo Boglione (19 November 2010). "Made in Madí: Nelson Di Maggio, curador de retrospectiva sobre Carmelo Arden Quin". la diaria. Retrieved 14 June 2012.
  2. ^ Edward J. Sullivan (1996). Arte Latinoamericano En El Siglo Xx/Latin American Art in the Twentieth Century. Editorial NEREA. pp. 288–. ISBN 978-84-89569-04-1.
  3. ^ Rocca, Thiago (26 June 2020). "Mil años de arte". Brecha (in Spanish).
  4. ^ "Concrete Invention." Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. Encyclopædia Britannica, 2010. Web. 30 Dec. 2010. <http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/1193621/Concrete-Invention>.
  5. ^ Barnitz, Jacqueline. Twentieth-Century Art of Latin America. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2001.
  6. ^ a b c d e Pozzi-Harris, Ana (2007). Marginal Disruptions: Concrete and Madí art in Argentina, 1940-1955. The University of Texas at Austin.
  7. ^ "Entrevista a Gyula Kosice" Archived 29 June 2012 at archive.today, Ñusleter Cultura, 12 de agosto de 2006.
  8. ^ Laudanno, Claudia (2003), , ArtNexus, vol. Jan., no. 47, archived from the original on 15 September 2008
  9. ^ Ades, Dawn. Art in Latin America. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1989.
  10. ^ a b c d Bois, Yve-Alan (2001). Geometric Abstraction: Latin American Art from the Patricia Phelps de Cisneros Collection. Massachusetts: Harvard University Art Museums.
  11. ^ Osornio, Cesar Lopez; Roitman, Ibercaja (1996). MADI internacional 50 años después: exposición del 7 de marzo al 3 de abril de 1996, Centro de Exposiciones y Congresos, Zaragoza. Ibercaja.

External links edit

  • Madi Museum Dallas, Tx
  • The Hungarian MADI art periodical in English[permanent dead link]
  • Arden Quin

madí, other, uses, madi, disambiguation, madi, also, known, grupo, arte, international, abstract, concrete, movement, initiated, buenos, aires, 1946, hungarian, argentinian, artist, poet, gyula, kosice, uruguayans, carmelo, arden, quin, rhod, rothfuss, movemen. For other uses see Madi disambiguation Madi or MADI also known as Grupo Madi or Arte Madi is an international abstract or concrete art movement initiated in Buenos Aires in 1946 by the Hungarian Argentinian artist and poet Gyula Kosice and the Uruguayans Carmelo Arden Quin and Rhod Rothfuss 1 2 3 The movement focuses on creating concrete art i e non representational geometric abstraction and encompasses all branches of art the plastic and pictorial arts music literature theater architecture dance etc The artists in the Madi movement consider the concrete physical reality of the art medium and play with the traditional conventions of Western art for instance by creating works on irregularly shaped canvases 4 Artwork of Madi movement appeared in eight issues of its magazine Arte Madi Universal published between 1947 and 1954 Contents 1 Historical Context 2 Origin of the name 3 Characteristics 4 The Madi Manifesto 5 Madi Dictionary 6 Selected Artists and Artworks 6 1 Gyula Kosice 10 6 2 Rhod Ruthfuss 10 6 3 Diyi Laan 6 6 4 Others 7 Exhibitions 10 8 Why MADI 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksHistorical Context editThe Grupo Madi was one of two prominent groups of artists pursuing abstract art in Argentina The other was Arte Concreto Invencion or AACI founded in 1945 5 The Madi art movement formed as a reaction to the AACI whose art was perceived by the Madi group as being too strict in their method of creating concrete art resulting in a lack of expression in their artworks Operating under the rule of Colonel Peron whose time in power was characterized by a volatile political climate the Madi artists used their art to make statements with social and political implications One of the most overt criticisms made by the Madi movement criticized cultural authorities in the Arte Madi Universal magazine commenting t he last submission to the Venice Biennial has signified for Argentina a blunt negation of the new artistic values We invite competent authorities to stop and compare the true current of contemporary plastic arts with the submissions that today put us our country half a century behind which vaguely attack the aesthetic choices of certain cultural officers under Peron According to Perez Barreiro Madi and Concrete art referring to the Asociacion Arte Concreto Invencion AACI are the artistic parallel s of the political phenomenon of Peronism These artists were also seen as combining modern art with Communist ideology Some scholars including Barreiro saw the government was an outspoken critic against concrete art as a whole whereas others such as Andrea Giunta assert that the Madi and Concrete groups were not victimized under Peron s regime rather they coexisted on its margins 6 The political regime of Peron made use of both linguistic and visual images for propaganda purposes This is seen in his use of an image the shirtless workers los descamisados as an alternative to the concept of the working class This image had strong connections and connotations with the male worker shirtless and unrealistically without much affliction In a speech given 17 October 1946 at Plaza de Mayo Peron addressed the workers in speeches as mis queridos descamisados my loving shirtless workers At this speech he declared 17 October the Day of the Shirtless Workers and stated I don t want to govern over men but over their hearts because mine beats in unison with the heart of each shirtless worker which I interpret and love above all things The use of representations to create propaganda opened up a clear target for the Madi artists to oppose Origin of the name editGyula Kosice who also operated under the pseudonym Raymundo Rasas Pet has explained that the name for the movement is derived from the Republican motto in the Spanish Civil War Madri Madri no pasaran Madrid Madrid they will not make it in i e the Francoist forces will not invade Madrid 7 The name is most typically understood as an acronym for Movimiento Abstraccion Dimension Invencion Movement Abstraction Dimension Invention 8 6 It could be an acronym for Movimento de Arte De Invencion because the group was against static arts or Marxisme Materialisme Dialectique but it could also be a nonsense word 9 Characteristics editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message A Madi work is non figurative and non representational it has a cut out or irregularly shaped form which takes away the viewer s perception of spatial depth that a rectangular frame provides its colors are flat and sharply defined it is often three dimensional and sometimes articulated and or mechanical and it is playful in spirit Madi artists were concerned with creating artworks that were autonomous with functions that naturally transcend the physical features that constitute the work Introducing elements of transformation and ambiguity were techniques commonly employed by these artists to avoid representation as well as avoid the fixity of representations In painted works some artists would intentionally lower the legibility of the design The incorporation of unusual materials into artworks is seen throughout the art movement movement this includes Plexiglas fluorescent tubes neon lights water metal and other materials An example of this is seen in Kosice s first hydraulic piece La arquitectura del agua Hidro escultura The Architecture of Water Hydro Sculpture which utilized light and water interaction Madi artists sought to combat representational forms because this art reflected and perpetuated class based social organizations They believed that representational images forced others to relate to concepts connotations and feelings which were superfluous to the object itself which enticed individuals into supporting class based organizations The Concrete art they produced was meant to have a reality that was self contained In other words the reality of the art ended in the object In the minds of the Madi artists Concrete art was worthy as a contribution to social liberation because it helped its audience grasp true reality while standing against the concepts connotations and feelings associated with art To state this differently exposing people to what is actually reality allows people to eventually confront myths perpetuated by the bourgeois that has suppressed revolution 6 Madi is perhaps the sole remaining art movement which can boast of a half century of uninterrupted activity since its creation in Buenos Aires in 1946 Today the MADI movement has over 60 members painters sculptors architects and poets working in France Italy Belgium Spain Hungary Japan Argentina and the United States One prominent figure behind this fifty years of artistic creation is Carmelo Arden Quin The Madi Manifesto editThe Madi Manifesto was created to defend the importance of invention in the light of limitations imposed on concrete art by the excessive rationalism of European concrete art This strictness of form in concrete art was also demonstrated by the Asociacion Arte Concreto Invencion AACI The manifesto also called for the integration of the nonorthogonal framework into representational space 10 Madi Dictionary editIn written works artists disrupted the construction of semantically coherent structures to avoid attaching meaning to the art and the possibility of representation The Madi created a dictionary that accomplished the opposite of what a normal dictionary does in that it confused and distorted the meanings of words and made up words The following excerpt is from the Madi dictionary which demonstrates a correct grammatical structure that relates ideas that are impossible to interpret meaningfully 6 This is an example of this incoherent construction which prevents interpretation MMaclode Upward hill Slope to insinuate land Meril Kidnapping of flat centimeters Madicional Madi like or of Madi origin opposition and resistance Miogue Account of events in which the authors of great answers participated Molois Site where the most varied adjectives are collected Fam Insult Musver About the manner to focus in photography the liveliest glare of a childhood memory Fixation Macichud Line of shade that emits a loosening of gray beams NNandy Arrangement for new personal cuno Nem Er Record of instances Nigs Opening that is left so that a cluster of enchanted powder emigrates Novoh Shooter that the riverside authority exercises to learn the coastal rulingSelected Artists and Artworks editRepresentatives of the Madi movement in addition to Kosice Quin and Rothfuss include Martin Blaszko Volf Roitman Waldo Longo Juan Bay Esteban Eitler Diyi Laan Valdo Wellington and Ladislao Pablo Gyori among others Gyula Kosice 10 edit Royi 1944 Lampara 1961 Ciudad hidroespacial 2005 Sobre Relieve 1950 Pintura Madi 1948 Hidroluz Lampara de pie ca 1975 Coplanal 1947 Parabolica 1960 Gota de agua 1960 Revolving water 1964 Hidroluz Hydrolight 1975Rhod Ruthfuss 10 edit 3 circulos rojos 1948Diyi Laan 6 edit La batalla de Inod short story 1947 Tiagno play script 1947Others edit Tomas Maldonado Composition 1951 Lidy Prati Concrete Painting 2 B 1948Exhibitions 10 editAug 1946 Instituto Frances de Estudios Superiores in Buenos Aires where the MADI manifesto was read Oct 1945 Concret invencion French Location House of Dr Enrique Pichon Riveiere leader of Psychoanalytic Societry of Argentina Dec 1945 El movimiento de arte concreto invencion a multimedia event which became the hallmark of Madi exhibitions Location House of Bauhaus trained photographer Grete Stern 1947 Galerias Pacifico Buenos Aires 1948 Salon des Realites Nouvelles in Paris 1958 Art Madi International at the Galerie Denise Rene 1996 Madi Internacional 50 Anos Despues Centra de Exposiciones y Congresos Saragossa 2010 Outside the Box Eleven International MADI Artists Polk Museum of Art FloridaWhy MADI editTo the question Why MADI Josee Lapeyrere who met Arden Quin in 1962 and has since participated with her poem objects in most of the events organized by the movement replies MADI s goal is to be rigorous inventive gay and ludic 11 By the importance to which they accord spiritual and imaginative games even the most serious MADI artists can be described as playful Already in 1795 Schiller focused on the inborn playful nature of man as an explanation for his production of art forms In his essay Homo Ludens Ludic Man 1938 Johan Huizinga observed that Play reveals an aspiration to beauty The terms we use to designate the elements of play are for the most part the same as those utilized in the aesthetic realm beauty tension balancing equilibrium gradation contrast etc Like art play engages and delivers It absorbs It captivates or in other words it charms It is full of those two supremely noble qualities which man expresses through rhythm and harmony The French art critic Dominique Jacquemin also remarks that It is possible that Arden Quin s passion for game playing led him to create MADI the only remaining contemporary art movement which can pride itself in possessing both coherence and a truly international outlook See also editMuseum of Geometric and MADI ArtReferences edit Riccardo Boglione 19 November 2010 Made in Madi Nelson Di Maggio curador de retrospectiva sobre Carmelo Arden Quin la diaria Retrieved 14 June 2012 Edward J Sullivan 1996 Arte Latinoamericano En El Siglo Xx Latin American Art in the Twentieth Century Editorial NEREA pp 288 ISBN 978 84 89569 04 1 Rocca Thiago 26 June 2020 Mil anos de arte Brecha in Spanish Concrete Invention Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Encyclopaedia Britannica 2010 Web 30 Dec 2010 lt http www britannica com EBchecked topic 1193621 Concrete Invention gt Barnitz Jacqueline Twentieth Century Art of Latin America Austin University of Texas Press 2001 a b c d e Pozzi Harris Ana 2007 Marginal Disruptions Concrete and Madi art in Argentina 1940 1955 The University of Texas at Austin Entrevista a Gyula Kosice Archived 29 June 2012 at archive today Nusleter Cultura 12 de agosto de 2006 Laudanno Claudia 2003 Carmelo Arden Quin Estetica y ascetica de un madi ArtNexus vol Jan no 47 archived from the original on 15 September 2008 Ades Dawn Art in Latin America New Haven Yale University Press 1989 a b c d Bois Yve Alan 2001 Geometric Abstraction Latin American Art from the Patricia Phelps de Cisneros Collection Massachusetts Harvard University Art Museums Osornio Cesar Lopez Roitman Ibercaja 1996 MADI internacional 50 anos despues exposicion del 7 de marzo al 3 de abril de 1996 Centro de Exposiciones y Congresos Zaragoza Ibercaja External links editVolf Roitman Madi Museum Dallas Tx The Hungarian MADI art periodical in English permanent dead link Arden Quin Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Madi amp oldid 1101773817, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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