Eduardo Arroyo: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Spanish painter |
{{Short description|Spanish painter and graphic artist (1937–2018)}} |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2023}} |
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{{for multi|the Bolivian sport shooter|Eduardo Arroyo (sport shooter)|the Ecuadorian painter|Eduardo X Arroyo}} |
{{for multi|the Bolivian sport shooter|Eduardo Arroyo (sport shooter)|the Ecuadorian painter|Eduardo X Arroyo}} |
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{{family name hatnote|Arroyo|Rodríguez|lang=Spanish}} |
{{family name hatnote|Arroyo|Rodríguez|lang=Spanish}} |
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[[File:Eduardo Arroyo (cropped).jpg|right|thumb]] |
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{{More citations needed|date=October 2018}} |
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⚫ | '''Eduardo Arroyo Rodríguez''' (26 February 1937 – 14 October 2018)<ref>[http://www.elmundo.es/cultura/2018/10/14/5bc31d3f268e3e0c668b4574.html Muere el pintor Eduardo Arroyo a los 81 años de edad] {{in lang|es}}.</ref> was a Spanish [[painting|painter]] and [[graphic arts|graphic artist]]. He was also active as an [[author]] and [[scenic design|set designer]]. Arroyo is regarded as one of the most important exponents of politically committed realism.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Kooness |url=https://www.kooness.com/ |access-date=2022-09-17 |website=Kooness |language=en}}</ref> |
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⚫ | '''Eduardo Arroyo Rodríguez''' (26 February 1937 – 14 October 2018)<ref>[http://www.elmundo.es/cultura/2018/10/14/5bc31d3f268e3e0c668b4574.html Muere el pintor Eduardo Arroyo a los 81 años de edad] {{in lang|es}}.</ref> was a Spanish [[painting|painter |
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==Biography== |
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Arroyo was born in [[Madrid]] and originally trained a journalist, graduating from School of Journalism, Madrid in |
Arroyo was born in [[Madrid]] to a [[Leonese people|Leonese]] family and originally trained a journalist, graduating from School of Journalism, Madrid in 1957. Following his studies and growing contempt for the [[Francoist Spain]], Arroyo emigrated to Paris at the age of 21. He originally began working as an author and journalist, but soon decided to devote himself to painting.<ref name="DBE0">{{cite web |title=Eduardo Arroyo |url=https://dbe.rah.es/biografias/8068/eduardo-arroyo |website=[[Diccionario biográfico español]] |publisher=[[Real Academia de la Historia]]}}</ref> |
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In [[Paris]], he befriended members of the young art scene, especially [[Gilles Aillaud]], with whom he later collaborated in creating stage sets, such as ''Vivre et laisser mourir ou la fin tragique de Marcel Duchamp'', a work in eight pieces intended to criticize contemporary French art.<ref name=":02">{{Cite book|last=Institut Valencià d'Art Modern|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1241664690|title=50 obras maesstras de la Colección del IVAM : 1950-2000|date=2019|publisher=[[Institut Valencià d'Art Modern]]|others=Rocío. Robles Tardóo|isbn=978-84-482-6416-1|location=València|oclc=1241664690}}</ref> He also befriended [[Joan Miró]]. In 1964, he made his breakthrough with his first important exhibition. He dominated the major post-Franco exhibition of Spanish art at the Venice Biennale of 1976. Over 20 years of critical and commercial success followed |
In [[Paris]], he befriended members of the young art scene, especially [[Gilles Aillaud]], with whom he later collaborated in creating stage sets, such as ''Vivre et laisser mourir ou la fin tragique de Marcel Duchamp'', a work in eight pieces intended to criticize contemporary French art.<ref name=":02">{{Cite book|last=Institut Valencià d'Art Modern|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1241664690|title=50 obras maesstras de la Colección del IVAM : 1950-2000|date=2019|publisher=[[Institut Valencià d'Art Modern]]|others=Rocío. Robles Tardóo|isbn=978-84-482-6416-1|location=València|oclc=1241664690}}</ref> He also befriended [[Joan Miró]]. In 1964, he made his breakthrough with his first important exhibition. He dominated the major post-Franco exhibition of Spanish art at the Venice Biennale of 1976. Over 20 years of critical and commercial success followed. |
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Stylistically, Arroyo's mostly ironic, colorful works are at the crossroads between the trends of |
Stylistically, Arroyo's mostly ironic, colorful works are at the crossroads between the trends of [[nouvelle figuration]] or {{ill|figuration narrative|es|Figuración narrativa}} and [[pop art]].<ref>{{Cite book|last=Preckler|first=Ana María|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=MJ_edWCq2UoC&q=%22Vestido+bajando+la+escalera%22&pg=PA363|title=Historia del arte universal de los siglos XIX y XX|date=2003|publisher=Editorial Complutense|isbn=978-84-7491-707-9|language=es}}</ref> A characteristic of his representations is the general absence of spatial depth and the flattening of perspective. |
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Arroyo also became known to a broad public through his many works as a set designer, as well as partially by his [[costume design]]s. In this relation, he cooperated since 1969 especially with the director [[Klaus Michael Grüber]], who encouraged him in this activity. Arroyo created sets for, among others, the [[Piccolo Teatro (Milan)|Piccolo Teatro]] in [[Milan]], the [[Palais Garnier|Paris Opéra]] (in 1976, [[Richard Wagner]]'s ''[[Die Walküre]]''), the ''[[Schaubühne am Lehniner Platz]]'' in [[Berlin]] and the ''[[Salzburg Festival|Salzburger Festspiele]]'' (in 1991, [[Leoš Janáček]]'s ''Z mrtveho domu''). |
Arroyo also became known to a broad public through his many works as a set designer, as well as partially by his [[costume design]]s. In this relation, he cooperated since 1969 especially with the director [[Klaus Michael Grüber]], who encouraged him in this activity.<ref name=DBE0/> Arroyo created sets for, among others, the [[Piccolo Teatro (Milan)|Piccolo Teatro]] in [[Milan]], the [[Palais Garnier|Paris Opéra]] (in 1976, [[Richard Wagner]]'s ''[[Die Walküre]]''), the ''[[Schaubühne am Lehniner Platz]]'' in [[Berlin]] and the ''[[Salzburg Festival|Salzburger Festspiele]]'' (in 1991, [[Leoš Janáček]]'s ''Z mrtveho domu''). |
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In 1982 he received Spain's [[National Award for Plastic Arts (Spain)|National Award for Plastic Arts]].<ref>{{Cite journal |url=http://www.cuentayrazon.org/revista/doc/012/Num012_006.doc |title=Los Premios Nacionales de Artes Plásticas |trans-title=The National Awards for Plastic Arts |first=Álvaro |last=Martínez Novillo |journal=Cuenta y Razón |number=12 |date=July–August 1983 |access-date=2019-06-21}}</ref> |
In 1982 he received Spain's [[National Award for Plastic Arts (Spain)|National Award for Plastic Arts]].<ref>{{Cite journal |url=http://www.cuentayrazon.org/revista/doc/012/Num012_006.doc |title=Los Premios Nacionales de Artes Plásticas |trans-title=The National Awards for Plastic Arts |first=Álvaro |last=Martínez Novillo |journal=Cuenta y Razón |number=12 |date=July–August 1983 |access-date=2019-06-21}}</ref> |
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Arroyo's stage play, ''Bantam'', premiered at the ''[[Bayerisches Staatsschauspiel]]'' (''[[Residenztheater]]'') in [[Munich]] with great success in 1986, with his friend, |
Arroyo's stage play, ''Bantam'', premiered at the ''[[Bayerisches Staatsschauspiel]]'' (''[[Residenztheater]]'') in [[Munich]] with great success in 1986, with his friend, Grüber, as director and Ailland and [[Antonio Recalcati]] for sets and costumes. |
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In her monograph on Eduardo Arroyo, Sarah Wilson of the Courtauld writes: |
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⚫ | Exhibiting since 1961, Arroyo's work has been shown in exhibitions across the globe, including the [[Neue Gesellschaft für Bildende Kunst]], Berlin (1971); the [[Centre Pompidou]], Paris (1982); [[Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum]], NY (1984); [[Museum für Kunst und Kulturgeschichte]], Dortmund, (1987); [[Institut Valencià d'Art Modern]], Valencia (1989); [[Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía]], Madrid (1998), and most recently held a solo exhibition at Fundación ENAIRE in Santander, Spain (2021–22). Arroyo's paintings are showcased at the [[Museo de Arte Contemporáneo (Madrid)|Museo de Arte Contemporáneo]] in Madrid.<ref name="Saatchi">{{Cite web |url=http://www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk/museums/museum-profile/Museo+De+Arte+Contempor%C3%A1neo+%28museosdemadrid.+Arte+Contempor%C3%A1neo%29++++++/778.html |title=Museo de Arte Contemporáneo Saatchi Gallery Official website. |access-date=30 August 2012 |archive-date=15 May 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200515040536/https://www.saatchigallery.com/404error.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref> His most renowned work, ''[[Vestido bajando la escalera]]'', belongs to the collection of the [[Institut Valencià d'Art Modern]], in [[Valencia|València]].<ref name=":02" /><ref>{{Cite web|last=Rodríguez Gimeno|first=Rafa|date=2019-05-22|title=IVAM, 30 años en 10 obras (III): Eduardo Arroyo|url=https://verlanga.com/exposiciones/ivam-30-anos-en-10-obras-iii-eduardo-arroyo/|url-status=live|access-date=2021-08-08|website=[[Verlanga]]|language=|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190526083911/http://verlanga.com:80/exposiciones/ivam-30-anos-en-10-obras-iii-eduardo-arroyo/ |archive-date=2019-05-26 }}</ref> |
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"Eduardo Arroyo was until October 2018 Spain's most celebrated living painter. A violent critic of the fascist dictatorship of General Francisco Franco, he left his home country in 1958. He soon joined Paris's international community of politicised artists, including those who fled America like Peter Saul or the Haitian artist Hervé Télémaque, in the run up to the revolution of May 1968. He dominated the major post-Franco exhibition of Spanish art at the Venice Biennale of 1976. |
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Arroyo became a driving force of the European Narrative Figuration movement, while anticipating by well over a decade the appropriations of the New York Pictures Generation. What I call his ‘killer-quotations’ ¬link him to his great precursor Francis Picabia with whom he has strong affinities (1). And just as for Picabia and Marcel Duchamp the mysterious boxer Arthur Cravan became a hero, a bevy of boxers, in particular Lord Byron and Panama Al Brown became emblematic for Arroyo and his own pugilistic position (2). See Eduardo Arroyo, Panama Al Brown, Paris, Jean-Claude Lattès, 1982 (many reeditions) and Eduardo Arroyo. 1969-1996, Lausanne, Olympic Museum, 5 March – 15 June 1997 (in French and English). |
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We discover here the boom in Pop Art under the labels of nou realisme in Catalonia and New Figuration in Madrid. (Arroyo’s position was in line with the vehement refusal of Picasso or Pablo Casals to have any contact with life under dictatorship) (3). America is insistently present in Arroyo’s early work, as it was in Spanish post-war politics. The very young Eduardo clandestinely devoured American literature in Argentinian editions that escaped the censorship. |
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In 1975, Arroyo showed in European Painting in the Seventies at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, where he declared: ‘After a nearly total eclipse lasting almost fifteen years, the idea that the United States seems interested again in European painting surprises and fascinates me simultaneously. While in Europe we were constantly kept in touch with every little fact concerning the evolution of any American artistic activity, it seemed that a black out had fallen over the other side of the Atlantic, prohibiting any artistic and cultural interest' (4). Once again we raise the curtain in this historic exhibition. |
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Arroyo’s curatorial role in the Venice Biennale’s Attualità internazionali ’72-76 was controversial, but—bearing in mind his arrest and imprisonment by Franco’s regime in 1974 and the confiscation of his passport—how intensely must he have savoured Spain: Artistic Vanguard and Social Reality (1936-1976), the 1976 Biennale pavilion centrepiece, celebrating Spain’s newfound freedom (5). It attempted to reconstruct the Spanish Pavilion at the 1937 Paris World’s Fair (minus Picasso’s Guernica) showing Alexander Calder’s mysterious Mercury Fountain together with many Republican posters (6). Alongside contemporary Spanish artists such as Antonio Saura, Arroyo’s Night Watch was the largest, most impressive figurative statement." |
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'''1.''' Sarah Wilson, ‘Of lettuces and kings: the killer quotations of Eduardo Arroyo’, keynote lecture, Association of Hispanists of Great Britain and Ireland, University of Durham, 8 April 2019. |
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'''2.''' See Eduardo Arroyo, Panama Al Brown, Paris, Jean-Claude Lattès, 1982 (many reeditions) and Eduardo Arroyo. 1969-1996, Lausanne, Olympic Museum, 5 March – 15 June 1997 (in French and English). |
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'''3.''' Arroyo mentions his admiration for this stance in Trente-cinq ans après, Paris, Union Générale des Éditons, 1974, p. 9. |
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'''4.''' Arroyo in Maurice Tuchmann ed. ''European Painting in the Seventies''. New Work by Sixteen Artists. Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1975, p. 45. |
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'''5.''' Valeriano Bozal et al. ''España: vanguardia artistica y realidad social (1936-1976)'', Barcelona, Editorial Gustavo Gili, 1976. |
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'''6.''' Francesc Mestre, ‘The Venice Biennale of 1976 as a symptom, Mirardor de les arts, 20 March 2019; the exhibition moved to the Miró Foundation Barcelona, December 1976 (recreated at IVAM, September 2018). https://www.miradorarts.com/the-1976-venice-biennale-as-a-symptom/. This includes the link to the IVAM film with curator Sergio Rubira, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7DfLKbk2L0w. |
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⚫ | Exhibiting since 1961, |
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==References== |
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{{Reflist|30em}} |
{{Reflist|30em}} |
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==External links== |
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*[ |
*[https://www.epdlp.com/pintor.php?id=186 Biography (''in Spanish'')] |
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*[http://archivio.piccoloteatro.org/eurolab/index.php?IDanagrafica=220&tipo=7 Designs for posters and performance photographs of theatrical productions designed by Arroyo in the archive of the Piccolo Teatro, (''in Italian'')] |
*[http://archivio.piccoloteatro.org/eurolab/index.php?IDanagrafica=220&tipo=7 Designs for posters and performance photographs of theatrical productions designed by Arroyo in the archive of the Piccolo Teatro, (''in Italian'')] |
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*[http://www.arteseleccion.com/ |
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20110707164632/http://www.arteseleccion.com/maestros-en/arroyo-eduardo-6 Eduardo Arroyo: Biography & analysis] |
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*[https://www.marlboroughnewyork.com/artists/eduardo-arroyo#tab:slideshow = Eduardo Arroyo] |
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{{Authority control (arts)|country=ES}} |
{{Authority control (arts)|country=ES}} |
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[[Category:21st-century Spanish painters]] |
[[Category:21st-century Spanish painters]] |
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[[Category:Artists from Madrid]] |
[[Category:Artists from Madrid]] |
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[[Category: |
[[Category:Scenic designers]] |
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[[Category:Spanish male painters]] |
[[Category:Spanish male painters]] |
Latest revision as of 21:52, 18 December 2024
Eduardo Arroyo Rodríguez (26 February 1937 – 14 October 2018)[1] was a Spanish painter and graphic artist. He was also active as an author and set designer. Arroyo is regarded as one of the most important exponents of politically committed realism.[2]
Biography
[edit]Arroyo was born in Madrid to a Leonese family and originally trained a journalist, graduating from School of Journalism, Madrid in 1957. Following his studies and growing contempt for the Francoist Spain, Arroyo emigrated to Paris at the age of 21. He originally began working as an author and journalist, but soon decided to devote himself to painting.[3]
In Paris, he befriended members of the young art scene, especially Gilles Aillaud, with whom he later collaborated in creating stage sets, such as Vivre et laisser mourir ou la fin tragique de Marcel Duchamp, a work in eight pieces intended to criticize contemporary French art.[4] He also befriended Joan Miró. In 1964, he made his breakthrough with his first important exhibition. He dominated the major post-Franco exhibition of Spanish art at the Venice Biennale of 1976. Over 20 years of critical and commercial success followed.
Stylistically, Arroyo's mostly ironic, colorful works are at the crossroads between the trends of nouvelle figuration or figuration narrative and pop art.[5] A characteristic of his representations is the general absence of spatial depth and the flattening of perspective.
Arroyo also became known to a broad public through his many works as a set designer, as well as partially by his costume designs. In this relation, he cooperated since 1969 especially with the director Klaus Michael Grüber, who encouraged him in this activity.[3] Arroyo created sets for, among others, the Piccolo Teatro in Milan, the Paris Opéra (in 1976, Richard Wagner's Die Walküre), the Schaubühne am Lehniner Platz in Berlin and the Salzburger Festspiele (in 1991, Leoš Janáček's Z mrtveho domu).
In 1982 he received Spain's National Award for Plastic Arts.[6]
Arroyo's stage play, Bantam, premiered at the Bayerisches Staatsschauspiel (Residenztheater) in Munich with great success in 1986, with his friend, Grüber, as director and Ailland and Antonio Recalcati for sets and costumes.
Exhibiting since 1961, Arroyo's work has been shown in exhibitions across the globe, including the Neue Gesellschaft für Bildende Kunst, Berlin (1971); the Centre Pompidou, Paris (1982); Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, NY (1984); Museum für Kunst und Kulturgeschichte, Dortmund, (1987); Institut Valencià d'Art Modern, Valencia (1989); Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid (1998), and most recently held a solo exhibition at Fundación ENAIRE in Santander, Spain (2021–22). Arroyo's paintings are showcased at the Museo de Arte Contemporáneo in Madrid.[7] His most renowned work, Vestido bajando la escalera, belongs to the collection of the Institut Valencià d'Art Modern, in València.[4][8]
References
[edit]- ^ Muere el pintor Eduardo Arroyo a los 81 años de edad (in Spanish).
- ^ "Kooness". Kooness. Retrieved 17 September 2022.
- ^ a b "Eduardo Arroyo". Diccionario biográfico español. Real Academia de la Historia.
- ^ a b Institut Valencià d'Art Modern (2019). 50 obras maesstras de la Colección del IVAM : 1950-2000. Rocío. Robles Tardóo. València: Institut Valencià d'Art Modern. ISBN 978-84-482-6416-1. OCLC 1241664690.
- ^ Preckler, Ana María (2003). Historia del arte universal de los siglos XIX y XX (in Spanish). Editorial Complutense. ISBN 978-84-7491-707-9.
- ^ Martínez Novillo, Álvaro (July–August 1983). "Los Premios Nacionales de Artes Plásticas" [The National Awards for Plastic Arts]. Cuenta y Razón (12). Retrieved 21 June 2019.
- ^ "Museo de Arte Contemporáneo Saatchi Gallery Official website". Archived from the original on 15 May 2020. Retrieved 30 August 2012.
- ^ Rodríguez Gimeno, Rafa (22 May 2019). "IVAM, 30 años en 10 obras (III): Eduardo Arroyo". Verlanga. Archived from the original on 26 May 2019. Retrieved 8 August 2021.