ARCIMBOLDO’S GHOSTS
by Arturo Rodríguez

 

November 17, 2018 – January 23, 2019

Arturo Rodríguez
Arcimboldo, Courbet, Cézanne, Arbus, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Mondrian, Sharaku Ghosts
(The Encounter I), 2018
oil on canvas
66 x 72 inches

Arturo Rodríguez,
Arcimboldo, Diane Arbus, Sharaku, Utamaro Ghost, 2017
oil on canvas
58 x 58 inches

Arturo Rodríguez
Arcimboldo, Géricault, Arbus, Courbet Ghost, 2018
oil on canvas
48 x 48 inches

Arturo Rodríguez
Arcimboldo, Diane Arbus, Mondrian Ghost, 2016-2017
oil on linen
70 x 48 inches

Arturo Rodríguez|
Arcimboldo, Arbus, Uccello, Mondrian, Henri Cartier-Bresson Ghosts, 2018
oil on canvas
88 x 66 inches

Arturo Rodríguez
Arcimboldo, Mondrian, Sharaku, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Arbus Ghosts, 2017
oil on canvas
66 x 52 inches

Arturo Rodríguez,
Arcimboldo, Courbet, Arbus, Uccello, Géricault, Cézanne, Mondrian Ghosts (The Encounter II), 2018
oil on canvas
60 x 96 inches

Arturo Rodríguez
Arcimboldo, Arbus, Sharaku Ghost, 2017
oil on canvas
24 x 24 inches

Arturo Rodríguez
Arcimboldo, Francis Bacon Ghost, 2017
oil on canvas
24 x 24 inches

Arturo Rodríguez,
Arcimboldo, Arbus, Mondrian, Cézanne, Henri Cartier-Bresson Ghost, 2017
oil on canvas
55 x 52 inches

Arturo Rodríguez,
Arcimboldo, Arbus Ghost, 2016
oil on canvas
58 x 48 inches

Arturo Rodríguez
Arcimboldo, Géricault, Arbus, Sharaku, Courbet, Uccello, Cézanne Ghosts, 2018
oil on canvas
triptych, 66 x 152 inches

Arturo Rodríguez,
Arcimboldo, Courbet, Cézanne, Arbus, Mondrian Ghost (The Pilgrim), 2018
oil on canvas
84.5 x 53.5 inches

Arturo Rodríguez,
Mondrian, Arbus, Géricault, Sharaku, Guston, Utamaro Ghost, 2017
oil on canvas
58 x 44 inches

Arturo Rodríguez
Arcimboldo, Uccello, Géricault, Sharaku, Mondrian Ghosts, 2018
oil on canvas
66 x 60 inches

Arturo Rodríguez
Mondrian, Arbus Ghost, 2018
oil on canvas
36 x 28 inches

Arturo Rodríguez
Arcimboldo, Arbus, Géricault, Mondrian Ghost, 2017
oil on canvas
54 x 54 inches

ABOUT THE EXHIBITION

LnS GALLERY presents ARCIMBOLDO’S GHOSTS, a visual treasure hunt alighting heart and intellect by Cuban-born, American artist Arturo Rodríguez, one of Miami’s most prominent and achieved artists. Visitors will feast sensorially through his work on Saturday, November 17 for an opening reception. A full-color catalog of artworks on exhibit will be presented with the show featuring essays by two special guest contributors: art historian, professor, and author Alejandro Anreus, Ph.D., as well as art curator, critic, and journalist Lilly Wei.

The series contemplates the muniments of art history, responding with “a love letter to painting” as described by Alejandro Anreus, which layers story upon story, painting within painting; applying the very medium to overtly reinterpret the visual poetry of Masters in homage to their influence, always with a focus on the universal theme of “displacement.”

The style of the series’ titular inspiration – the 16th century Italian Mannerist painter Giuseppe Arcimboldo – is effectively incorporated in the portraiture of human forms represented in imaginative natural images such as flowers, fish, fruits, and vegetables. Rodríguez tropicalizes Arcimboldo’s traditional still-life elements by substituting the flora of his birthplace and the arsenal of his profound exploration of art history. “At first glance they all seem whimsical, playful, but underneath the depth of the human condition can be sensed; tragedy and comedy, nothingness and meaning encountered and balanced in our existence… Homage and parody are knitted together in these poetic evocations, which of course are very much a part of the tradition of painting in Europe and the Americas,” Alejandro Anreus writes of the series. In echoing the satirical, clever nature of Arcimboldo, Rodríguez’s resulting work speaks to one of art’s crucial purposes in service of humanity.

“He invests his figuration with borrowings from other images, overtly so, creating not only a visually compelling hybrid, but also one that represents a dense and layered history of art that is personal, idiosyncratic,” writes Lilly Wei. Formative influences such as Cézanne’s The Bather, Diane Arbus’ Child with Toy Hand Grenade in Central Park, and Courbet’s self-portrait and servant with walking sticks from The Encounter connect us to the essence of their expressive intention as Rodríguez concurrently develops the concepts within, advancing each narrative, folding those stories into his own prolific story. “It’s a visual treasure hunt to find them and identify the sources, challenging and engaging the viewer” adds Wei.

ARTIST PAGE