- 354
Matta
Description
- Matta
- Untitled
- Oil on canvas
- 78 1/4 by 76 1/4 in.
- 200 by 193.5 cm
- Painted circa 1949.
Provenance
Acquired from the above
Exhibited
Condition
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Catalogue Note
Upon Matta’s departure from New York in 1949 to Italy and eventually France, the works executed in the “fifty-plus years post-New York” regularly visit the concept of “shifting space and evolving movement” through the appearance of geometric, cube-like shapes that seem to dissolve into limitless landscapes of bold and shocking colors (Mary Schneider Enriquez, “Roberto Matta: International Provocateur” in Matta, Making the Invisible Visible (exhibition catalogue), McMullen Museum of Art, Boston College, 2004, p. 37). Matta, who was trained as an architect and worked in the office of Le Corbusier in the mid-1930s, began to vigorously showcase his original, formal training in these works. With time, his technique progressively matured; his gestures became freer, liberated, and to a certain degree become more playful. The present work, Untitled (painted circa 1949), is an exemplary painting of the conceptual project of a painted cube and elongated human/totem-esque forms Matta began to explore during the late-1940s and early 1950s. Populated with what appear to be “satellite shields bursting apart, floating, and attacking space and the figures within it,” Matta evokes “an endless, shifting space that conveys a palpable level of movement manipulating pigments that, both in color and in the means of application, conjure up vaporous, unearthly spaces, the metallic shine of a machine piece, or the excessive brilliance and tone of a world sickened by technological disaster” (ibid., pp. 37-38).