Home Opinion KVT visits and revisits the Corazon show

KVT visits and revisits the Corazon show

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Foundations for a Building in Argente
Foundations for a Building in Argente

Thanks heaps Embassy of Spain. You’re gorgeous.

Anyone with artistic ability or pretension would have to be seriously up themselves if they haven’t taken the time to see the wonderful Alberto Corazon exhibition at the National Museum of Fine Arts, and if they only went at the opening and haven’t been back since to savor it mot minh then they’d have to be poseurs. One can understand the glitterati rushing along to openings be seen and culturally adored and the free loaders intent on sipping a glass, or two, or five while they give it all a passing glimpse, but for an artist, a curator or a serious cultural devotee not to linger a time or two more (especially as it’s all for free) is totally remiss.

A Place for Paying Taxes
A Place for Paying Taxes

Can one take a long bow and draw parallels between Corazon, his work, this exhibition and the art scene in Vietnam? Like Corozon, some of our more promising young, local artists have a background in graphic design and a few have used this to push the boundaries of their art towards intellectual abstractionism or polemic representation. We can see that some exciting, local artists have their philosophies drawing inspiration from the conceptual movement that reached its pinnacle between the mid 60’s and 70’s and of which a young Corazon was an integral part. Corazon was lucky to be in the forefront of a new renaissance in Spanish cultural life in the mid seventies, post Franco, when modernism, experimentation and innovation in art was permitted to fly to dizzying heights , and when Spain and Picasso’s Geurnica were symbolically reunited.

At the Museum, Corazon’s work has been as effectively displayed as is possible. There’s no sense of crowding, the pieces breathe freely and the wall pieces are simply framed. The sculptural work is incredibly beautiful and thought provoking. The lead draped Poet’s House and the totemic Place for Paying Taxes make you realize why so many of his works are on permanent display in Madrid and throughout Spain.

The paintings represent Corazon’s output through the nineties to the present. I am intrigued with his still life series represented here by Still Life with Lattice where the forms have an intended Matissean cut out feel to them. I would pay heaps to see a gallery full of works in the same vein as the haunting Listen to the Tide. His oils on wood that, like so much of his work, abound in iconography, are sparse but intense. The oils on paper are tantalizing and fill any artistic eye with awe. The use of grids, a familiar construct toVietnamese artists, in many of the works reference the artist’s graphic art foundations.

It is easy to see why the promos for the exhibition feature that hand. As Corozon states, when he is drawing he is thinking. It’s his gestural way of thinking and it undscores the intellectualism of Corazon’s work. Corazon is first and foremost an intellectual practitioner and it’s this that makes the exhibition a must see for all good artists. It would be exciting if a few more of the plethora of young hopefuls around could expand their practice from the making into the reasoning.

The exhibition completely envelopes and intellectually (to use that dread word again) engages you when you’re lucky enough to be alone within it. It’s not the most exciting or the most exuberant exhibition I’ve seen in Hanoi but it’s certainly one of the very worthwhile, very satisfying, seductive and emblematic.

Thanks heaps Embassy of Spain. And yes, please, lots more!

Speaking of seductive, try to get a peek at the outstanding book that complements the exhibition. If I could get my hands on one for keeps I’d be over the moon. It matters not a bit that its text is mostly in Spanish. For English speakers there are excellent essays towards the end….sometimes intellectually (again!) obtuse, but very valuable for art historians.

Until 15 May.

Not a reviewer, not a critic, “Kiếm Văn Tìm” is an interested, impartial and informed observer and connoisseur of the Hanoi art scene who offers highly opinionated remarks and is part of the long and venerable tradition of anonymous correspondents. Please add your thoughts in the comment field below.

2 COMMENTS

  1. Tôi đã đến xem triển lãm và được dự buổi nói chuyện của hoạ sĩ về triển lãm tại Viện Bảo Tàng. Các vấn đề mà Alberto nói về các sáng tác của ông gây ra sự thích thú không chỉ của riêng tôi mà còn của hầu hết những người có mặt trong buổi nói chuyện hôm đó. Rất tiếc vì hầu hết các tác phẩm trong triển lãm đều không phải là những tác phẩm gần đây, nên khó có thể có được một cái nhìn xuyên suốt cả quá trình sáng tác của hoạ sĩ. Những chia sẻ của hoạ sĩ với người xem như một lần nữa mở ra với người xem con đường thứ hai tiếp cận với tác phẩm, từ khía cạnh phân tích của chính hoạ sĩ. Thực sự rất cảm ơn Alberto và các tác phẩm của ông!

  2. Attending the ‘intellectual’ Corazon lecture…

    Well, a lecture is too big a word for meeting the Spanish artist Corazon in the Fine Arts Museum. It was the day after the opening when some artists, including me, were at the exhibition with the artist to talk about his work. We learned a lot…

    The exhibition itself had been selected by a curator, and he himself was surprised to find what was on show. This wasn’t his best works, he said, and this was not his conceptual art. When I asked what he meant with ‘conceptual art’, because his drawings could (for me at least) be conceptual art. His answer to my question was ”it is all written down in my book”! Which is only in Spanish. by the way. According to Corazon, his titles where better than his art, and these titles give all the meaning. I hope, Kvt that you have read these?

    On the question why he uses icons out of historical art works, like the cut leaves from Matisse or other used icons from Goya or Kounellis, he was surprised that I saw Matisse in his work. This was not a joke. He would have a look at it again at home…

    Then he went on talking about painting with Dutch oil. I had no clue what he meant. When I had a closer look at his paintings it looked like stand oil. It doesn’t matter for me but it tells something about what this man had to say.

    To tell you the truth, it was a waste of time and it was embarrassing that this was arranged by the Spanish embassy.

    After his nonsensical talk, we suddenly had to leave: he was tired.

    The poor man, so little to say about his work in such a hot country, with all the work he didn’t choose himself, they where just laying in his studio… Oh, by the way: he was happy with the framing…

    So I went back to see the exhibition later again. Maybe the work is better if he didn’t talk about it. And yes, the sculpture was nice: wood and lead, a beautiful combination. Like marble, too beautiful material… This doesn’t mean that I found a great opportunity to see his work and that I am happy the Spanish Embassy organizes it here in Hanoi

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