Fondation Beyeler presents an exhibition of work by Beatriz Milhazes on view through 25.4. 2011.
The Brazilian artist Beatriz Milhazes is one of the most highly regarded women artists on the international scene. The basic motifs in her oeuvre are drawn from the abundance of the tropical environment and the history and culture of her native country. This is reflected in vivid compositions based on arabesques, floral and abstract ornamentation, geometric shapes, and rhythmical patterns in brilliant, magnificent colors.
Summer Love © Sergio Araújo, RJ, Courtesy of the artist; courtesy of James Cohan Gallery, Galerie Max Hetzler, Stephen Friedman Gallery and Galeria Fortes Vilaça
The Fondation Beyeler devotes the first exhibition in Switzerland to Milhazes. Mounted on the museum’s lower floor, it comprises four new, monumental paintings, a selection of the artist’s compelling collages, and a mobile. The paintings, done expressly for the show over the past two years, are devoted to the subject of the four seasons. Milhazes’s unique painting technique is derived from decalcomania. She applies paint to transparent plastic foil and mounts the paint on canvas by pulling off the foil. Used again and again, the pieces of foil retain traces which may then reappear in the same or other works. Each painting is thus marked by the flux of time, like a palimpsest.
The selection of the subject of the four seasons was the first time Milhazes determined the subject of works in advance of the painting process. Usually she selects a title after the works are finished, from a list of previously noted words and phrases, without any necessary objective connection between title and image. The collage titles are frequently derived from the materials employed, for instance foil candy wrappers. Colored, monochrome, patterned, glossy or fluorescent papers are further components of her collages.
In 2007, Milhazes designed stage sets for her sister Marcia’s dance group (Marcia Milhazes Dance company). One of the mobiles from the sets will be expanded by a samba school (Imperatriz Leopoldinense) in Rio de Janeiro for the Fondation Beyeler exhibition. The materials comprise simple decorative elements of the kind used to adorn floats in the Carnival parade.
Though painting forms the focus of Milhazes’s artistic activity, she also employs other media such as collage and printmaking, produces artist’s books, and designs textiles, building facades, stage sets, and interiors, such as one at the Tate Modern, London. At Art Basel Miami Beach in 2010, the Fondation Beyeler exhibited a spectacular floor work, a first-ever project in which the entire area of the stand was covered with ceramic tiles designed by the artist.
The exhibition project is curated by Michiko Kono, assistant curator at the Fondation Beyeler.
www.fondationbeyeler.ch