Passageway VI

Lydia Okumura

Passageway VI, 1986197 x 197cmSign in to view price
Details
MaterialGallery
acrylic paint on canvasMartins&Montero
Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.

This abstract geometric painting features a vibrant composition of intersecting shapes and lines in a kaleidoscope of colors, including shades of blue, yellow, pink, and purple. The work employs a cubist-inspired style, with angular forms and sharp contrasts that create a dynamic, fragmented visual effect. The artist's intentional use of color and shape suggests a playful exploration of depth, perspective, and the interplay of light and shadow, offering a visually captivating and thought-provoking exploration of the formal elements of art. ...

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Artist
Lydia Okumura
B.1948, Brazilian

Okumura had her first solo exhibition in 1968 and later was part of Equipe3 (1970-1979) along with artists Francisco Iñarra and Genilson Soares. She contributed in a fundamental way to the development of ephemeral site-specific installations and many of them are documented in MAC-USP, Museu de Arte Moderna de São Paulo, Pinacoteca do Estado de São Paulo, Hall Art Foundation - Germany, MetropolitanNY, MoMA (New York) and Guggenheim (Abu Dhabi). First impressions of Lydia Okumura’s individual work can easily be misleading. For almost 50 years, the Brazilian-born, New York based artist has been investigating the interstice between two and three-dimensional space through precise, site-specific installations. Mostly using acrylic paint, cotton string, painted aluminum sheets, charcoal and pencil, Okumura constructs abstract geometric compositions that project from the walls into three-dimensional space. Although her practice can be framed within the minimalist tradition, op art is also at play. Through modest interventions, Okumura enhances our awareness of our bodily presence in the exhibition space. ...

Lydia Okumura: Artworks
Passageway VI
Double
Lydia OkumuraDouble, 1984
100 x 150cm
Tribeca
Lydia OkumuraTribeca, 1984
270 x 390cm
Untitled
Lydia OkumuraUntitled, 1971
35 x 48 x 65cm
untitled GSP
the appearance
Lydia Okumurathe appearance, 1975
150 x 150 x 150cm
ps1
Lydia Okumuraps1, 1981
200 x 313 x 141cm
Phenomena VII
Lydia OkumuraPhenomena VII, 1985
70.5 x 100 x 0.3cm
Phenomenon V
Lydia OkumuraPhenomenon V, 1985
70.5 x 100 x 0.3cm
Methamorphosys II
Double
Lydia OkumuraDouble, 1984
150 x 100cm
Untitled
Lydia OkumuraUntitled, 1980
155 x 233.7cm
Untitled
Lydia OkumuraUntitled, 1976
75.8 x 55.8cm
Martins&Montero
Gallery
Martins&Montero
Brussels, São Paulo

Founded in São Paulo in 2011, Galeria Jaqueline Martins is a space for research, documentation and presentation of contemporary artistic production. It proposes collaborative curatorial strategies that foster dialogue between different generations and different cultural perspectives. One of its guiding principles is the encouragement of research-oriented conceptualist practices characterized by critical, even subversive, approaches. Since its inauguration, the gallery has developed a special program around the investigation of artistic productions carried out during the Brazilian military period – more specifically from the 1970s and 1980s. It promotes a historical revision of processes grounded on strong intellectual resistance, audacity and commitment to art and which transformed the artistic practice in the country, but nonetheless were neglected throughout the last decades. By integrating research and practice that confront the contemporary scene by means of its exhibition program, the gallery encourages the revival of the debate that conceives of artistic actions as contact zones for the exercise of aesthetic, social and political change. In 2020 the gallery opened its second exhibition space, in Brussels, aiming to expand our presence in Europe and to develop a multidisciplinary program that will foster connections between our artists and Brazilian art practices in an international context. ...

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