Wilmington, DE
- The Delaware Art Museum presents The Baroque World of Fernando Botero, a
major retrospective exhibition featuring 100 paintings, sculptures, and
drawings, on view through June 8, 2008. Fernando Botero (b. 1932), well
known for his extravagantly rounded figures, is one of the most
internationally popular artists working today. Using a broad range of media,
the Colombian-born Botero has created a world of his own, one that is at
once accessible and enigmatic.
“Botero’s
brilliant colors and massive forms make you stand up and take notice
immediately,” said Dr. Mary F. Holahan, Curator of Collections and
Exhibitions at the Delaware Art Museum. “But then his paintings and
drawings and sculptures take you through a more subtle range of
emotions—empathy, outrage, curiosity, and just plain good humor. The result
is that you just keep wanting to come back to look again and again!”
The Baroque
World of Fernando Botero presents a selection of the best works from various
stages in Botero’s development as an artist. Drawn from Botero’s private
collection and assembled over the past 50 years, this exhibition includes
favorite works that the artist was unable to part with, as well as pieces
reacquired years after they left his possession. Many have never before
been exhibited in public. And the exhibition goes beyond the Delaware Art
Museum’s galleries, as three of Botero’s sculptures are being mounted in the
Museum’s Copeland Sculpture Garden: Hand, Smoking Woman, and The Rape of
Europa.
Fernando
Botero’s roots are in Medellín, and his earliest artistic impressions were
molded in a Colombian town close to the Andes mountains. His first images
drew upon the Spanish colonial Baroque, a movement of extravagant richness,
featuring the sumptuous decorations that flourish on the walls of churches
in South America.
Botero has
spent most of his years as an artist away from his native Colombia, but his
art has maintained an uninterrupted link to Latin America. Latin American
Baroque imagery is reflected in Botero’s work when portraying himself as a
small boy in the arms of Our Blessed Lady of Colombia, carrying a diminutive
flag with the national colors, or in depictions of his mother as a widow, in
her desperate struggle to survive with her three young children. Botero can
also shock viewers with images of terror and violence, referring to the
political instability, the attacks, the kidnappings, and the torture
prevalent in his country.
The exhibition
follows Botero in his extensive studies of the history of European art,
focusing on the influence of Velazquez in Spain; Ingres, Delacroix, and
Courbet in France; and Renaissance artists in Italy. He also turned his
attention to Mexico, where the monumental murals by Diego Rivera and David
Siqueiros had a profound impact. Botero absorbed the dramatic
self-portraits of Frida Kahlo and her idiosyncratic interpretation of Latin
American folklore, and was intrigued by the mysteries of Pre-Colombian
artifacts.
Another
important theme illustrated in the exhibition is the reality of contemporary
life in Latin America as observed by Botero’s satirical eye. A section is
presented on everyday life in South America: women observed in the intimacy
of their boudoir, street scenes, dance halls, and the suggestion of houses
of ill repute. Even in his still-life paintings, Botero is capable of
introducing a hint of menace, creating a sense of uneasiness difficult to
define.
Botero’s
superb craftsmanship is evident in his drawings, especially those executed
in pastel. His pastels have a thoroughly finished look and a richness of
color, and they have been compared to early etchings by Picasso. Botero has
also worked in bronze and marble sculpture, a seminal element in his
oeuvre. His monumental bronzes were seen along the Champs Elysées in Paris,
in front of the Palazzo Pitti in Florence, and along Park Avenue in New
York.
Organizer
The Baroque
World of Fernando Botero is organized and circulated by Art Services
International, Alexandria, Virginia.
Catalog
The Baroque
World of Fernando Botero is accompanied by a fully illustrated, full-color
exhibition catalog. The author is Dr. John Sillevis, Curator of the
Gemeentemuseum, The Hague, who selected the works for this exhibition. The
catalog is published by Art Services International.
Sponsors
The Baroque
World of Fernando Botero is presented in Delaware by DuPont. The Delaware
Art Museum received a MetLife Foundation Museum and Community Connections
grant to support programming for this exhibition. In Delaware, this
exhibition is made possible, in part, by grants from the Delaware Division
of the Arts, a state agency dedicated to nurturing and supporting the arts
in Delaware, in partnership with the National Endowment for the Arts.
About the
Museum
The Delaware
Art Museum, located at 2301 Kentmere Parkway, Wilmington, DE 19806, is open
Tuesday through Saturday 10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. and Sunday noon – 4:00 p.m.
Admission fees are charged as follows: adults (18 – 59) $10, seniors (60+)
$8, college students $5, and youth (7 – 17) $3, with children 6 and under
entering for free. For more information, call 302-571-9590 or 866-232-3714
(toll free), or visit the website at www.delart.org.
Founded in
1912, the Delaware Art Museum holds a world-renowned collection that focuses
on American art and illustration from the 19th century to the present as
well as the British Pre-Raphaelite movement. The Museum offers the outdoor
Copeland Sculpture Garden, the Helen Farr Sloan Library & Archives, studio
art classes, the interactive Kids’ Corner learning area, the delART Café
featuring free Wi-Fi access, and the Museum Store with distinctive books and
gifts.