BARCELONA.- Víctor Lope Arte Contemporáneo announced the opening of its new exhibition this Thursday 19th of December at 7 pm: Six stories for a color where six different artists will participate, all with works made with different formats and techniques, but all inside the same chromatic field.
The color black has been used throughout history of art with multiple purposes, from technical intentions to give depth to parts of the compositions to emotional ones to represent the darkest thoughts of the human beings. Rubens and Rembrandt provided it of importance through their works and Velazquez and Goya mastered the technique and extended its use. The black color, nowadays totally emancipated, spreads as a protagonist to give strength and complexity to the compositions, relinquishing of color the works of the artists, providing like this, much more nuances to notice.
Six stories for a color is a group exhibition where are presented the works by six different artists who have posed the artistic creation from the monochromatic perspective of black and white, predominating the dark over light. This chromatic dualism forces the spectator to mentally take part and make an effort to observe the pieces with the absence of the other colors noise. By simplifying the visual experience, the emotional part can appear stronger, the positive and the negative, light and dark, what is good and what is bad
The six artists present us six completely different visions of seeing contemporary art: Mariajosé Gallardo (Badajoz, 1978) joins the gallery portfolio right after her individual exhibition in CAC Malaga and she presents us her iconic paintings; Kepa Garraza (Vizcaya, 1979) keeps working on his latest series of drawings: Propaganda, with which he encourages us to reflect on the nature of power and its representation; Max Gärtner (Heidelberg, 1982) shows us his most recent pieces from his world of ghosts and gods; Concha Martínez Barreto (Murcia, 1978) keeps investigating on the deepest and most profound layers of the individual and collective memory with her series Stratum; Frank Plant (Philadelphia, 1969) present us one of his most iconic pieces made of painted steel; and lastly, we present the project A foreign land by the South African photographer Alastair Whitton (Glasgow, 1969), who will get the spectator around several corners of Cape Town through his architecture of time, a journey through the memory of the country.
The exhibition will be carried out until Saturday, February the 1st. The gallery will remain closed during Christmas Holidays (December: 24th afternoon, 25th and 26th all day long, 31st afternoon; January: 1st and 6th all day long).