NEW YORK, NY.- Mitchell-Innes & Nash opened its first solo exhibition, this past March 9th, for Brazilian artist Antonio Henrique Amaral (1935-2015) since taking on representation of the artists estate in 2022.
Antonio Henrique Amaral: O Discurso will be on view in Chelsea through April 15, 2023 and features more than 12 paintings ranging in date from the 1960s to the 1990s focused on the artists main themes: Bocas, Batalhas and Bananas. It is the largest concentration of the artists work seen outside of South America since 1996.
A pioneering figure in Brazilian and Latin American art, Amaral developed his signature style during the second half of the 20th century, coming of age under the 1964 coup détat which installed military rule in his home country. His visceral and allegorical works of this period deal with political violence and existential discontent through an incisive visual approach that seeks to challenge authoritarianism. When the military dictatorship was overturned through democratic elections in the late-1980s, Amaral shifted his attention to representations of forests, water and other forms of nature- and, frequently, the dangers to their survival.
Antonio Henrique Amarals work is as relevant and vital, if not more-so, in the current political climate as it ever was, said Lucy Mitchell-Innes. We are thrilled to bring increased attention to the paintings of this Brazilian-born- but truly international- artist.
In the artists Bocas (Mouths) paintings, such as Third Person (1967) and O Discurso (1967) Amaral depicts political talking heads either arguing to questionable effectiveness or amplifying their opinions to gain fame and influence.
Amarals series of Banana paintings, such as Selva (1968), offer a clever critique on the Brazilian state by using the archetypal tropical export to communicate issues of political barbarity and public unrest.
Amarals works from the 1970s reach a peak of ferocity with his Campo de Batalha (Battlefield) series. Spending sustained periods of time in New York, Amaral created works in his SoHo studios such as Campo de Batalha 32 (1974) and Os Metais e as Viseras II (1975) that show weaponized forks piercing fragments of bananas or bodily remnants.
In the 1990s, Amaral was fully engaged in a new battle for the soul of the Amazon as unchecked industry threatened the viability of the global climate. In Armas (1992), chainsaws and smokestacks imperil a lone tree trunk.
Paulo Miyada, curator for the Centre Pompidou, wrote, When one observes Antonio Henrique Amarals oeuvre as a whole it is plausible to think of it as a bestiary expanded in time and space: a succession of forms and figures that defy human identification and its capacity for communication, or, in a complementary way, a landscape of inanimate objects that he imbues with an empathic identification. There is still much to discover and debate in his work, especially now, when at every point and place there is a search for examples of artworks able to resist not only the authoritarian projects now underway, but also the normativities that restrict the understanding of the nature of desire, sexuality and communication.
The estate of Antonio Henrique Amaral is represented in partnership with Casa Triângulo, Sao Paulo and the Instituto Antonio Henrique Amaral.