Nationality Hispanic Period Postmodernism Role Visual Artist | Name Laurent Jimenez-Balaguer Known for painting | |
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Full Name Llorenc Jimenez-Balaguer Movement |
La diada i laurent jimenez balaguer
Laurent Jiménez-Balaguer (January 14, 1928 – 16 April 2015) Born in L’Hospitalet del Llobregat, Barcelona (Catalonia), Spain. He lives and works in Paris. During the 1950s, he is one of the most distinguished painters of Catalan art, known for creating a private language. He belongs to the Abstract Expressionism and European Informalism. These postmodern vanguardists have been characterized by their multiculturalism, manifested in their contrasting pictorial textures, and the need to invent a new mindset.
Contents
- La diada i laurent jimenez balaguer
- Laurent jimenez balaguer
- Early years
- Catalonian Lyrical Abstraction
- Informalism and Information
- In Defense of Subjectivity
- Constitution of a universal language of the Self
- Painting as interface
- Artwork Universal graphic lexico
- See also
- Individual exhibitions
- Retrospectives
- MuseumsPublic collections
- References

Jiménez-Balaguer’s purpose is to establish a framework of knowledge of the human psyche based on Ferdinand de Saussure’s language model, in order to show how painting is a universal medium for the understanding of the Self. He regards the construct of the Self as indispensable, and its visualization as vital; the human inner is neither an impalpable, untouchable soul nor an invisible, immaterial ego.

His conception of creation and society inscribe him in a process of a permanent revolution, from which the subject must struggle for the construction of the Self. His work asserts that the Self is a performative act. Jose María Moreno Galván in 1960 considered him one of the twenty most talented painters of Contemporary Catalan Art.
Two fundamental archetypes structure his field: the Body-Memory and the Exterior-Interior.

Laurent jimenez balaguer
Early years
Early on, Jiménez-Balaguer paints androgynous figures that exude a metaphysical sentiment. His portraits emphasize what is within, unmarked by gender or cultural identity. Like El Greco, one of his artistic references, he seeks the transcendental essence of being. In 1955, he abandons all description of the world in order to focus on the problem of transforming the invisible to visible. He considers that painting allows for true knowledge of oneself, with the projection of raw material.
Following the parameters of Western philosophy, he thinks that all expression is an expression of something; therefore, the sign refers to a reality that constructs the object at the same time as the meaning.
According to this tradition, everything is related and has its corresponding channels: everything is connected and meaning is constructed by analogy. His concept of Other Reality arises from here, as well as his work regarding boundaries and the concept of limit.

The real, understood symbolically, is found between the Interior and the Exterior, between Corporality and Memory. One of his most important contribution to Catalan Informalism and 21st century painting is referencing this ‘Other Reality’ as a linguistic-pictorial sign.
During these formative years, surrounded by political turmoil, he actively participates in the recognition of a Catalan identity. He learns to write in his language, Catalan, which was prohibited during Franco’s regime.
It is years of experimentation for the painter as he works on the hidden matter, that which one keeps inside one’s psyche: the fragile and subjective.
Jiménez-Balaguer believes: “That which is sensed is a reflection of the intelligible”, and he does not cease searching for the fundamental concept of individuation and independence.
Catalonian Lyrical Abstraction
At the age of twenty, he goes to the mountains of the monastery in Montserrat and begins to paint with his friend, Josep Guinovart, experimenting a new freedom and liberating himself of the contingency of convention. He meets Cesáreo Rodríguez-Aguilera and his wife Mercedes de Prat, and a close friendship ensues.
He publishes a manifesto, He Escuchado, whereby he defines his aspirations along the vein of Stanley Cavell: ‘Claim is what a voice does when it founds within itself in order to establish a universal assertion.’
His sensibilities are along the lines of Merleau-Ponty regarding his defense of the body as the subject, and Wittgenstein: ‘The human body is the best image of the human soul.’
He exhibits in Ciclo Experimental d’Art Nou directed by Josep Maria de Sucre i de Grau and Angel Marsá and his paintings enrich the contemporary Catalan art scene. At the Galería Clan in Madrid, he receives the invaluable support of Manolo Millares, El Paso (grupo) and César Manrique, the latter becoming a good friend and inviting him to continue their contact. The goal is to impede the obstruction of expression and obtain total freedom of the Self. In 1956, the art critic Juan-Eduardo Cirlot includes him in the Art Informal movement.
Catalan identity is in search of specificity, and is in opposition to the official art sanctioned by the Franco regime. The painters of the 20th century, mainly Joan Miró, insist on the need for a new art.
In 1957, in the European May Salons, intellectuals such as Antoni Tàpies and Laurent Jiménez-Balaguer, present their latest works. All the Informalist painters evince a critical vision against a world of oppression and exclusion, dominated by diverse imperialisms.
Informalism and Information
In the 70’s, in dialogue with the poststructuralist period, he continues to explore the possibilities of a knowledge of the Self. From then on, his work heralds a new period based on the understanding of the problem of human expression and its inabilities, inhibitions, prohibitions, and negations; Jiménez-Balaguer’s paintings are a projection of the visualization of the unknown Inner.
In spite of the abstraction of the images, he finds no reason they would be mysterious, magical nor mute; instead, they should be able to communicate meaning. The utility of a sign, is its power to give universal information that allows giving the subject more power.
Although, Inform in Catalan language, is that which has no form, Jiménez-Balaguer chooses to investigate the second meaning of the word. As all words, ‘inform’ is not a univocal concept but a polysemous one. ‘Inform’ is also an exhaustive and organized exposition regarding a topic.
Therefore, according to Jiménez-Balaguer, Informal is telling information that still has no form, and Informalism is the science of the formation of the meaning. Informalism becomes, from this perspective, the artistic current that visualizes the space where significance is built.
In Defense of Subjectivity
His work demonstrates a deep respect for vulnerability. It is constructed as a critique against contemporary society that produces the destruction of subjectivity. During these years, Jiménez-Balaguer concerns himself with the power of painting as force.
He thinks that the informalist image bears witness to a semiotic pre-symbolic memory.
It is during this time that he frees himself from the destruction of the 50’s and the scratchings of postwar Informalism, in order to step into the 21st century.
As such, after the amputations, the fragmentation of the image, the details of the wound, the assimilation of negativity and violence exercised against the matter of the Self, there is the human psyche that is capable of reconstructing itself.
Jiménez-Balaguer focuses his art on the transformation of violence into Form.
Constitution of a universal language of the Self
During the 1960s, Jiménez-Balaguer and his wife María Teresa Andreu (Mery) relocate to Paris and establish themselves in the intellectual milieu. They have four children, Cristian, Virginie, Valérie and Eric. He meets the Parisian jeweler, Jean Vendome.
In 1961, he is introduced to Antoni Clavé and Stephen Spender from Gallery Saint-Germain. From then on and for the next twenty years, he develops a language of signs able to communicate the universal language of the Self.
As such, it is a deconstruction of the idea that a private language cannot be understood by another.
For Jiménez-Balaguer, the Inner has as a destiny: universal communication. In 1986, he meets Michel Tapié, the originator of the concept ‘Art Autre’ and he is introduced to Rodolphe Stadler.
From 1988 onward, he introduces a series of objects of the world in order to express the inward. His paintings become an enunciation with branches, ropes, cloth, grids, and nails.
Painting as interface
Jiménez-Balaguer’s work gains the approbation and support of Pierre Restany and is introduced to Joan Hernández-Pijuan at the Galeria Calart Actual in Geneva.
From 1990, Laurent Jiménez-Balaguer devises the first system of signs for a universal language of the Inner. Each painting becomes the space for the visualization of the universal language of the Self from which the construction of the subject is confirmed.
His work questions the classic attributes of the subject: time, acquired memory, and suffering. His works enquire on such elements.
In 2000, he begins his philosophical dialogues with Alexis Virginie Jimenez on Catalan Art and Informalism; together, they create the artistic movement known as New Informalism. The movement begins in the year 2000 in his studio in Chevry II, in Gif sur Yvettes.
The theoretical base is related to the New Cultural studies. Alexis Virginie Jimenez’s art videos, ‘Interventions’, are taped there.
Jiménez-Balaguer’s work shares certain core values intrinsic to the field of Cultural studies and the theoretical struggle of intellectuals such as Julia Kristeva, Jacques Derrida, Gilles Deleuze, Jacques Lacan, Michel Foucault, Alexis Virginie Jimenez, Judith Butler.
The artist questions what to do with the cardinal points of Western metaphysics and how to interpret a new vision of the human identity.
Artwork : Universal graphic lexico
The ropes: symbolize the ties that unite the invisible Inner of man to the universal Totality. ‘The rope is an emblematic material of the road that brings the artist to the territory of Informalism’s Art Autre.’
Blue branches: symbol of the wanderings of the soul and its realization in a unitarian form.
The knots: these are psycho-noetic strokes of subjective elaboration.
See also
Individual exhibitions
Cicle Invasions Subtils amb Laurent Jiménez-Balaguer, Fundació Espai Guinovart, Agramunt - CATALONIA - SPAIN
L’Emergència del Signe, Museo Can Framis, Fundació Vila Casas, Barcelona - CATALONIA - SPAIN
"El Cos d’una memòria", Galeria Art Vall, Andorra la Vella - ANDORRA
"Le Nœud", Galerie Saint Cyr, Rouen - FRANCE
"Cuerpo de una memoria", Galeria Calart Actual, Segovia - SPAIN
"L'au-delà du miroir", Galerie Guislain-États d'Art, Paris - FRANCE
"Œuvres de 1960 à 1962" et "Souvenirs enfouis", Rétrospective, Galerie Guislain-États d'Art, Paris - FRANCE
"Traces d'une mémoire", Centre d'Études Catalanes, Paris - FRANCE
"Exposition", Galerie Guislain-États d'Art, Paris - FRANCE
"2000 ans de quoi ?", Galerie Lina Davidov, Paris - FRANCE
"2000 ans de quoi ?", Grand Théâtre d’Angers, Angers - FRANCE
"Dedans/Dehors", La Corderie Royale, Rochefort - FRANCE
MPT Courdimanche, Les Ulis - FRANCE
"Images d'une mémoire", Les Cordeliers, Châteauroux - FRANCE
Galerie Lina Davidov, Paris - FRANCE
Galerie Finartis, Zug - SWITZERLAND
Galerie Calart, Genève - SWITZERLAND
Galerie Rami, Zurich - SWITZERLAND
Galerie Lina Davidov, Paris - FRANCE
Galerie Adriana Schmidt, Cologne - GERMANY
Galerie Lina Davidov, Paris - FRANCE
Galerie Adriana Schmidt, Stuttgart - GERMANY
Centre d'Art Contemporain, Corbeil-Essonnes - FRANCE
Galerie Claude Samuel, Paris - FRANCE
Galerie Rami, Zurich - SWITZERLAND
Galerie Calart, Genève - SWITZERLAND
Galerie Claude Samuel, Paris - FRANCE
"Réalité autre", Galerie Claude Samuel, Paris - FRANCE
Paris Art Center, Paris - FRANCE
Grand Orient de France, Paris - FRANCE
International Arts Gallery, Chicago – UNITED STATES
Galerie Vienner, Paris - FRANCE
Galerie Vienner, Paris - FRANCE
Musée Napoléonien, Antibes-Golfe-Juan - FRANCE
Galerie Vienner, Paris - FRANCE
Réalisation de huit grandes créations murales pour le Centre Hospitalier de Creil, Creil - FRANCE
Dayton's Gallery 12, Minneapolis - UNITED STATES
Joachim Gallery, Chicago - UNITED STATES
Galerie Saint-Germain, Paris - FRANCE
Savage Gallery, London - UNITED KINGDOM
Galerie Toulouse, Copenhagen - DENMARK
Galerie J.C. de Chaudun, Paris - FRANCE
Galerie Mistral, Brussels - BELGIUM
Centre Culturel et Artistique d'Uccle, Brussels - BELGIUM
Club Universitari de València, Valencia - SPAIN
Galeria d'Art Jaimes, Barcelona - CATALONIA - SPAIN
Galeria Clan, Madrid - SPAIN
Galeria d'Art Quint, Palma de Mallorca - Balearic Islands - SPAIN
"Ciclo Experimental d’Art Nou", Galeries Jardin, Barcelona - CATALONIA - SPAIN
Casino de Ripoll, Ripoll - SPAIN
Galeries Laietanes, Barcelona - CATALONIA - SPAIN
Galeria Sur, Santander - SPAIN