Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Vicente Grondona

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Vicente Grondona


Vicente Grondona Vicente Grondonas most recent Flickr photos Picssr

HSBC y ArteBA presentan: Vicente Grondona, #ElPaisaje


Vicente Grondona (born 4 January 1977, Buenos Aires) is an Argentinian artist born during the post-dictatorship period.

The Argentinian artist trained at the School of Fine Arts Prilidiano Pueyrredon between 1996–2001, where he specialized in sculpture. He is best known for his charcoal carvings including his iconic kiss series, one of which was purchased by Peruvian fashion photographer Mario Testino. He also creates charcoal drawings on silk and cotton of gigantic visages, whose dense ornamentation resembles the sophistication and elegance of French painter Alexandre-Évariste Fragonard.

Grondona's artistic production draws attention not only to past masters, but also to contemporary issues that lie at the core of our current society. Post-colonial ideologies can be perceived on one of his most striking sculptures, Human Library, previously exhibited in Paris and Argentina. Human Library consists of a bookshelf made out of charcoal from the Chaco Province, north of Argentina. The Argentinian art critic, Claudio Iglesias, argues the way in which Vicente's bookshelf stands as a synonym for colonisation, establishing an awkward relation between binary oppositions. The coloniser, represented by books on English literature such as Mary Shelley's gothic novel, Frankenstein, become a display of humanist knowledge where ideas of romance, nature and horror are contrasted to the portrait of the noble savage. This collection of memories and experiences reveals how the acquisition and accumulation of knowledge and goods depended directly on the exploitation of the primitive. The colonised is symbolically represented by charcoal, highlighting the vulnerability of non-western countries including the material constraints experienced by contemporary artists in Latin American cities like Buenos Aires. It is worth mentioning that the work of Grondona also points out to an ecological disaster taking place in areas such as the Amazon where deforestation has become an environmental issue that threatens the ecological balance of our planet and requires serious consideration by political organizations. By using quebracho, a tree species that grows in the Gran Chaco region of South America Vicente manages to raise cultural a social awareness to this problem.

By contrast, his drawings portray the refinement associated with eighteenth-century French culture, and this is reflected on some of his drawings by the figure's tall, ribboned hairstyles. This can be contrasted, at the same time, by the overall primitive style of his drawings where a hint of Mayan sensibility is perceived. Once again the Argentinean artist plays with binary oppositions creating a balance between primitive civilisations and surrealism, psychedelia and the naiveness that so well characterises his work. A Brancusian legacy is also found on Grondona's charcoal bookshelf. Vicente also references the Romanian sculptor's modernist style in his other charcoal carvings such as the kiss series, where the Argentinian artist, like Brâncuși, represents ideal union in a single mineral block of figurative simplicity.

Vicente Grondona has performed solo and group shows in Argentina, Europe and The United States including MALBA, the Latin-American Museum of Art, CC Borges, CC Recoleta, Braga Menendez Gallery, ArteBA Fair (Buenos Aires); JTM Gallery, Pavilion Argentine, Art Metz (France); Fernelmont Contemporary (Belgium); Miart, (Milan); VVV gallery (Madrid); Hogar Collection Gallery & Argentine Consulate (New York). Vicente's days are spent alternating between Argentina and France, where he currently works with the Alberto Sendros Gallery in Buenos Aires the JTM Gallery in Paris.

References

Vicente Grondona Wikipedia


Similar Topics