Thursday, March 12, 2020

Artist of the day, March 12, 2020: Carmen Herrera, a Cuban-American abstract, minimalist visual artist and painter

Carmen Herrera (1915) is a Cuban-American abstract, minimalist visual artist and painter. She was born in Havana and has lived in New York City since the mid-1950s. Herrera's abstract works have brought her international recognition late in life. She will turn 105 in May 2020.

Herrera was raised by intellectual parents in Havana. She took art lessons when she was young, and as a teenager, she was sent to Paris to further her studies. Upon her return to Cuba, she made sculptures of wood and later began studying for an architecture degree at the University of Havana, though the tumultuous political situation in the country following Fulgencio Batista’s seizure of power prevented her from finishing. She relocated in 1939 to New York City, where she pursued mostly figurative painting at the Art Students League and struck up friendships with other artists, including Barnett Newman.

Only after returning to Paris in 1948, however, did Herrera fully develop her artistic identity, finding inspiration from the Salon des Réalités Nouvelles (“Salon of New Realities”), a group of artists who mounted an annual exhibition featuring abstract, mostly nonrepresentational work by figures such as Josef Albers and Jean Arp. Reducing her formal vocabulary to its essential elements, Herrera started creating paintings in which boldly colored, sharply defined geometric shapes predominated, and she exhibited this new work through the salon in 1949–52.

In 1954 Herrera settled permanently in New York City. Though she continued to produce strong work throughout the 1950s, particularly the beginning of a series of stark black-and-white paintings, she failed to attain the same recognition accorded her peers. The prejudices some gallery owners held against women and Latin American artists put her at a disadvantage, as did the fact that her work—some of which prefigured the later trends of Op art and hard-edged Minimalism—was out of step with the period’s fashion for Abstract Expressionism. Moreover, Herrera herself cared little for fame during this time.

Herrera continued her precise chromatic explorations in the 1960s and ’70s in works. She also demonstrated an interest in pushing beyond painting’s traditional structural limitations. Since her days in Paris, she had experimented with nonrectangular canvases, and she played with dimensionality in works such as Amarillo (1971), painted on four-inch plywood.

In 1984, after years of exhibiting only sporadically, Herrera received her first retrospective. Still, she did not sell a single painting until two decades later when, at age 89, she was included in a show of women geometric painters at New York City’s Latincollector Gallery. From then on, her art-world stock skyrocketed. Her works were acquired for the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington, D.C., and Tate Modern in London, and she won accolades for several solo exhibitions. Following the success of a traveling retrospective in Europe, “Carmen Herrera: Recent Works” opened at Frederico Sève Gallery/Latincollector in 2010. A 29-minute documentary on Herrera, The 100 Years Show by Alison Klayman, was released in 2015.

© 2020. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Carmen Herrera. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only


Ms. Carmen Herrera

1949, Iberic
1949, Red Star
1949, Shocking Pink
1952, Black and White
1952, Untitled
1956, Green and White
1958, Equation
1958, Tondo 3 Colors
1958,. Green and Orange
1961, Red with White Triangle
1964, Blue with White Line
1965, Irlanda
1966-2012, Estructura Roja
1971, Amarillo “Dos”
1971, Amarillo
1971, Untitled
1978, Wednesday
1984, Blue with Orange
1987, Yesterday
1989, Orange & Red
1993, Red-Blue
1995, Verde y negro
2006, Rara Avis
2009, Encounter
2012, Untitled
2014, Alba
2015, Costa del Sol
2017, Equilibrio
2017, Untitled from Verde y Negro

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