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Alberto Heredia.
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Year: 1981 Publisher: Buenos Aires : Center of art and communication,

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Heredia, Alberto


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Alberto Heredia : esculturas y dibujos 1970/1984.
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Year: 1984 Publisher: Buenos Aires : Fundacion San Telmo,

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Heredia, Alberto

Blood lines : myth, indigenism, and Chicana/o literature
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ISBN: 0292794053 0292717962 0292717970 Year: 2008 Publisher: Austin : University of Texas Press,

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Blood Lines: Myth, Indigenism, and Chicana/o Literature examines a broad array of texts that have contributed to the formation of an indigenous strand of Chicano cultural politics. In particular, this book exposes the ethnographic and poetic discourses that shaped the aesthetics and stylistics of Chicano nationalism and Chicana feminism. Contreras offers original perspectives on writers ranging from Alurista and Gloria Anzaldúa to Lorna Dee Cervantes and Alma Luz Villanueva, effectively marking the invocation of a Chicano indigeneity whose foundations and formulations can be linked to U.S. and British modernist writing. By highlighting intertextualities such as those between Anzaldúa and D. H. Lawrence, Contreras critiques the resilience of primitivism in the Mexican borderlands. She questions established cultural perspectives on "the native," which paradoxically challenge and reaffirm racialized representations of Indians in the Americas. In doing so, Blood Lines brings a new understanding to the contradictory and richly textured literary relationship that links the projects of European modernism and Anglo-American authors, on the one hand, and the imaginary of the post-revolutionary Mexican state and Chicano/a writers, on the other hand.


Book
Escultura II. Bedel, Distéfano, Gerstein, Gomez, Heras Velasco, Heredia, Iommi, Marotta, Minujin, Pacenza, Paparella, Portillos, Sabelli, Wells
Author:
Year: 1982 Publisher: Buenos Aires Galeria de Arte


Book
Art in Argentina.
Author:
Year: 1986 Publisher: Milano : Giancarlo Politi Editore,


Book
Gran Premio de Pintura y Escultura/ Great Award of Painting and Sculpture, Premio Jovenes Pintores y Escultores/ Award Junior Painters and Sculptors
Author:
Year: 1986 Publisher: Buenos Aires Fundacion Alfredo Fortabat y Amalia Lacroze de Fortabat


Book
The 2nd Henry Moore Grand Prize Exhibition [1981]
Year: 1981 Publisher: Hakone The Hakone Open-Air Museum

Inverted Utopias : avant-garde art in Latin America
Authors: --- ---
ISBN: 0300102690 Year: 2004 Publisher: New Haven Yale University Press

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Inverted Utopias is the first exhibition in the United States devoted to the brilliant, innovative contributions of Latin American artists to the phenomenon that became the 20th-century avant-garde.The exhibition spans the decades 1920 to 1970, bringing together more than 200 works by 67 artists from Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Mexico, Puerto Rico, Uruguay, and Venezuela. The presentation integrates outstanding examples of the visual arts (painting, sculpture, assemblage, mixed media, installation, and performance) with printed materials (books, manifestos, and reviews).&#13;&#13;The works on view are presented in dialogue with two distinctive periods of the 20th century. In the first—comprising the decades 1920 to 1940—artists who were considered the pioneers of the Latin American avant-garde returned from Europe, where they had taken part in cutting-edge movements such as Cubism, Futurism, and Constructivism. Having assimilated these trends into highly innovative ideas that set new standards for artistic creation in Latin America, these forerunners sought to make real the promise of a “new art” for societies undergoing the initial stages of modernization. The second period—the decades 1950 to 1970—witnessed the expansion of avant-garde activities throughout the region as well as the autonomy from contemporary developments in Europe and the United States. &#13;The exhibition is organized according to the following six constellations: Universal and Vernacular; Play and Grief; Progression and Rupture; Vibrational and Stationary; Touch and Gaze; and Cryptic and Committed. &#13;&#13;&#13;&#13;Universal and Vernacular - This section addresses the paradoxical desire for a type of art rooted in the vernacular, yet imbued with universal appeal. Artists in this constellation—including David Alfaro Siqueiros (1896-1974), Xul Solar (1887-1963), Joaquín Torres-García, Gonzalo Fonseca (1922-1997), Francisco Matto (1911-1995), and Eduardo Abela (1889-1965)—combine the recovery of native, colonial, and folk art elements with the innovative artistic vocabulary of avant-garde movements such as Cubism, Expressionism, and Constructivism. Some of the issues addressed by these artists are the emergence of a New World artistic consciousness, the exaltation of their origins—whether indigenous, mestizo, black, or mulatto—and the attempt to create a universal means of artistic communication out of codified symbols. This constellation will introduce United States audiences to the little known work of the Brazilian Vicente do Rego Monteiro (1899-1970) as well as the Cubans Eduardo Abela and Carlos Enríquez (1900-1957). &#13;&#13;&#13;Play and Grief - Play and Grief brings together artists who reject the formalism of art-for-art´s sake in favor of an open denunciation of social and political injustice. What distinguishes this body of work is its rejection of traditional artistic formats—such as painting and sculpture—in favor of openly unconventional techniques and materials. Works by José Clemente Orozco (1883-1949), Antonio Berni (1905-1981), Jorge de la Vega (1930-1971), Rubén Santantonin (1919-1969), Alberto Heredia (1924-2000), and Carlos Raquel Rivera (born 1923), among others, engage these ideas through parody and allegory, being also irreverent of social conventions and religious myths. Additionally, all of the artists included in this constellation combine traditional artistic genres and stylistic conventions in ways that yield interesting crossings between painting and sculpture, collage and assemblage, everyday objects and fine art. The work of unabashedly critical women artists such as Débora Arango (born 1910)—whose work is being shown for the first time in the United States—and Beatriz González (born 1938) is noteworthy for its early incrimination of violence (Arango) and its outright mockery of artistic genres (González). &#13;&#13;&#13;&#13;Progression and Rupture - Artists from the Southern Cone region (Chile, Argentina, Uruguay, Southern Brazil) who engaged early on in geometric abstraction and constructivism are featured in this constellation. The utopian dimension of these works is centered on the universal appeal of such notions as structure, order, synthesis, and a will for totality. The attempt to imbue geometry with a vital dimension that incorporates the viewer´s active participation of the work was a distinguishing feature of these artists´ approach that both confronts and extends the legacy of Constructivism into an unexplored dimension. Proceeding from the pioneering work of Joaquín Torres-García and Lucio Fontana (1899-1968), the selection highlights the paradigmatic role played by the artist-theoreticians of the Argentinean Madí movement [Gyula Kosice (born 1924), Rhod Rothfuss (1920-1969) and Carmelo Arden Quin (born 1913)], as well as the Brazilian ruptura [Waldemar Cordeiro (1925-1973), Luis Sacilotto (1923-2003)] and Neo-concrete groups [Hélio Oiticica (1937-1980), Lygia Clark (1920-1988), Willys de Castro (1926-1988), Hércules Barsotti (born 1914)]. &#13;&#13;&#13;&#13;Vibrational and Stationary - The attempt to resolve the dilemma between movement and stasis that characterized Western art from its inception is the topic of this constellation that brings together artists working toward the utopian goal of producing an art of pure movement. Artists as disparate as David Alfaro Siqueiros, Antonio Berni, Jesús Rafael Soto (born 1923), Alejandro Otero (1921-1990) and Carlos Cruz-Diez (born 1923) engaged the complex legacies of Futurism and Constructivism and updated other dynamic and kinetic trends from a New World perspective. The originality of their achievements range from Siqueiros´ cinematographic murals, to the serial progressions of Soto, the methodical rhythmicolors of Otero, and the physichromatic vibrations of Cruz-Diez. Gego (1912-1994) is shown for the first time in this context as a critical counterpoint of the well-known narrative of Venezuelan Cinetismo. &#13;&#13;&#13;&#13;Touch and Gaze - The utopia of a unique art grounded in the combined sensorial experiences of vision and touch interrelates this constellation. Each of the works gathered here illuminates both the optical and the tactile dimensions of human experience. This comparative ensemble ranges from the de-materialized perception of light evident in Armando Reverón´s (1889-1954) white paintings, to the sensorial synthesis of Soto, Lucio Fontana, and Sérgio Camargo (1930-1990), Gego´s spatialized drawing, Lygia Clark´s and Hélio Oiticica´s "haptic gaze", passing through the mobile optics of Julio Le Parc (born 1928), the light-and-water experiences of Gyula Kosice, and culminating in the sensuous color-bath of Cruz-Diez´s chromosaturations. &#13;&#13;&#13;&#13;Cryptic and Committed -Artists working in the politically repressive countries of Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay, and Chile in the 1960s and 1970s devised highly original conceptual strategies in response to the authoritarian climate of the time. In fact, the practices of artists such as Cildo Meireles (born 1948), Oiticica and Clark, Alberto Greco, León Ferrari, Arte de los Medios, and the Tucumán Arde collective constitute one of the most outstanding chapters of the avant-garde in Latin America. In the last decade, the significance of their contribution has attracted the attention of art historians and critics from all over the world.


Book
Guía Rápida del Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes
Authors: --- --- --- --- --- et al.
Year: 1996 Publisher: Buenos Aires MNBA, Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes

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Art --- Painting --- painting [image-making] --- Tàpies, Antoni --- Saura, Antonio --- Xul Solar, Alejandro --- Victorica, Miguel Carlos --- Forner, Raquel --- Bouguereau, Adolphe William --- Chirico, de, Giorgio --- Dongen, van, Kees --- Rivera, Diego --- Sisley, Alfred --- Friesz, Othon --- Vlaminck, de, Maurice --- Dubuffet, Jean --- Picasso, Pablo --- Bourdelle, Antoine --- Fontana, Lucio --- Morandi, Giorgio --- Rothko, Mark --- Prete, Del, Juan --- Dompé, Hernán --- Fader, Fernando --- Figari, Pedro --- Léger, Fernand --- Guttero, Alfredo --- Hlito, Alfredo --- Lozza, Raúl --- Malharro, Martín --- Curatella Manès, Pablo --- Nicholson, Ben --- Gogh, van, Vincent --- Pollock, Jackson --- Morel, Carlos --- Alechinsky, Pierre --- Pueyrredón, Prilidiano --- Klee, Paul --- Sívori, Eduardo --- Spilimbergo, Lino Enea --- Thibon de Libian, Valentín --- Yrurtia, Rogelio --- Kline, Franz --- Torres García, Joaquín --- Manet, Edouard --- Kandinsky, Wassily --- Gauguin, Paul --- Toulouse-Lautrec, de, Henri --- Modigliani, Amedeo --- Carrà, Carlo --- Degas, Edgar --- Goya y Lucientes, de, Francisco José --- Corot, Camille --- Rodin, Auguste --- Testa, Clorindo --- Chagall, Marc --- Rouault, Georges --- Monet, Claude --- Benedit, Luis Fernando --- Courbet, Gustave --- Nevelson, Louise --- Segui, Antonio --- Pissarro, Camille Jacob --- Berni, Antonio --- Distéfano, Juan Carlos --- Heredia, Alberto --- Iommi, Enio --- Kuitca, Guillermo --- López, Cándido --- Maccio, Romulo --- Minujin, Marta --- Noé, Luis Felipe --- Vega, de la, Jorge --- Vuillard, Edouard --- Portinari, Cândido --- Pettoruti, Emilio --- Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes [Buenos Aires] --- anno 1800-1899 --- anno 1900-1999 --- Argentina

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