Carlos Alfonzo, Trail, 1985
acrylic on canvas, 103 x 112 inches
Carlos Alfonzo, Artist and The Genie, 1988
acrylic on canvas, 96 x 72 inches
Carlos Alfonzo, Petty Joy, 1984
acrylic on canvas tarp, 72 x 96 inches
LnS GALLERY presents
Carlos Alfonzo: Witnessing Perpetuity
February 15 – April 18, 2020
OPENING RECEPTION | Saturday, February 15th | 6:00-9:00pm
LnS GALLERY continues its third Season of the Arts with Carlos Alfonzo: Witnessing Perpetuity. Collaborative research and a strong community-based passion for the work of Alfonzo – an important historical creative pioneer and key contributor to Miami’s role as a center of artistic force – have realized an exhibition that embodies a comprehensive chronology of artistic evolution in works that span the artist’s oeuvre from 1976-1990. The 5,000 square foot gallery space is dedicated in its entirety to the exhibition, aligning to commemorate what would have been the year of Alfonzo’s seventieth birthday.
A 78-page hardcover catalog including an essay by Julia P. Herzberg, Ph.D., expert on the artist, accompanies the exhibition, which features works that have been handled by LnS GALLERY, alongside a number of works on loan that are considered essential to honoring the artist’s life, his scope of work, and his mark on a formative time in the history of Miami.
A prodigious artistic talent was delivered upon the shores of the Americas when, in July of 1980, Carlos Alfonzo left Cuba in exile through the port of Mariel and arrived in Miami. At an early age, Alfonzo’s raw creative talent became apparent, an endowment he began to cultivate through formal artistic studies at the prestigious San Alejandro Academy and at the University of Havana from 1969 to 1977. As a young man living and working within the Cuban communist system, cautiously navigating the personal and artistic repressions of post-revolutionary life, Carlos Alfonzo became disenchanted with the Cuban government, and sought freedom from the limitations he faced under the regime’s restrictive climate. Paradoxically, Alfonzo made the decision to leave Cuba just eight months before the opening of the pivotal Volumen 1 (Volume 1) exhibition that heralded a new international direction in contemporary Cuban art, and where Alfonzo was slated to exhibit among those who would later become known as the “1980s generation.” With hopes of finally living an open life as individual and artist, he endured a traumatic crossing via the Mariel boatlift to settle in Miami.
Alfonzo’s style developed significantly and his career as an artist matured during a period in which neo-expressionist figurative art came to renewed global attention. As he was exposed to great works of modernist and contemporary art in America, he internalized a variety of styles – cubist, surrealist, expressionistic, and abstract expressionist – and adapted them to his free-flowing expression, resulting in a style discernibly his own. A magical body of work emanated, which combined intense autobiographical experience with cross-cultural mythologies laden with penetrative, intimate messaging that recounts the soul and struggle of the artist’s life experience through a stark, resonant system of forms. Alfonzo employed the spiritual iconography of African deities, Catholicism, and the ritualistic emblems of Santería in heads, disembodied facial features, daggers, and arrows to hauntingly convey eternal paradoxes of the human condition and the unconscious, an impression recognized by the leading art critics of the era. Carlos Alfonzo emerged not simply as a Cuban artist, but rather as a celebrated artist of the Americas.
In the essay accompanying Carlos Alfonzo: Witnessing Perpetuity, Julia P. Herzberg, Ph.D., observes the trajectory of the artist’s development: “The artist began to work in a slightly larger scale than he had in Cuba while retaining the graphic marks and using a limited color palette, as noted in earlier work. The motif of the head predominates; the composition divides into a box-like or grid structure that features pictographic markings, recalling Adolf Gottlieb’s mid-1940s works… Alfonzo had his own subjective story, one that viewers will decipher. The artist has said that he was not interested in narrative or anecdote. Rather, his interests lie in expressing a poetic, mysterious quality even though there are [at times] specific themes he unwinds.”
During his lifetime, Carlos Alfonzo realized notable achievements including a Visual Artist Fellowship in Painting from the National Endowment of the Arts in Washington D.C. and a CINTAS Fellowship in the Visual Arts. When the artist’s life was tragically claimed by an AIDS-related illness at the young age of 40, he had just been selected as one of “Ten Artists to Watch in the 1990s” by ARTnews magazine. In the spring of 1991, just one month after his death, a number of his paintings were exhibited in the renowned Whitney Biennial of Contemporary American Art in New York. His work has been exhibited in solo and group shows on a national and international scale, including the retrospective at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., the exhibition entitled Hispanic Art in the United States which traveled to seven prominent American institutions, and the 41st Biennial Exhibition of Contemporary American Painting at the Corcoran Gallery of Art. Today, his work forms part of the permanent collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, and numerous institutions of worldwide prominence.
Recent years have seen major developments for the artist and his work: Told, (1990) by Alfonzo was exhibited in Fast Forward Painting of the 1980s at the Whitney Museum of American Art, and was featured as one of the highlighted works in leading art critic Roberta Smith’s New York Times review of the show. A Tongue to Utter and Ballerinas have been rejoined more than 25 years after being initially displayed together at the Lannan Museum in 1989; this mise en scène is now on prominent view at the Lowe Art Museum in Coral Gables, FL. Carlos Alfonzo was also included in the historic exhibition About Face: Stonewall, Revolt and New Queer Art, curated by Jonathan David Katz at WRIGHTWOOD 659 in Chicago, Illinois, marking the 50th Anniversary of the Stonewall Riots and the events leading to the LGBTQ liberation movement. Alfonzo’s work was featured in Where the Oceans Meet at MOAD – Freedom Tower, curated by Hans Ulrich Obrist, Asad Raza, Gabriela Rangel, and Rina Carvajal, organized by MOAD and Americas Society. Additionally, Alfonzo was the subject of a three-artist show at the Sheldon Museum of Art in Lincoln, Nebraska, entitled Unquiet Harmony: The Subject of Displacement, organized by Director and Chief Curator, Wally Mason. The increasing interest for the artist is evidenced by these exhibitions and the steadily strengthening valuation of the artist’s market.
EXHIBITION ON VIEW
February 15 – April 18, 2020
OPENING RECEPTION
Saturday, February 15, 2020
6:00-9:00pm
ESSAYIST JULIA P. HERZBERG’S TALK ON CARLOS ALFONZO
Tuesday, February 18, 2020
Begins promptly at 6:30pm
Seating is limited. RSVP required.
Please RSVP to info@oldsite.lnsgallery.com.