2col 04 Studio with 3 Doors…
2col 04 Studio with 3 Doorsâ¦
Antonio Lopez Garcia (Spanish, b 1936), âStudio With Three Doors,â 1969â70, pencil on paper, Fundación Pivada Sorigué-Lleida, Spain. â©Francisco Fernández, Unidad Móvil photo; photograph courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
 1 cut sent e-m 3-19
For 4/11
ANTONIO LOPEZ GARCIA DEBUTS APRIL 20 AT MFA, BOSTON W/1CUT
AVV/CD #732782
BOSTON, MASS â The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA), will present the first retrospective at an American museum of the works of contemporary Spanish artist Antonio Lopez Garcia in an exhibition on view April 13âJuly 27. âAntonio Lopez Garciaâ will feature approximately 55 paintings, drawings and sculpture by the celebrated artist of the realist school, including nine works from the MFAâs collection and loans from European and American museums and private collections
The exhibition will complement the major Spanish exhibition, âEl Greco to Velazquez: Art during the Reign of Philip III,â which debuts at the museum April 20âJuly 27.
âAntonio Lopez Garciaâ will highlight the artistâs career from 1955 to the present. The familiar and ordinary of Lopezâs world â the classical themes of landscape, still life, and figure realized through the close examination of his immediate surroundings â comprise this renowned artistâs subject.
With painstaking detail and profound adherence to observation, Lopez creates a faithful representation of his humble motifs. His strict dependence upon the truth of his subjects has become legendary â sculptures and paintings have sometimes taken him years to complete â which accounts for the often lengthy creative process for which he is known. The exhibition is sponsored by United Technologies Corporation.
âAntonio Lopez Garcia is considered a national treasure in his native Spain. We are proud to bring the extraordinary works of this contemporary realist and visionary to American audiences,â said Malcolm Rogers, Ann and Graham Gund director of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
âAntonio Lopez Garciaâ will present the artistâs work in three major groupings: Landscape, Still Life, and Figure.
In articulating his vision of Madrid, Lopez has chosen throughout his career to paint and draw the city from a variety of distinct views. âThe North of Madrid from âLa Maliciosa,ââ 1963â64, JP Morgan Chase, New York, is a daunting panoramic view observed from the distance, of a notable spot in the Guadarrama Mountains near Madrid. In contrast in âSouth Madridâ 1965-85, Masaveu Foundation, Oviedo, Spain, the artistâs first attempt at painting urban Madrid.
Through intense observation, Lopez engages Madrid, as in his more recent painting, âMadrid as Seen from the Fire Tower of Vallecas,â 1997â2006, Madrid Assembly. Typically on view at the Madrid Assembly in the cityâs Vallecas district, it has never been lent prior to this exhibition.
Lopezâs vision provokes the viewer to consider even the simplest subject matter with newfound significance. In âSink and Mirror,â 1967, MFA, Boston, the tangible display of personal effects draws in the observer, creating an intimate display and self portrait.
Perhaps only the artistâs face is missing in Lopezâs close study of his family throughout his career. âMaria,â 1972, private collection, noteworthy for its realism, is a pencil drawing of the artistâs oldest daughter at the age of 10. But it is in sculpture that he has most often represented the human figure. From his earliest reliefs in painted wood of mysterious narratives, to the essence of his young daughter, life size, in the polychrome wood sculpture âMaria Standing,â 1964, private collection, sculpture plays a prominent role in the artistâs work.
The museum is at 465 Huntington Avenue. For information, www.mfa.org or 617-267-9300.