Exhibition

Juan Genovés

29 Oct 2009 – 28 Nov 2009

Regular hours

Thursday
10:00 – 17:30
Friday
10:00 – 17:30
Saturday
10:00 – 16:00
by appointment
Monday
10:00 – 17:30
Tuesday
10:00 – 17:30
Wednesday
10:00 – 17:30

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Marlborough

London, United Kingdom

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  • Green Park
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About

The Directors of Marlborough Fine Art are pleased to announce the first London exhibition in over 40 years by the Spanish artist Juan Genovés of 15 new paintings that will open at Marlborough Fine Art, London on October 29. Born in Valencia in 1930, Genovés has been exhibiting with Marlborough worldwide since 1964. This exhibition continues Genovés' exploration of people in groups, depicted through bird's-eye views of crowds where the absence of buildings, roads, trees or clues to a common landscape creates a dynamic of intensity and dislocation. The motiva­tions for the groups' activities are never clear, as Genovés allows the viewer to draw his own conclusions. Genovés' body of work is devoted to the subject of political engagement, developing his genre amidst the iso­lated world of Franco's Spain. He was influenced by modern photography and cinema, especially the work of Sergei Eisenstein. Genovés' highly painterly style, though seemingly contradictory, worked well to depict the anxiety, fear and desperation that people in society experi­enced during the Fascist regime. His painting El Abrazo, created near the end of Franco's regime, just before his death, came to symbolize the desire of most Spaniards for a reconciliation of people in society and the end of the fight between democ­racy and totalitarianism. When images of this work circulated as a protest poster, Genovés was detained and held in solitary confinement for seven days. Since Franco's death, Genovés' work is still engaged with the movement and action of crowds, though while one has the feeling that the subjects in his paintings experience great anxiety, the threat of imminent violence has been removed.

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