Entrevista A Claudio Bravo.
Entrevista A Claudio Bravo.
Entrevista A Claudio Bravo.
CLAUDIO BRAVO:
Perceiving the Seen
Fosburgh. B. A. 1933.
6
the New Realism of the 1960s (especially in New York)
as "cool. clean. distanced from the self:' 3 Bravo's
work. however. displays few of these characteristics.
There are. in fact. virtually no links between Bravo
and the American New Realists o f the 1960s and 70s.
He paints none of the mundane aspects of urban life
that so fascinated the American Photo Realists such
as store fronts. cars or shelves of merchandise. and
he never works from photographs. Although he has
spent long periods of time in New York. he has been
little effected by the latest developments in American
painting. This is not to say that no American artists
have inspired him. In his wrapped package pictures.
for example. as well as in his paintings of folded
paper. the work of Mark Rothko and the color field
painters like Jules Olitski and Ellsworth Kelly did play
a certain role. Other critics. like William Dykes. have
described Bravo's art as a part of the New Spanish
Realist movement that includes Antonio LopezGarcia. Isabel Quintanilla. Julio L. Hernandez and
Daniel Ouintero. 4 While there are indeed more points
of contact between Bravo and these painters. there is
still much that separates his work from theirs. The
pervasive romantic melancholy of the Madrid group.
their deserted streets. empty bathrooms or depictions of dead animals on plates are all far from the
aesthetic of Bravo in whose painti ngs a contemplative mood is achieved through concentration on
clarity and purity. Sometimes these qualities can be
mistaken for preciosity. Bravo has stated that he conceives o f himself as an "aesthetic" artist. one who
chooses objects. places and people that are pleasing
to look at and express his ideals of beauty and universal harmony. His work is saved from gratuitous
prettiness. however. by the intensity of the presences
he creates.
The objects in Bravo's art appeal to us as extraordinary studies o f form and texture. whose significance goes beyond their outward appearance. This
meaning is at times difficult to grasp. There is. more
often than not. a sense of the bizarre or the surreal
in his paintings. pastels and pencil sketches. Indeed.
Surrealism. or at least a surrealist-related mode of
perception lurks just beneath the surface of many
of his images. I do not think that his overtly surreal
imaginings. like some o f his quasi-religious composi-
S4
J
1 (' 4
<'01
Fig. 2 Claudio Bravo. Three Young Girls. 1963. Spain. private collection (photograph courtesy Staemprli Gallery. New York).
Fig. 3 Claudio Bravo. The Dwarf. 1979. New York. Staempfli Gallery
(photograph courtesy Staemprli Gallery. New York).
7
become an important name in Surrealism. Since
there were few museums in Chile at that time. almost
the only exposure that Bravo had to art. outside his
teacher's studio. was by means of reproductions.
Through these he developed a taste for Renaissance
and Baroque art that he would see in European
museums where he would feel totally at ease. From
1961 to 1972. he lived in Madrid. This was during the
years of Franco's dictatorship. when. although several
significant galleries were operating there. Madrid was
hardly in the forefront of the European avant-garde.
Spain was still fairly isolated from the rest o f Europe
in terms of the current events in culture. Bravo's next
move was to a place even further from the centers of
the art world. In 1972. he went to Morocco where he
remains today. In his house in '!angier he lives and
works in relative solitude. Though not far from Spain
geographically. '!angier belongs to another world.
Bravo has almost always lived in places that are far
8
Although these studies do not display any of Bravo's
characteristic mystery and suggestiveness. they show
his technical proficiency as well as his fascination
with historical traditions. Perhaps the most arresting
of them is the Head of Beethoven. in which a haunting and disturbed personality is adumbrated.
Once Bravo arrived in Spain his art matured rapidly. As is often true in the case of artists who paint
many portraits. as Bravo did during his years in
Madrid. there are some likenesses in which the
viewer infers a strong relationship between painter
and sitter that goes beyond the strictly professional.
Some of the most attractive portraits are of close
friends and fellow artists. The red chalk and pencil
portrait of Fernando Zobel (1924-84) is a case in
point. It is signed and dated 1963 6 An important figure in the abstract movement in Spain in the 1960s
and 70s. Zobel was born in Manila and educated in
the United States. He was known for his paintings of
projectile-like black objects surrounded by a feathery
aura and set against stark white backgrounds. He was
also an important art collector and a promotor of
Fig. 9 Claudio Bravo. Abdullah and the Sponges. 1974. Longmeadow. Massachusetts. private collection {photograph by David
Stansbury).
Fig. II Francisco de Zurbaran. Still Life with Lemons. Oranges and a Rose. 1633. Pasadena. The Norton Simon Foundation.
10
Fig. 13 Claudio Bravo. Red Still Life. 1984. New York. private collection (photograph courtesy Marlborough Gallery).
Fig. 12 Claudio Bravo. Still Life with Candle. 1983. New York. private collection (photograph courtesy Marlborough Gallery).
11
the same forthrightness of spirit and directness that
makes those paintings by Velazquez so compelling.
A particularly close parallel might be drawn between
Bravo's picture and its principal source. Velazquez's
Portrait of Francisco Lezcano (also known as The
Child of Vallecas: Fig. 4).
Returning to Bravo's early years in Spain. we
should consider an unusual. unpublished painting
that shows how the artist employed and transformed
earlier images. Shortly after he arrived in Madrid.
Bravo began to frequent the Prado Museum. "I had
known most of the important masterpieces from
reproductions in books that I had in Chile; so many
of the images were already familiar to me. What surprised me. though. were the colors-which you can
never judge from reproductions- and the dimensions .. .. The artists that I gravitated to during those
early years were Velazquez. of course. and Zurbaran .
I also studied the works of Ribera and Goya but was.
perhaps. less effected by them." An artist whom
Bravo rarely mentions is El Greco. The strange exaggerations and intense spirituality of his art seem to
have little in common with Bravo's realism. Nonetheless. in Bravo's Toledo of 1962 (Fig. 5) there is an
unmistakable reflection of the famous "portrait" of
this town by El Greco. who spent most of his mature
life there. The principal similarity between Bravo's
canvas and that of El Greco (Fig. 6) is in the treatment
of the sky. Dramatic dark and light contrasts and tormented clouds serve as theatrical backdrops to both
townscapes. It is well-known that El Greco reversed
the position of the major architectural monuments of
Toledo. Bravo has not done this. nor has he used
Greco's feathery brush technique to suggest flamelike grasses and trees. Bravo's Toledo seems closer
to an architectural model of the town. The buildings
look as if they were made of pieces of wood and the
ground from a plaster mold. The painting is at the
same time both an homage to El Greco and a rejection of his "mystical" rendering of Toledo 7
One of the most unusual and intriguing of Bravo's
early Madrid works is the Cat with Anemones (1963).
Here. a cat is dressed in a pyramidal cloak. decorated with flowers at the neck and base. The background is formed by a cloth that shows the outlines
of where it had been carefully folded. Behind the
Fig. 16 Chaim Soutine. Dead Fowl. c. 1926- 27. The Art Institute of
Chicago. Joseph Winterbotham Collection.
12
(Fig. 8) and the canvases using paper shopping bags
as their focal point of interest. Bravo. however. did
not share the ideology of the Pop artists. who were
at times commenting on the flashiness of "modern
life" with its vulgarity and futility. Neither was he. as
were the Pop artists. reacting against the individualism and esotericism of Abstract Expressionism.
Bravo. who is neither tendentious nor concerned
with critical dialogue. found a way to express his realities through the creation of thoroughly mundane
images. This same sensibility is present in the paintings in which food tins or plastic containers are
placed almost at random on a table. In White and
Silver it is the tins (without labels) that dominate.
They are not painted simply because they are commonplace objects. easily discarded simulacra of our
contemporary "junk culture" but because the silvery
luster and their varied shapes are beautiful. Although
Bravo may have been inspired by Pop Art. what he
does with these materials is the opposite of what
Pop masters do. He denudes the shopping bags.
food tins. or Coca Cola bottles of their temporal
meaning as utilitarian objects and studies them for
the inherent interest or appeal of their shapes and
forms-memorializing_and universalizing. allowing
them to become statements of perfection. Paintings
such as the !974 Abdullah and the Sponges (Fig. 9)
and Pinball Machine also respond to the Pop stimulus. The garish colors of the pinball machine remind
us of the bright tones and comic strip-derived
imagery of Lichtenstein but. like Abdullah and the
Sponges. it contains a human figure peering out at
the viewer. These figu res are either semi-mysterious
(Pinball) or contemplative and abstracted as in
Abdullah.
Some of Bravo's most affecting paintings are more
conventional still lifes. Many of these evoke a mood
of quietude and contemplation that relate them
directly or indirectly to the Spanish Baroque still life
tradition. The beginnings of Spanish still life can be
found in Castille. and especially in Toledo. during the
early seventeenth century. Although there are definite parallels to the still life traditions of Flanders
and Italy. masters such as Sanchez Cotan. Bias de
Ledesma. Alejandro de Loarte and others developed
a highly distinctive Spanish style.s Still life flourished
Fig. 17 Salvador Dali. Shades of Night Descending. 1931. St. Petersburg. Florida. The Salvador Dali Museum.
each object is separated as in the Spanish old masters. The Red Still Life of !984 (Fig. !3) presents us
with a work whose overall harmony is produced by a
unity of color. In this pastel. the flower. boxes. fruits.
brushes and the substances of the jars blend with the
background to form a smooth continuity of red
tones. The Red Still Life is one of many works in
which we detect Bravo's connection to other contemporary masters. Perhaps the most striking parallels
may be drawn between some of his compositions
and those of the American painter William Bailey.
In Bailey's Monte Migiana Still Life of !979 (Fig. 14).
there are analogous color harmonies. concerns with
form and simplicity of presentation.
Bravo has stated " I want everything in my still lifes
to be in perfect balance. Still. I don' t want my compositions to look as if they'd been artificially composed. I want them to look decomposed. that is to
say. natural." His most recent work. however. evidences increasing complexity and a more lavish use
13
Fig. 19 Cornelis Gysbrechts. 11Jrned Over Canvas. c. 1660. Copenhagen. Statens Museum for Kunst.
an even more hallucinatory effect given the particularly strong emphasis placed on the feet that almost
seem to encroach on the viewer's space. We are
reminded . more than anything else. of the fetishistic
use of animals both dead and alive in some of the
films of Luis Bunuel (e.g. Los Olvidados). Bravo has
said that he has often been inspired more by films
than by o ther paintings. and he has acknowledged
a special debt to Bunuel. The iconography of the
slaughtered animal has a long history in modern and
old master painting. We inevitably think. for example.
of Rembrandt's Slaughtered Ox (c. 1640) or. closer to
the present day. Chaim Soutines Dead Fowl (Fig. 16).
an image similar in theme but. with its vigorous.
expressionistic brush stroke. far removed from
Bravo's detached. placid rendition of the subject.
Bravo o ften relishes. in his stilllifes. the juxtaposition of the bizarre and the mundane. In the Still Life
with Paint 7/.Jbe of 1983. a Chinese bowl and a red
lacquer box are presented on a table top with less
exalted objects such as cardboard tubes. tin boxes.
a tube of paint and a shower cap. The almost surreal
coming together in one image of such disparate elements suggests a link with Surrealism. Stones o f 1970
is one of many pictures of randomly distributed rocks
or pebbles. " In the early 70s: Bravo has said. " I
became very interested in Zen philosophy. In my
readings concerning Zen. I was o ften impressed by
passages describing meditation on stones thrown at
14
a specialty of this subject. 13 His 7/.Jrned Over Canvas
(Fig. 19) is a stark rendition with little more than a
small piece of paper with the number "36" in the
upper left hand corner to break the minimalist
monotony of the image (and also to make us believe that this is part of a series of such paintings).
Nineteenth-century American artists such as William
Harnett. john Peto. Victor Dubreuil and john Haberle
often depicted the backs of canvases. Petos Lincoln
and the Phleger Stretcher of c. 1900 (New Britain
Museum of American Art. Connecticut) shows a cutout portrait of the President tacked to the back of a
canvas. john Haberle's Torn in Transit (Fig. 20) is one
of several versions of this theme. It portrays what
appears to be the back of a canvas wi th a painted
sketch and a small tintype portrait affixed to it. 14 Its
torn paper and string remind us of similar elements
in the works of Bravo. Such paintings as those by
Gysbrechts and Haberle are interesting coincidences
of a theme-a depiction of the artist's own materials.
Bravo was not familiar with these images when he
painted his "packages: He was very much aware.
however. of the versions of the subject done in various media by Spanish artists.
Bravo has said that he was interested in some of
the paintings of Antoni Tapies that included string
as a pictorial element. Tapies also executed a work
representing a canvas stretcher. not by painting it but
by taking a real canvas. turning it around and presenting it as a finished piece. The 1962 Stretcher
Painting (Fig. 21) seems to be. in effect. exactly what
is beneath Bravo's paper wrappings. Bravo. however.
poeticizes or even romanticizes these objects by
shrouding them with colored paper and twine. Other
artists of the mid-1960s in Spain were doing similar
things with canvas backs. Some of the works of the
Valencian artists Manuel Boix and Arturo Heras
might be thought of as analogues for Tapies image. 15
In the United States. Roy Lichtenstein began to
paint the backs of canvases beginning in 1968 with
the Stretcher Frame with Vertical Bar (private collection). a straightforward. unadorned depiction of the
object. This subject was elaborated upon in several
works of the early 1970s including the Trompe l'Oeil
with Leger Head and Paint Brush (197 3. private collection) and Things on a Wall (1973. collection David
Whitney) which. according to Lawrence Alloway "exemplify the incompatibility of reality (out there) and
imagery (on the canvas). !Here Lichtenstein! takes
the well-known formats o f trompe l'oeil and demonstrates them in non-illusionistic terms:' 16 While
Bravo's images are naturally quite distinct from Lichtenstein's approach to the theme visually. they are
nonetheless integrally related in a conceptual way.
Since he has been in Morocco. Bravo has painted
landscapes o f the desert regions in the south of the
country near Marrakesh and views of the coast near
Asilah on the Atlantic shore. Recently he has executed the large Landscape of Marshan which will be
discussed below. He also paints views from the window of his studio located next to a cemetery. The
tombstones often figure as important elements in his
delicate pencil drawings and in his paintings. Also
from his window he paints views of the Straits of
Gibraltar. the distant Spanish coast and passing
ships. Bravo's landscape and some of his figure compositions have been linked to the art of the Orientalists. mid- and late-nineteenth-century artists like
15
voyeur" that the Orientalists were and who Jives the
experience of North Africa on a day to day basis) is
able to capture a much more convincingly real and
sober view of the Moroccan coasts or deserts. 17
William Dykes. who has written of Bravo's affinities
with the " New Realism" groups in Madrid. Seville
and Valencia. has stated that "while !Bravo! appears
to surpass the Madrid Realists in sheer technical skill.
rendering virtually any shape or texture rapidly and
accurately with either pencil or brush. he falls short
of them in the question of content. which he is prone
to ignore altogether.. . : 18 While his affinities with
this group are undeniable (Bravo has spoken of his
great interest in the work of Lopez-Garcia) it is a mistake to think of his art as lacking content. The point
is that the meaning of Bravo's work is different from
that of his Spanish contemporaries. Lopez-Garcia's
Wash Basin and Mirror of 1967 (Fig. 23) epitomizes
the sort of dreamy meditations on the realities of
middle-class life that characterizes this artist's most
recent work. Bravo's realities are quite different. He
takes his objects outside of any ordinary context.
exalts and transforms them into simulacra of a higher
state of being.
There is. however. one genre in which we do
sense a definite symbiosis between Bravo and LopezGarcia: the cityscape, Lopez's specialty. 19 In his cityscapes of Madrid (such as South Madrid of 1964-85;
Fig. 24). Lopez-Garcfa attempts to capture a specific
quality of light. Working slowly and meticulousl y. he
paints only at the time of day and in the precise light
he is attempting to capture. The result is frequently
enormously evocative and convincing. Bravo's 1986
Landscape of Marshan depicts the district of Thngier
where the artist lives. It shows. in a highly detailed
manner. the buildings of this Mediterranean city.
Although painted much more rapidly than LopezGarcia's South Madrid. it nonetheless approaches
the latter's Madrid townscapes in realistic detail
and strong evocation of specific time and place.
Many of Bravo's figure compositions recall devotional paintings. as pious as any painted during the
sixteenth or seventeenth centuries. A case in point
is his Madonna (Fig. 25) of 1979- 80. This work represents what is essentially a Venetian sacra conversazione with the Virgin poised against a cloth of honor
Fig. 22 Jean Leon-Gerome. Medinet-ei-Fayoum. Upper Egypt. 1870. Williamstown. Massachusetts. Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute.
16
Fig. 24 Antonio LOpez-Garcia. South Madrid. 1964-85. Madrid. col lection of the artist (photograph courtesy Marlborough Gallery).
17
1984. an allegory o f sin and temptation. is such a picture. It has been described in detail by the artist and
it is worth quoting his words on this subject:
In traditional scenes of the Temptation. Anthony
is set upon by specters of the most horrible sort.
monstrous devils. syphilitic beings with hunched
backs and hideous chancres on their faces. Who
could ever be tempted by such creatures? I decided
to make my temptations mysterious. beautiful people
who could really tempt anyone. I loosely based my
Temptation on a film by Luis Bunuei JSimon of the
Desert! about a saint who had retired to the wilderness. There are no specific elements in the painting
drawn from the movie. but it was my general source.
The cut-off cock's feet at the lower left are derived
from a '!emptation by Hieronymus Bosch in the
Prado Museum. There are blotches of mud dirtying
the space of the saint. de-sanctifying it. There cannot
be spiritual rest without cleanliness. Cleanliness has
an ethereal quality for me. The saint kneels on a rug
made of lambs' wool. Its like the prayer rugs that
Moroccans carry with them. The small lamb. a sym-
Fig. 26 Claudio Bravo. Vanitas. 1981. Stamford. Connecticut. private collection (photograph courtesy Marlborough Gallery).
bol of Christ. sticks out his tongue at the saint. The
flying angel Jbased on an angel in Caravaggio's
Seven Acts of MercyJ holds an absurd imbalance of
money and two hearts . . . here the hearts are outweighed by the money. The angel is really a devil; all
the tempting figures are really devils. The boy with
the leather jacket is coming from a discotheque and
has earphones playing pop music. He's a boy of
today found in a context where the devil resides.
I hate noise. The noise of discos is hellish to me.
Beside the saint is a girl with a turban who comes
to torment Saint Anthony with a brochette or shish-
18
tied by their feet and try to eat objects beyond their
reach. I often study these animal details and then
later transfer them to my human figures. Against
the wall is a Chinese scroll that's hardly seen. Its an
abstract element meant to enhance the verticality of
the picture. The figure at the back right was derived
in part from the hooded men who walk in the Holy
Week processions in Seville. They accompany the
statue of the Virgin in processions but they look
absolutely diabolical. They also remind me of my
early wrapped package pictures. This figure has just
finished tempting the saint but without success. In
the same position I had first painted a large and very
ugly dog I own in Thngier. I later painted her out: she
looked like a huge rat. There's a chameleon crawling
up the robe of Saint Anthony. Although chameleons
are harmless. they look like the most devilish of
creatures.
Bravo has created several images o f Saint Sebastian. According to legend. Sebastian was a captain of
the Pretorian Guard under the Emperor Diocletian .
He was condemned to death for his Christian faith
and was to be executed by being shot with arrows.
Miraculously. he survived this torment and was cured
by the pious woman Irene. He was later cudgelled to
death and his body thrown into the Roman cloaca
maxima. Since Medieval times Sebastian has been
portrayed either as a paradigm of religious steadfastness or a figure for suppressed eroticism. As Marga-
Fig. 28 Antonio de Pereda. The Knight's Dream. c. 1660. Madrid. Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando.
19
1986 (Fig. 30). the emphasis is almost entirely on the
erotic potential of the well-defined muscularity of the
young man. As in other paintings and drawings of
nude male models. there is a palpable homoerotic
content created. not only by the sultry presence of
the figures. but also by the hint of potential pain.
The arrows can be understood. in the case of Saint
Sebastian (as they can in other artists d epictions
of Saint Theresa of Avila's ecstasy) as signifiers of
sacred or profane love and ecstatic pleasure a well
as suffering.
Bravo's erotically suggestive paintings never
resemble pin-ups. The same classical calm and
restraint can be found in images such as the 1978
Black Nude (Fig. 31) which we can as easily relate to
Fig. 29 Claudio Bravo. St. Sebastian. 1984. New York. private collection (photograph courtesy Marlborough Gallery).
Fig. 30 Claudio Bravo. The Martyrdom of St. Sebastian. 1986. private collection (photograph courtesy Marlborough Gallery).
20
nudity, embodying the Vitruvian proportions illustrated in Leonardo's drawing of c. 1485- 1490. As
Valerie). Fletcher has written of this work " Bravo
also proclaimed his status as an artist by means of a
visual pun: in the painting he stands triumphantly on
the kind of paper whose trompe f'oeil effects in Bravo's paintings had provided a basis for his art and for
his success."22 Even more intriguing. the 1973 Portrait
of Antonio Cores (Fig. 33) portrays the essence.
though not the physical presence of Bravo's friend
the boat and race car driver. The empty suit retains
the shape of its owner. There is an aggressive. almost
erotic suggestion in this portrayal of the accoutrements (including the crash helmet. boots and gloves)
of Cores's profession. The color of the jump suit. a
searing orange, enhances the forcefulness of the
image. This representation of a person through the
display of objects of integral. intimate importance
to him is not a totally new one. Vincent Van Gogh
painted a portrait of his friend when he created
Gauguin's Chair (1888. Amsterdam. Rijksmuseum Vincent Van Gogh). By showing only the chair. the work
suggests the presence of the other artist in a more
psychologically palpable way than would any conventional likeness.
The Portrait of Antonio Cores is a restrained. even
a quasi-abstract work. Restraint and quietude. a concentration on the balanced aesthetic components of
visual experience is what Bravo tries to achieve in
all his paintings and drawings. His art engages the
viewer in a cerebral and visual dialogue. His vision is
one that recreates the harmonious accord between
the thing observed and the inner life that he finds
palpitating in every object. from a simple box to a
tree. or the most voluptuous of human figures. Bravo.
a "visionary of the seen" can be thought of. then.
as a transmitter through whose imagination the
essences of things and meanings beyond the scope
of our everyday grasp are presented to all who look
at his work with openness and sensitivity.
Fig. 31 Claudio Bravo. Black Nude. 1978. New York. private collection.
21
'
Fig. 32 Claudio Bravo. Venus. 1979. San Antonio. lexas. private collection (photograph courtesy Marlborough Gallery).
22
Notes
I. Charles S. Moffett. "On Claudio Bravo's Realism 19711973." Art lnternational19. VII (September. 1975):7.
14. For a discussion of American artists working in this tradition see Robert F. Chirico. "Language and Imagery in Late
Nineteenth-Century lrompe L.:Oeil: Arts Magazine 59. VII
(March. 1985):110--114.
15 . For movements related to the art of Tapies as well as a
discussion of his career see the forthcoming Ph.D. dissertation by Manuel Borja. Antoni Tapies. Graduate Center. City
University of New York.
16. Lawrence Alloway. Roy Lichtenstein (New York.
1983). 86.
17. Gerome had visited this Egyptian site during his "great
safari" to North Africa and the Middle East in 1868. See
Gerald M. Ackerman. The Life and Work of Jean-Leon
Gerome. with a Catalogue Raisonne (New York. 1986). 78.
80. 228 (no. 206).
18. Dykes. "The New Spanish Realists: 33.
19. The largest compendium of reproductions of works by
Lopez-Garcia (including his cityscapes) can be found in the
exhibition catalogue Antonio Lopez (Brussels. 1985).
1976). 20.
1983). 34.