MIT Institute Archives & Special Collections. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. News Office (AC0069)

From the Office of Public Relations Massachusetts Institute of Technology Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139 Tel: UN4-6900, Ext. 2707

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

"New Art of , " an exhibition illustrating the evolution of Argentine art during the last three years, is showing at MI.T.'s Hayden Gallery and will continue through

April 28. The exhibition was organized by Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, in association with the Visual Arts Center, Instituto Torcuato di Tella, .

Though the focal point of the new Argentine art is Buenos Aires, nine of the 30 artists in the exhibition currently live in , three in New York and one in Rome. This migration has had the effect of accelerating the "internationalization" of Argentine art as well as contributing to the art of other countries. The strength of the new Argentine art became apparent at the Venice Biennale in 1962, and in December of 1963, when an exhibition of recent art from Argentina opened at the Musee National d'Art Moderne in Paris. Argentina is now the strongest contributor to contemporary art in Latin America.

Argentine painting has taken various directions and they are typified in the exhibition under five general groupings:

Geometricism is represented by the works of Luis Tomasello, Julio Le Parc,

Hugo De Marco, Carlos Silva, Miguel Angel Vidal and Eduardo Mac-Entyre. The Geometrists have derived many of their ideas from the Concrete group of the forties but have become more independent of European concepts than the Concretists.

Abstract painting and a growing interest in collage is found in the works of

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2. "New Art of Argentina"/M.I.T.

Jose Antonio Fern'andez-Muro, Mario Pucciarelli, Miguel Ocampo, Kasuya Sakai and

Sarah Grilo. The Abstract group, though not as predominant since 1962, is still in the main-

stream of international art with their impulses toward the experimental and the new. Its

members live outside Argentina and their canvases reveal forms not purposefully sought

but developed f rom a "visionary view. "

The lyric abstraction of the Phases group is reflected in the works of Osvaldo

Borda, Martha Peluffo and Rogelio Polesello who reside in Buenos Aires. Their artistic

theory is broad and less dogmatic than that of the emigre Abstract group and they paint

images in a more defined manner.

Neo-Figuration is represented by the works of R~mulo Maccio, Luis Felipe Noe,

Jorge de la Vega, Ernesto Deira and Antonio Segui. These painters are freer in their

deviation from conventional methods and media than the former groups.

The Argentine equivalent of American style "Pop Art" and French "New Realism"

is f ound in the works of Antonio Berni, Rub~n Santantonin, Marta Minujin, Carlos Squirru

and Delia Sara Cancela. This vanguard group is divided into those who create objects out

of common materials and those who employ assemblage media but concentrate on the act of

painting itself more than on objects.

Included in the exhibition is sculpture by Alicia Penalba, Marino Di Teana, Gyula

Kosice, Libero Badii, Ennio lommi and Noem( Gerstein.

Hayden Gallery is in the Library Building and admission is free to the public. The

Gallery is open from 10 a.m. through 5 p.m. weekdays and 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.

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April 5, 1965

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