Pair 6: Left, Mira Schendel, Brazilian, born Switzerland. 1919-1988, Untitled, mid-1960s, Tempera on burlap, 50.5 x 50.5, Private collection, Brazil, © 2009 Mira Schendel Estate, Photograph by: Romulo Fialdini. Right, León Ferrari, Argentine, born 1920, Untitled, October 24, 1962, Cut-and-pasted painted paper on painted paper on wood, 48 x 30 cm, Collection Maria Cristina and Pablo Henning, Houston, © 2009 Fundación Augusto y León Ferrari. Archivo y Colección, Buenos Aires, Photograph by: Adrián Rocha Novoa. Right,

Ferarri and Schendel: Language as Visual Subject Matter

Pair Eight: Left, León Ferrari, Argentine, born 1920, Untitled, 1988, Cut-and-pasted printed papers on black paper, 26.5 x 34 cm, Fundación Augusto y León Ferrari. Archivo y Colección, Buenos Aires, © 2009 Fundación Augusto y León Ferrari. Archivo y Colección, Buenos Aires, Photograph by: Adrían Rocha Novoa. Right, León Ferrari, Argentine, born 1920, Untitled, 1986, Cut-and-pasted printed paper on printed paper, 19.7 x 15.5 cm, Fundación Augusto y León Ferrari. Archivo y Colección, Buenos Aires, © 2009 Fundación Augusto y León Ferrari. Archivo y Colección, Buenos Aires, Photograph by: Adrían Rocha Novoa.

Pair 2: Left, León Ferrari, Argentine, born 1920, Untitled, 1962, Ink on paper, The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Purchase, 2003, © 2008 Fundacion Augusto y León Ferrari. Archivo y Colección. Right, Mira Schendel, Brazilian, born Switzerland. 1919-1988, Untitled from the series Droguinhas, 1972, Paper, 66 x 17.8 x 17.8 cm, Collection of Diane and Bruce Halle, © 2008 Mira Schendel Estate.

Pair 7B: Left, Mira Schendel, Brazilian, born Switzerland. 1919-1988, Untitled, 1960, Felt-tip pen on paper, 103.5 x 70 cm, Collection Adherbal Teixera, © 2009 Mira Schendel Estate, Photograph by: Romulo Fialdini. Right, León Ferrari, Argentine, born 1920, P4CR from the series Xadrez (Chess) and the book Imagens (Images), 1979, Ink and pressure sensitive transfer type on paper, 32.7 x 21.4 cm, Fundación Augusto y León Ferrari. Archivo y Colección, Buenos Aires, © 2009 Fundación Augusto y León Ferrari. Archivo y Colección, Buenos Aires, Photograph by: Adrían Rocha Novoa.

Pair 7A: Left, Mira Schendel, Brazilian, born Switzerland. 1919-1988, Untitled, 1960, Felt-tip pen on paper, 103.5 x 70 cm, Collection Ivo vel Kos, © 2009 Mira Schendel Estate, Photograph by: Romulo Fialdini. Right, León Ferrari, Argentine, born 1920, Kama-Sutra III from the series Códigos (Codes) and the book Imagens (Images), 1970, Ink on paper, 33 x 21.5 cm, Fundación Augusto y León Ferrari. Archivo y Colección, Buenos Aires, © 2009 Fundación Augusto y León Ferrari. Archivo y Colección, Buenos Aires, Photograph by: Adrían Rocha Novoa.

Pair 5: Above, Mira Schendel, Brazilian, born Switzerland. 1919-1988, A trama (A fabric net), c. 1960s, Oil transfer drawing on thin Japanese paper, 45.1 x 62.2 cm, The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Gift of Ada Schendel and the Latin American and Caribbean Fund, 2008, © 2009 Mira Schendel Estate, Photograph by: Thomas Griesel Museum of Modern Art © 2009. Below, León Ferrari, Argentine, born 1920, Gagarín (Gagarin), c. 1961, Stainless steel, Diameter: 52 cm, Collection Eduardo F. Costantini, Buenos Aires, © 2008 Fundación Augusto y León Ferrari, Archivo y Colección, Buenos Aires, Photography by: Oscar Balducci.

Pair One: Above, León Ferrari, Argentine, born 1920, Planet, 1979, Stainless steel, Diameter: 129.5 cm, © 2008 Fundacion Augusto y León Ferrari. Archivo y Colección. Below, Mira Schendel, Brazilian, born Switzerland. 1919-1988, Untitled from the series Graphic Objects, 1972, Pressure sensitive transfer type on thin Japanese paper, 95 x 95 cm, Clara Sancovsky Collection, © 2008 Mira Schendel Estate.

Pair 3: Above, Mira Schendel, Brazilian, born Switzerland. 1919-1988, Untitled, 1960, Felt-tip pen on paper, 103.5 x 70 cm, Collection Adherbal Teixera, © 2009 Mira Schendel Estate, Photograph by: Romulo Fialdini. Below, León Ferrari, Argentine, born 1920, P4CR from the series Xadrez (Chess) and the book Imagens (Images), 1979, Ink and pressure sensitive transfer type on paper, 32.7 x 21.4 cm, Fundación Augusto y León Ferrari. Archivo y Colección, Buenos Aires, © 2009 Fundación Augusto y León Ferrari. Archivo y Colección, Buenos Aires, Photograph by: Adrían Rocha Novoa.

 

Museum of Modern Art
11 West 53 Street
212-708-9400
New York
The International Council
of The Museum of Modern Art Gallery, sixth floor
Tangled Alphabets:
León Ferrari
and Mira Schendel

April 5-June 15, 2009

Tangled Alphabets: León Ferrari and Mira Schendel is the first major museum retrospective in the United States to survey work of León Ferrari (Argentine, b. 1920) and Mira Schendel (Brazilian, b. Switzerland, 1919-1988), and to explore their significant contributions to contemporary art. Working separately over several decades in neighboring Latin American countries during the latter half of the 20th century, each created an oeuvre of conceptual works of art fundamentally based in language. At a time when Western artists were incorporating letters, words, text, and language as a functional component of their art, Ferrari and Schendel distinctively addressed language as a major visual subject matter, considering the material body of language, its manifestation as a written word, and its use as a metaphor to understand the human world. As contemporaries, though never collaborators, the two artists shared experiences of disillusion and exile that informed the parallels and divergences in the art they produced.

Tangled Alphabets: León Ferrari and Mira Schendel brings together some 200 works in a range of media, including ceramics, paintings, sculptures, installations, and drawings, from public and private collections in São Paulo, Buenos Aires, London, and the U.S., including that of The Museum of Modern Art. The majority of the works in the exhibition come from the Mira Schendel Estate (thanks to the collaboration of Galeria Milan in São Paulo) and León Ferrari's personal collection, and many of these works are being shown in the United States for the first time.

The exhibition was organized by Luis Pérez-Oramas, The Estrellita Brodsky Curator of Latin American Art, with the assistance of Geaninne Gutiérrez-Guimarães, Curatorial Assistant,

"While the exhibition is intended to juxtapose the common themes shared in the work of these two artists, it constitutes a full retrospective of each artist's career," says Mr. Pérez-Oramas. "Ferrari and Schendel are visual artists who never abandon the word. They make it the center of the work-the word as a limitless substitute for the human voice. Ferrari and Schendel give us opaque texts as visual fields; wounded, fragmented, obsessive signs; abandoned, delirious, solitary letters. It is not language that shines through, but writing — whether abstract or textual, alphabetic or architectural, deformed or infinitesimal, nominal or transitive — and, above all, its body: the graphic gesture."

Tangled Alphabets presents many fluid groupings of works, and is organized loosely chronologically, presenting the evolution of the two artists' work from the late 1950s through the late 1980s for Schendel, and from the late 1950s through 2007 for Ferrari. The exhibition begins in the late 1950s with an examination of the artists' use of line, form, and texture, starting with early still-life paintings by Schendel and ceramic vessels by Ferrari. This is followed by a comprehensive look at the artists' use of words, letters, and phrases, as exemplified in a selection of their language-based works on paper from the 1960s and 1970s. Next, a dramatic display of their three-dimensional works from the 1960s and 1970s — Ferrari's steel sculptures and Schendel's graphic works on paper — features many works that hang from the ceiling. Both artists made work of political and religious protest, examples of which are on view in a subsequent gallery, and range in date from the mid-1960s to the late 1990s in the case of Ferrari. The exhibition concludes with Schendel's last series of large paintings from the late 1980s, and Ferrari's most recent hanging sculptures in polyurethane from 2006 and 2007.

The early 1960s were crucial years in the development of the artists' work. Ferrari and Schendel started to derive work from language, making intricate works on paper. During this time in North America and Europe, the 1960s saw the emergence of Conceptual art. Although the work of Ferrari and Schendel is contemporary with the birth of Conceptualism, it is distinctively different. Since they address language as a material presence, a body of signs and traces, brushstrokes and gestures, far more than as a vehicle of concepts or ideas, they are more concerned with the visual appearance of language. In fact, the essence of their art lies in its execution, making each work an unrepeatable operation, which is the opposite of Conceptual art.
Highlighted in the first section of the exhibition are two key works from the 1960s. Ferrari's Cuadro escrito (Written Drawing) (1964), is a "written drawing" on which a handwritten text on the surface of the paper describes a nonexistent painting and what this painting would look like, while also producing an argument against religion, God, and the deification of painting. Schendel's Untitled (Achilles) (Sem titulo (Achilles)) (1964) is a large oil painting depicting a doorway, over which an English sentence that references Achilles, taken from the introduction to a book of religious poems, has been written in stenciled capital letters.

The exhibition proceeds with groups of works by Ferrari and Schendel that use symbols and patterns based in poetry rather than actual text. Both artists knew poets well — Haroldo de Campos in the case of Schendel; Rafael Alberti in the case of Ferrari. Ferrari's Sin titulo (Sermón de la sangre) (Untitled [Sermon of the blood]) (1962), is based on a poem by Alberti and is comprised of two planes of lines that join in a complex labyrinth of black and blood-red triangles and crisscrosses.

Comparatively, Schendel's series of sculptural works begun in the 1960s, such as Droguinha (Little nothing) (1966) and Objetos gráficos (Graphic Objects) (mid-1960s), both which hang from the ceiling of the galleries. The Droguinhas are made of pieces of Japanese paper, twisted into ropes, which are then knotted and reknotted, thus symbolizing a chain that links embroidery and the frustration and confusion of a knot that cannot be untied in a repeating formation. The Objetos gráficos emphasize Schendel's interest in graphic letters, signs and symbols and further address the notion of transparency by placing the work in between two plexi sheets, thus encouraging the viewer to see it from both sides.

Further in the exhibition are dramatic works in which the artists expressed their ideas about religion, faith, and the Catholic church. Schendel's series of works on paper, Untitled from the series Letras (Letters) (1964) examines the contradictions in the Catholic church through floating words, symbols, hermetic paraphrases, and sentences, which she inscribed on fragile Japanese paper. To avoid tearing the paper, she coated a pane of inked glass with a layer of talc, and laid the paper on top, pressing on the paper to make a mark. Also included is Schendel's Ondas paradas de probabilidade (Still waves of probability) (1969), a large work comprising thousands of translucent nylon threads that extend from ceiling to floor besides a Biblical text that is printed on an acrylic sheet and hang on the wall. It was first shown at the São Paulo Biennial in 1969, and was installed there again, in her honor, in 1994, and has only been shown once since then until its debut in this exhibition. Juxtaposing these works is Ferrari's Juicio final (Last Judgment) (1994), a large print of Michelangelo's famous painting of the same title, upon which Ferrari set a cage of pigeons, and allowed their excrement to collect on its surface. The excrement acts as a form of writing expressing the artist's desire for an end to the concept of Hell, and to the Bible's writings about torture for sinners in the afterlife.

The exhibition concludes with the most recent work of each artist. In Schendel's final series of paintings, Sarrafos (Splints) (1987), large white monochromes with attached black bars appear as incomplete frames, mute gestures that might redeem the silence of painting. Ferrari's recent hanging sculptures, which are untitled and date from 2006 and 2007, are made from polyurethane and plastic, and include bones and other large interwoven materials.

León Ferrari was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in 1920. His earliest works were done at the end of the 1950s, while he was working in Rome, Italy. He made sculptures in clay and plaster stylistically connected to the abstract tendencies of the period. Ferrari abandoned avant-garde formalism beginning in the 1960s, to practice more political and confrontational forms of art-making. Forced into political exile, Ferrari lived in São Paulo, Brazil, between 1976 and 1986, a time in which he reconsidered the techniques of his work and concentrated on forms closer to conceptual art. León Ferrari is still fully active in the contemporary Argentine art scene, and at 89, is today one of the most productive artists in Latin America.

Mira Schendel was born in Zurich, Switzerland, in 1918, and began her artistic training in Milan, Italy, in 1936. Immersed from her childhood in the most cultivated intellectual milieu in Italy, where her mother married Count Gnoli, Mira Schendel studied art, philosophy, and theology and spent her early youth in the Brera Palace, privately experiencing one of the most exquisite collections of art in the world. Schendel went to Sarajevo, Bosnia, in 1941 while fleeing Nazi persecution during World War II. In 1946, she moved to Rome, Italy, and later to Porto Alegre, Brazil. Three years later, in 1949, Schendel began to produce paintings and ceramic works while teaching and publishing poetry. Following an invitation to show at the first São Paulo Biennial in 1951, she moved to that city in 1953. A solitary artist, Mira Schendel was aware of the most important avant-garde chapters in her adopted country and exchanged with crucial intellectual figures of the XXth Century, from poets to philosophers and critics and fellow artists, becoming a central reference for the Brazilian cultural scene after 1965. Schendel died in Brazil in 1988.

Generous support is provided by Beatriz and Andrés von Buch, The Bruce T. Halle Family Foundation, David Rockefeller, and Fundación Cisneros/Colección Patricia Phelps de Cisneros with additional funding from Clarissa Alcock Bronfman, Andrea and José Olympio da Veiga Pereira, Marieluise Hessel, Leopoldo Rodés and Ainhoa Grandes, Mrs. Yvonne Dadoo de Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Guillermo Cisneros, TEN Arquitectos/Enrique Norten, Milú Villela, and Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Griffin, Eva Luisa Griffin, and Tomás Orinoco Griffin.

The accompanying publication has been prepared with the assistance and support of Charles Cosac and Michael Naify.

The accompanying publication, León Ferrari and Mira Schendel: Tangled Alphabets, is a richly illustrated volume edited by Luis Pérez-Oramas. The catalogue presents new insights into the artists' groundbreaking work, and examines the connections and collisions of language, politics, and religion in the oeuvres of the two artists. In addition to over 200 color reproductions, the book features essays by Andrea Giunta, professor of Latin American art at The University of Texas; Rodrigo Naves, writer, historian, and professor of art history; and Mr. Pérez-Oramas. It is published by The Museum of Modern Art and is available at MoMA Stores and online at www.momastore.org. It is distributed to the trade through Distributed Art Publishers (D.A.P) in the United States and Canada, and through Thames + Hudson outside North America. Hardcover: 224 pages, 220 color illustrations. $55.00.

Pair 04: Left, Mira Schendel, Brazilian, born Switzerland. 1919-1988, Untitled from the series Sarrafos (Splints), 1987, Synthetic polymer paint on wood, 198 x 180 x 9.2 cm, Collection Patricia Phelps de Cisneros, © 2009 Mira Schendel Estate, Photography by: Mark Morosse. Right, León Ferrari, Argentine, born 1920, Ramas (Branches), 2007, Willow tree branches with wire, 235 x 90 x 90 cm, Fundación Augusto y León Ferrari. Archivo y Colección, Buenos Aires, © 2009 Fundación Augusto y León Ferrari. Archivo y Colección, Buenos Aires, Photograph by: Adrían Rocha Novoa.