Minimalismo Antropológico

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ANA MERCEDES HOYOS: AN ANTHROPOLOGICAL MINIMALISM By Peter Frank Ana Mercedes Hoyos figures as one of the great humanists in contemporary Latin-American art – an art that (rightly or wrongly) is considered practically synonymous with humanism. Hoyos' embrace of her species, however, distances itself from the fantasy, allegory, and pathos that drives so much other Central and South American figuration – and in that distance, her art finds its distinctive shape and its power. Especially now that Hoyos has reverted to the kind of restrained, pared-down imagery with which she first made her mark, her art reclaims its spare eloquence, an eloquence made sanguine by her keen eye and sure, supple line. If Hoyos emerged in the wake of Pop art as a minimalistic kind of representational painter (notably with mute, striking depictions of windows), she ensured her popularity subsequently with lush, voluble figures and still lifes, genial and reassuring even as their colors and forms tussled with one another. The visual struggle in these images seemed charming and affectionate, brimming with the world's verdancy. But Hoyos' heart is a little tougher than that, if no harder, and she seems that much more in her element with her newer, sharper, and more reportorial paintings, drawings and prints. There is less "hand" in this work, but yet more eye, and arguably more mind. These most recent images realize much of their clarity and precision from their source, an ongoing sequence of photographs Hoyos has been maintaining, and which she wisely regards as artworks in themselves. Given the significant formal variations and reconsiderations Hoyos realizes in translating what her eye (or camera) sees into what her hand (or brush or pen) renders, her photos exhibit logically and in dynamic contrast with her other work. Together they seem less to obviate one another than to describe the various optical and spiritual “angles” Hoyos takes on her rich subject matter. As we know well in the United States, the slave trade of the colonial era brought large numbers of Africans to American shores. The evolution of African subcultures on this side of the world took myriad different forms, engaging on manifold levels with the dominant civilization(s). The community of San Basilio de Palenque, on Colombia’s Caribbean coast, was established in the 16th century in the wake of a slave revolt in and around the nearby port of Cartagena, one of several such communities but the only one still surviving. As a result, San Basilio de Palenque, still an entirely Afri-Latin community, is the site of an indigenous culture, syncretic in origin but with remarkably distinctive


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