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De Volder

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  • De Volder

    Born 1962 in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Lives and works in New York, New York.
  • DOWNLOAD CV Download HM&C Artist Monograph DOWNLOAD PRESS RELEASE OF Cadence download checklist of cadence DOWNLOAD EXHIBITION CATALOGUE of Landscapes...

    De Volder working in his studio, Brooklyn, NY, 2021

    DOWNLOAD CV
    Download HM&C Artist Monograph

     

    DOWNLOAD PRESS RELEASE OF Cadence
    download checklist of cadence
    DOWNLOAD EXHIBITION CATALOGUE of Landscapes & Drawings
    DOWNLOAD PRESS RELEASE OF LANDSCAPES & DRAWINGS
  • De Volder (b. 1962) is an Argentine painter and sculptor whose work often examines the boundary between chaos and restraint....

    De Volder photographed by Lucas Michael

    De Volder (b. 1962) is an Argentine painter and sculptor whose work often examines the boundary between chaos and restraint. While the curving lines that comprise his compositions are finite – fixed in size, color, and weight – their dynamic loops and intersections imply motion that continues energetically and unhindered through space.

     

    De Volder’s most recent oeuvre took a radical turn from his more figural work of the 1990s. It is mainly characterized by his employment of curved linear forms that bisect, unfurl, and overlap each other through a playful use of geometry as a formal language. Conflated with an ascetic yet also bold use of color (many times committing to only one single hue), De Volder’s forms unfold into three-dimensional space through either single or intertwining loops that appear to rest in the between space of randomization and restraint. De Volder creates works whose lines are static in color, size, and weight; yet their dynamic loops and overlappings imply a sense of energetic, swirling motion.

     

    De Volder has participated in a number of solo and group exhibitions in the United States, France, Argentina, Uruguay and Peru. His artwork can be found in numerous internationally recognized cultural institutions and private collections, as well as in the public collections of the Museum of Latin American Art of Buenos Aires (MALBA); Museum of Contemporary Art of Buenos Aires (MACBA); the Museum Castagnino of Rosario, Santa Fe, Argentina.

  • De Volder, 'Untitled #32,' 2008 Aluminum 80 x 80 x 235 in.
    De Volder, "Untitled #32," 2008 Aluminum 80 x 80 x 235 in.
  • I was attracted to the way that comic-books, and later cartoons as well, showed movement and speed. This line comes...

    I was attracted to the way that comic-books, and later cartoons as well, showed movement and speed. This line comes along in one direction, then stops and goes off in another direction, expressing the idea of such tremendous dynamism in something so static, all thanks to a convention that signifies movement and speed in graphic terms. It made me think of Hans Hartung’s work. I used to see his drawings and imagine him like a guy swiping at a sheet of paper and leaving on it something like the “fingerprint” of velocity. What I was after was quite the opposite. I wanted to show a drawing that could represent velocity in a rational way, as a thought-out concept, but without transmitting a sensation of speed. Just the lines of the Tasmanian Devil’s tornado, just what gets him from here to there.

    - De Volder

  • Casi simétrico, con algunos errores 2023

    Casi simétrico, con algunos errores #1, 2023 Ink on paper 11 x 14 in (27.9 x 35.6 cm) (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Casi simétrico, con algunos errores #2, 2023 Ink on paper 11 x 14 in (27.9 x 35.6 cm) (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Casi simétrico, con algunos errores #4, 2023 Ink on paper 11 x 14 in (27.9 x 35.6 cm) (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Casi simétrico, con algunos errores #5, 2023 Ink on paper 11 x 14 in (27.9 x 35.6 cm) (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).

    Casi simétrico, con algunos errores #1, 2023 Ink on paper
    11 x 14 in (27.9 x 35.6 cm)

  • De Volder and Painting

    De Volder’s incursions into the nature of drawing, and into the possibilities of dark and light, led him to explore color and painting in a new mode: in small-format, color-blocking, untitled paisajes (landscapes). In these paintings, De Volder aims to remove the line altogether and to purely paint, prioritizing the medium’s materiality and the color relationships in the composition.

    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2020 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    De Volder, Untitled, 2020 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2020 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2020 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2020 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2018 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    De Volder, Untitled, 2020 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).

    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2020

  • Horizontals

    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2019 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2020 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2020 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2019 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2020 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder  Untitled, 2020  Acrylic on hardboard  11 x 14 in 27.9 x 35.6 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).

    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2019

  • 'The line passes, explores and turns back on itself, successively, obsessively. De Volder's work proposes an insistent reflection on modes...

    Beto De Volder, Untitled, Acrylic on MDF, 15 3/4 x 25 5/8 in

    "The line passes, explores and turns back on itself, successively, obsessively. De Volder's work proposes an insistent reflection on modes of seeming, on the morphology of the line as a transcendent element. The constant return lures us to the question of the beginning; like with a ball of yarn, we look for the start, the genesis. The question of origin is probably one of its queries. Perhaps in this multiplicity of lines we can project the randomness of certainty of our own paths." 

    Marita Garcia in Beto De Volder, Galería Palatina, Buenos Aires, 2007

  • Calados: Wall Reliefs

    Within recent years, De Volder has explored these ideas in larger format and especially in his Calados: sculptural, colorful works emphasizing positive and negative, which embody drawing in real space and look humorously to ideas of spontaneity and expression. Untitled (2021) functions as a key example. On a large scale, De Volder has created a set of multiple lines that precisely and meticulously cross over each other in a seemingly uncontrolled fashion. Making them stand out in red, De Volder makes reference to the legacies of color and geometry in Rioplatense modernism.

    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2021 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder  Untitled, 2007  Acrylic on MDF  35 1/4 x 25 1/4 in 89.5 x 64 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder  Untitled, 2007  Acrylic on MDF  25 x 37 1/2 in 63.5 x 95.3 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder  Untitled, 2019  38 x 60 in 96.5 x 152.4 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder  Untitled, 2004  Acrylic on MDF  38 1/2 x 30 5/8 in 97.8 x 77.8 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).

    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2021

  • De Volder working in his studio, Brooklyn, 2021

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  • Drawings

    Since the early 2000s, De Volder’s oeuvre has necessarily been concerned with drawing, color, and the possibilities of the line. The swirling lines he creates, always constantly in movement, naturally originate from age-old traditions of drawing. However, their inspiration also comes from an unlikely source: vintage cartoons of the Tasmanian Devil. Seeing this character on television with his son, De Volder was taken by the animated, graphic swirling that denoted his chaotic and rapid movement. 

     

    Taking from the Tasmanian Devil, but also from the visual language of comic books, De Volder’s lines suggest unhindered movement. Their potential for speed, however, is juxtaposed with the fact that they’re unmoving, as well as with the slow, dedicated precision needed to create them. The references to cartoons and comic books additionally gesture towards the ludic in De Volder’s work. He refers to his drawings as firuletes— haphazard doodles in spiral shapes— showcasing the playful attitude he permits in creating and describing his work. 

    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2007 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2007 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2007 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled , 2007 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2007 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2007 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2007 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder  Untitled  Graphite on paper  15 x 11 in  (38.1 x 27.9 cm) (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder  Untitled  Graphite on paper  15 x 11 in  (38.1 x 27.9 cm) (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).

    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2007

  • Artists

    Dibujo y Golf

    Drawing and Golf

    De Volder working in his Brooklyn studio while listening to Golf, 2021

     
  • Graphite Drawings

    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2020 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2021 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2020 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2020 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled , 2020 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2021 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2021 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2021 (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).

    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 2021

  • '[De Volder's] papers, paintings, and objects always traveled unique paths within abstraction: they combined the formal and the informal, the...
    Beto De Volder, Untitled, Colored pencil on paper, 8 1/4 x 11 3/8 in
     

    "[De Volder's] papers, paintings, and objects always traveled unique paths within abstraction: they combined the formal and the informal, the mechanical and the random, construction and invention...his images seem like invertebrate shapes that shift to possible animated figurations or deformed projections of architectural designs, scientific models and fragmentary landscapes." 

    Marcelo E. Pacheco ,"Beto De Volder: Between The Lines," in Beto De Volder: Poco Color, Zavaleta Lab, Buenos Aires, 2005

  • Untitled (1994)

    Beto De Volder, Untitled, 1994, Acrylic and markers on canvas

    Untitled (1994)

    "His figurative practice of the 1990s was marked by a sense of liberation and irreverence. Considering that his generation was brought up during the repressive years of the dictatorship (1979 - 1983), his compositions can be understood as an attitude of rebellion. One of the works that epitomizes this demeanor is Untitled (1994), a large square canvas depiciting the country's blue-and-white flag with its golden sun at the center. Autocratic sovereign states have traditionally reguarded national symbols as sacred, which was the case during the military rule in Argentina. De Volder's work takes on this iconic image and transforms it into the background for a nonsensical scene saturated with elements reminiscent of comic strips. These illustrations are not denunciations, but rather satirical references imbedded in Argentine culture."

    Ursula Davila-Villa on Beto De Volders Untitled (1994) in Recovering Beauty. The 1990s in Buenos Aires, The Balton Museum, Austin TX, 2011

  • Orgía (Orgy)

    "De Volder's bold lines and repeated geometrical forms are clear references to Contstructivism. However, his sense of irony and satire of irony and satire strongly depart form the rationality that distinguised his predecessors' work. In this regard, the influence of [Keith] Haring's humorous and and explicitly sexual compositions is clearly present...."

     

    Ursula Davila-Villa on Beto De Volders Orgía in Recovering Beauty. The 1990s in Buenos Aires, The Balton Museum, Austin TX, 2011

    Beto De Volder, Orgía [Orgy], 1993, Acrylic on canvas (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Orgía [Orgy] II, 1993, Acrylic on canvas (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beto De Volder, Orgía [Orgy] III, 1993, Acrylic on canvas (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).

    Beto De Volder, Orgía [Orgy], 1993, Acrylic on canvas

  • Recovering Beauty. The 1990s in Buenos Aires, The Blanton Musuem

    De Volder in Recovering Beauty. The 1990s in Buenos Aires, The Blanton Musuem, Austin TX, 2011

    Recovering Beauty. The 1990s in Buenos Aires

    The Blanton Musuem

    "De Volder's intent is not political, but rather it signifies his untroubled attitutde torwards everyday symbols and stories drawn from his own experince. His work does not pretend to convey grand discourses or a comples synthesis of art history...He saw art as an expression of renovation, and as a way to challenge the seriousness that defined teh political art of previous genderation through wit and humor." 

    Ursula Davila-Villa on Beto De Volder's practice of the 1990s in Recovering Beauty. The 1990s in Buenos Aires, The Balton Museum, Austin TX, 2011

     

    You can view the entire catalogue of Recovering Beauty: The 1990s in Buenos Aires. Click the Link Below

    Read the catalogue here
  • Past Exhibitions and Publications

    • Recovering Beauty. The 1990s in Buenos Aires, The Blanton Museum, Austin TX

      Recovering Beauty. The 1990s in Buenos Aires

      The Blanton Museum, Austin TX February 20 - May 22, 2011

      Organized by The Blanton, Recovering Beauty: The 1990s in Buenos Aires is the first comprehensive North American presentation of art produced during the 1990s in Buenos Aires, a time of pivotal transformation in Argentina. 

      Learn more about the exhibition here
    • Beto De Volder: Poco Color, Zavaleta Lab, Buenos Aires

      Beto De Volder: Poco Color

      Zavaleta Lab, Buenos Aires September 29 - October 29, 2005
    • Beto De Volder, Galería Palatina, Buenos Aires

      Beto De Volder

      Galería Palatina, Buenos Aires October 25 - November 12, 2007
    • Beto De Volder: Más, Galería Palatina

      Beto De Volder: Más

      Galería Palatina August 27 - September 14, 2009
    • De Volder, libros sobre artistas , (De Volder, books about artists)

      De Volder, libros sobre artistas

      (De Volder, books about artists) Adriana Hidalgo, 2011

      The work of the Argentine artist Beto De Volder can be seen as a legitimate heir to the tradition inaugurated by the River Plate abstractionism. The re-readings of his production continue to give consensus to say that he refers to the avant-garde of the 1940s with a solid contemporary anchor.

       

      Including essays by Ablerto Passolini, Isabel Plante and Santiago García Navarro.

      Learn more about the publication here
    • Algunos Artistas / Arte Argentino: 1990 – Hoy , Fundación Proa

      Algunos Artistas / Arte Argentino: 1990 – Hoy

      Fundación Proa April - June 2013

      Algunos Artistas refers to the title of the historic exhibition curated in 1992 by Jorge Gumier Maier at the Recoleta Cultural Center, where he exhibited the group of artists who settled around Rojas: some artists, some works, their first and second steps, and now In Proa, also the first and second steps of the collectors. A dialogue between multiple voices - those of artists and collectors - that reconstructs a moment in the history of recent art.

      Learn more about the catalogue and the exhibition here
    • Arte Abstracto: cruzando líneas desde el Sur, Mario H. Gradowczyk

      Arte Abstracto: cruzando líneas desde el Sur

      Mario H. Gradowczyk 2005
    • Arte Abstracto (Hoy) = Fragilidad + Resiliencia, Mario H. Gradowczyk, Centro cultural de España en Buenos Aires

      Arte Abstracto (Hoy) = Fragilidad + Resiliencia

      Mario H. Gradowczyk, Centro cultural de España en Buenos Aires March 30 - May 27, 2005
    • Beto De Volder: Celebrating The Curve, Durban Segnini Gallery, Miami

      Beto De Volder: Celebrating The Curve

      Durban Segnini Gallery, Miami September - November 2012

      "In Beto de Volder’s work, the notion of a gesture in motion is essential. Each piece indicates or signals a process, and captures it as a form frozen in time that seems to have the potential to spread out, to multiply itself and to become a set of changing possibilities, of “developments,” as we have in fact verified from some of his other works. His “objects”—to use again the name favored by Neo-Concretists, ever watchful, like him, for the organicity of forms and even for their communicating vessels with the body—belong to an adjoining territory where endless displacements of various natures take place.

      The diagram De Volder used to synthesize his artistic trajectory as a web of non-linear interrelations proves that he shares with Marcel Duchamp a fascination with the machinations of the thought process, with the invisible wheels of mental motions which manifest themselves (or not)—just like the thought process of a chess player looking at the board in front of him—in the form of a gesture, a piece or an object."

      Durban Segnini Gallery, 2012

      Learn more about the exhibition here
    • Beto De Volder: Recent Works, Durban Segnini Gallery, Miami

      Beto De Volder: Recent Works

      Durban Segnini Gallery, Miami December 2006 - January 2007
    • Doscientos Años De Pintura Argentina, Volumen III (200 Years of Argentine Painting, Volume III, Ana Longoni and Fernando Davis, Banco...

      Doscientos Años De Pintura Argentina, Volumen III (200 Years of Argentine Painting, Volume III

      Ana Longoni and Fernando Davis, Banco Hipotecario 2013
    • Dialogos, Arte Latinoamericano desde la Colección Cisneros. , Ariel Jímenez, Museo de Arte de Lima, Lima Peru

      Dialogos, Arte Latinoamericano desde la Colección Cisneros.

      Ariel Jímenez, Museo de Arte de Lima, Lima Peru 2005 View The Catalogue Here
    • Diálogos. Arte Latinoamericano desde la Colección Cisneros. , Ariel Jímenez, Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, Santiago de Chile

      Diálogos. Arte Latinoamericano desde la Colección Cisneros.

      Ariel Jímenez, Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, Santiago de Chile 2004 View The Catalogue Here
  • Por Si La Nada, Bibi Calderaro

    Por Si La Nada

    Bibi Calderaro

    Read artist Bibi Calderaro's survery of De Volder's work in Spanish and English

     

HUTCHINSON MODERN & CONTEMPORARY

47 East 64th Street

New York, NY 10065

212 988 8788

info@hutchinsonmodern.com

 

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Other Hours by appointment

 

 

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