Alfredo Da Silva (February 20, 1935–January 26, 2020) was a painter, graphic artist, and photographer, known for his abstract expressionism. He came to international prominence in 1959 and remained so until his death in 2020.[1]
Biography
Alfredo Da Silva was born February 20, 1935, in Potosí, Bolivia. He studied firstly at the Academia de Bellas Artes de Potosí, and then subsequently at the Academia de Bellas Artes Prilidiano Pueyredon in Buenos Aires.[2]
Da Silva had his first solo exhibition, at the age of sixteen, at the Municipal Gallery in La Paz, and he continued to show his work in both group exhibitions and solo exhibitions throughout Bolivia during the 1950s.[3] In 1958, he obtained his degree as teacher of drawing and painting.
In 1960, Da Silva’s work came to the attention of José Gómez-Sicre, then chief of the Division of Visual Arts for the Organization of American States (OAS).[4] In 1961, Gómez-Sicre invited Da Silva to present a solo exhibition at the gallery of the Pan American Union in Washington D.C., organized by the OAS.[5] In 1962, he won a grant to study graphic Arts at the Pratt Institute of New York.
On Sunday, January 26, 2020, Da Silva was struck and killed by a vehicle while crossing the street near his home in Alexandria, Virginia.[1]
Artistic career
Da Silva was recognized as one of the historical “generation of ’52” by the Bolivian National Museum of Art, in its exhibition Generación del ’52: Pintura Boliviana del Siglo XX (Generation of ’52: Bolivian Painters of the 20th Century).[6] The name refers to the generation of artists whose work was profoundly marked by the Bolivian National Revolution of April 1952.[7] This generation had two main artistic trends, the ‘social painters’ and the ‘abstract painters.’ Alfredo was part of the movement of abstract painters that did not accept social realism as the only mode for artistic expression.[8]
In 1959, da Silva won first prize in a competition for foreign artists at the Salon National of Painting in Buenos Aires. In 1961 he represented the Pan American Union at the Biennial of São Paulo.
In 1963, the Institute of Spanish Culture in Madrid invited him to participate in the exhibition of Art of America and Spain. The same year he was awarded a fellowship[9] by the Guggenheim Foundation for the period of 1963–1964.
In 1964, he was invited to participate at the II American Biennale of Cordoba, Argentina, where he won 3rd prize. In 1977 participated at II Biennale of Bolivia INBO, where he won grand prize. In 1980 he was invited to the II Biennale Iberoamericana of Art in Mexico where he had a show.
"During the 1960s, he continued to amass honors, including his Guggenheim Fellowship and a Pratt Graphic Center Grant, as his artwork attracted ever increasing attention and plaudits. Since then, he has participated in dozens of group exhibitions at such prominent venues as the Museum of Fine Arts, Mexico; the Contemporary Art Museum of Dallas, Texas; the Museum of Fine Arts in Helsinki, Finland; the gallery of the Central University of Caracas, Venezuela; the Institute of Contemporary Art in London; the Museum of Aberdeen, Scotland; and the Cultural Center of Villa Madrid, Spain. His work has also been exhibited in numerous one-man shows throughout North and South America and Europe and is in the permanent collections of the Coin Museum of Potosi, Bolivia; the National Museum of La Paz; the Metropolitan Museum of New York; and the Museum of Modern Art in Rio de Janeiro; to name just a few of the public collections that boast his works. His many prizes include the Grand Prize at the II Biennale INBO in La Paz in 1977"
Between 1987 and 1988 he worked for The World & I, Washington Times Publication.
Between 1988–present he worked for HJB Associates, 2228 South Quincy St. Arlington, VA.
On May 21, 2005, he was a judge for the Congressional Art Competition "An Artistic Discovery" in Washington Dc.
Between March 16 and May 17, 2009, his art was part of an exhibit presented at the Museo de Antioquia, in Medellín, Colombia, on occasion of the 50th Anniversary of the Inter-American Development Bank, and the celebration of the 50th Annual Meeting of Governors of the IDB.
Comments by critics and notable artists
In the book Art in Latin America Today "Bolivia" art critic Rigoberto Villarroel Claure says "Alfredo Da Silva was almost unknown in his own country until he went abroad and won the highest award for a foreign artist at the 1959 National Salon in Buenos Aires".[11]
In a Cable address on October 26, 1966, Dr. José Gómez-Sicre said "In my judgment, Alfredo Da Silva is highly talented as both a painter and graphic artist, and there is no doubt that he can be considered among the best professional artists in his fields in Latin America".[12]
In the book "Latin-American Painters in New York" Ernesto Ramallo (professor and art critic), from Buenos Aires, Argentina Describes Alfredo Da Silva and his work. "He is very young. His 24 years almost conflict with the maturity his work shows. We are far from thinking that painting well is a matter of more or less time, but still it is surprising to find him so mature. His works have everything, but everything in coherence, in unity. It is suggestive, yes, but it suggests the deep: there is nothing superficial or epidermic".[13]
Da Silva was close friends with a celebrated Bolivian sculptor Marina Núñez del Prado, who wrote about him in her book Eternidad en Los Andes — “his work is abstract, and gets us thinking in Tiawanaqu. He has all the telluric force and mysterious strength of the Andean nature.”[14]
Artist, art critic, and cultural manager, Felix Angel describes his work in the catalog "50 years 50 works" "His production, based on a repertory of forms that alternate between the geometric and the organic, has always been rich in meaning. He has never been able to banish completely from his mind the hallucinatory images of the Valley of the Moon near La Paz, as attested in his work by the mineral-like sharpness of the draftsmanship and the labyrinthine intricacy of the total composition".[15]
In 1981, his abstract work was recognized by Teresa Gisbert, who described his work as being “outstanding for his treatment of surface qualities and his abstractionism.”[16]
According to Babs Myer from the Times of Brazil, “Accepting ‘abstract expressionism’ as the label most nearly describing his art, da Silva works from a base of “intuition creation,” expressing a world of intuition with rational shapes. He fuses the ancient past with the far distant future and creates a sense of time itself moving to the future or to the past, but always of one continuous whole. The circle is always evident, and one may recognize ancient Indian building stones, fossilized bones, or structures for man’s use in some misty future in space.”[17]
Style and influences
His early works were painted using vibrant colors. Growing up in Bolivia he was influenced by the Inca civilization. In 1958 he went to Buenos Aires and became very interested in his textural expressionism. Color wise his paintings were more monochromatic. He also spent a great deal more focus on texture and composition. In 1960 he started to receive invitations to have shows all over the world and his paintings began to grow in size and in detail.
^Meyer, Babs (December 3–4, 1978). "Guggenheim grantee in SP". Sao Paulo Brazil: Brazil Herald's Supplement.
^Teresa Gisbert. "Generation of 52". Ecology and Art (in Spanish). The National Art Museum (MNA). Archived from the original(text/HTML) on May 16, 2009. Retrieved March 22, 2010.
^Alexander, Robert J. (1958). The Bolivian national revolution. New Brunswick, N.J.: University Press.
^Gisbert, Teresa (April 1981). "Bolivian painting today". Americas. 33 (4). Washington dc: General Secretariat Organization of American States: 13.
^Rigoberto Villarroel Claure (1963). Art in Latin America today "Bolivia". Washington D.C.: Pan American Union. p. 17, para 1.
^Gómez-Sicre, José (October 26, 1966). "Cable address: PAU Washington D.C.". Washington 6, D.C., U.S.A: Pan American Union "Organization of American States".{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
^Cisneros, Florencio Garcia (1964). "Alfredo Da Silva". Latin-American Painters in New York (in English and Spanish). Francisco R. Garcia. p. 70. Shows exhibit dates from 1936–1962
^Marina Núñez del Prado (December 1973). Eternidad en Los Andes. Marina Núñez del Prado. p. 191.
^Inter-American Development Bank Felipe Herrera Library; Felix Angel (2009). 50 Years %0 Works (in English and Spanish). Washington, D.C.: IDB Cultural Center. p. 66. ISBN978-1-59782-088-2. Archived from the original on June 20, 2010. Retrieved April 15, 2010.
^Gisbert, Teresa (April 1981). "Bolivian painting today". Americas. 33 (4). Washington DC: General Secretariat Organization of American States: 13.
^Meyer, Babs (December 3–4, 1978). "Guggenheim grantee in SP". Sao Paulo: Brazil Herald's Supplement. pp. para 5&6.
^ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadaeafagahaiajakalamCisneros, Florencio Garcia (1964). "Alfredo Da Silva". Latin-American Painters in New York (in English and Spanish). Francisco R. Garcia. pp. 68–69. Shows exhibit dates from 1936–1962
Teresa Gisbert. "Generation of 52". Ecology and Art (in Spanish). Historic sample, paragraph 4: The National Art Museum (MNA). Archived from the original(text/HTML) on May 16, 2009. Retrieved March 22, 2010.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
Journal
Gisbert, Teresa (April 1981). "Bolivian painting today". Americas. 33 (4). Washington dc: General Secretariat Organization of American States: 13.
Books
Rigoberto Villarroel Claure (1963). Art in Latin America Today Bolivia. Washington D.C: Pan American Union. p. 17 and Illustrations.
Shows pan American union 1961, some biographical info, and painting and critic reviews
Florencio Garcia Cisneros (1964). Latin-American Painters in New York (in English and Spanish). Francisco R. Garcia. Shows exhibit dates from 1936–1962
Contains some biographical info, painting, and critic reviews
International Exhibition of Graphic Art (in English and Dutch). Frechen/Germany. 1986. p. 158.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Shows some biographical info and 1 painting
10th International Triennial of Original Graphic Prints (in English, Spanish, and Dutch). Washington D.C: Kunstgesellshaft Grenchen. 1985. p. 235.
Shows art work and artist
Teresa Gisbert (April 1981). Americas. Vol. 33. Washington D.C: General Secretariat Organization of American States. p. 1 and Back Cover.
Shows Art work and Artist
Marina Núñez del Prado (December 1973). Eternidad en Los Andes. Marina Núñez del Prado. pp. 191–192.
Positive written views of Artist
II Bienal Ibericoamericana de Arte (in English, Spanish, and Dutch). 1985. p. 235.
Shows art work and artist
Alexander, Robert J. (1958). The Bolivian national revolution. New Brunswick, N.J.: University Press.
all about the Bolivian national revolution
Inter-American Development Bank Felipe Herrera Library (2009). 50 Years 50 Works (in English and Spanish). Washington, D.C.: IDB Cultural Center. p. 66.
Shows one art work and recognizes him as one of the 50 greatest Latin American artists. with comments by Felix Angel
Newspaper
Alejandra Melgraejo (April 2008). "Da Silva: gran artista potosino y experimentador de texturas" (in Spanish). Potosí Bolivia: EL Potosi. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
Contains=Shows full 2 page article in color with Art work and Artist recognition
"Congressional Awards Ceremony". The Washington Post. Washington DC. May 2005.
Contains=Shows Awards picture and artist
Meyer, Babs (December 3–4, 1978). "Guggenheim grantee in SP". Sao Paulo: Brazil Herald's Supplement. pp. para 5&6.