“Matrix”: the art of Julián Pesce transcends traditional graphics

“Matrix”: the art of Julián Pesce transcends traditional graphics

Landscapes related to water cover a wall in the manner of a large mural in which the artist shows waterfalls, patterns, and crisscrossings that he has depicted appealing not only to traditional graphics but also to the use of technological tools, since he also has a degree in Electronic Arts from UNTREF, in addition to having trained with prominent artists, including his father, Ernesto Pesce, Dolores Casares, Jorge Perrin, Oscar Smoje, Diana Aizenberg, Manuel Amestoy

In 2013 he held his first solo show at the Recoleta Cultural Center, which may one day recover its identity and which catapulted so many artists who distinguished themselves and are distinguished by their careers. She completed a research grant in Bilbao and participated in Bristol in Impact 12.

The sample requires stopping at the innumerable variants with which Pesce catches our gaze, we recognize images but also leaves room for the ambiguous, determining factors so that all the exhibited work reveals the richness of the essential drawing and the amount of resources, for example, landslides. in the manner of small mosaics that break apart, leave free spaces and are grouped somewhere on the support, a programming of textile fabric, traditional xylography and digital language.

An excellent montage with large works, some hang from the ceiling and also crawl on the floor, from where Eduardo Stupía points out in the curatorial text that Pesce “proposes the viewer to let themselves be enveloped and dazzled by the suggestion of its frameworks, superimpositions and counterpoints” .

Fortunately, an important group of engravers is emerging who, as in other disciplines, approach other techniques so as not to fall into the cliché, the repetitive, the imitation of itself or what is already too done, which does not mean that innovating is empty. of sense.

(AMIA Art Space, Pasteur 633. Monday to Thursday from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Friday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Closing at the end of February).

Source: Ambito

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