Olga de Amaral | Catalogue
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Olgade
amaral


Olgade
amaral



tombé sur cette phrase : « Le charpentier ne vient pas
vous dire : “Ecoutez‑moi parler de l’art de la charpente”,
mais il traite pour la construction d’une maison et il fait
voir qu’il possède son métier. » Olga de Amaral n’a ja‑
mais parlé de l’art de la charpente à personne. Ce qu’elle
assemble, tresse et dresse, compose un piège où le re‑
gard prend conscience de ce qu’est (peut‑être) son pou‑
voir et de ce qu’est (peut‑être) son impuissance lorsqu’il
fait face à l’indéchiffrable, qu’il doit admettre que ce qu’il
rencontre et éprouve impose le silence. Et si elle n’a pas
besoin de citer Épictète, c’est parce qu’une affirmation
comme celle‑ci, essentiel propos de Cézanne, lui importe
– c’est une hypothèse –, plus que tout : « La sensation
est à la base de tout, je le répéterai sans cesse. » Relisez,
s’il vous plaît : « … de tout ». Ce qui implique, parce
qu’une œuvre est un partage sinon elle n’est rien, celle
qu’il a pu éprouver et celle qu’il se propose de provoquer.
De quel ordre est la sensation que provoquent ces sur‑
faces ? La réponse vous appartient.
Ce qui ne doit pas vous empêcher de penser à ces
mots prononcés par Matisse : « Tout art digne de ce nom
est religieux. Soit une création faite de lignes, de cou‑
leurs : si cette création n’est pas religieuse, elle n’existe
pas. Si cette création n’est pas religieuse, il ne s’agit
que d’art documentaire, d’art anecdotique… qui n’est
plus de l’art. » Ou encore à ce propos de Mark Rothko :
« Les personnes qui pleurent devant mes tableaux font la
même expérience religieuse que celle que j’ai eu lorsque
je les ai peints. » Faut‑il vous préciser que cette expé‑
rience se passe de textes sacrés comme elle se passe de
culte et de liturgie ?
Comprenez‑moi bien. Si j’ai tenu à vous citer ces
phrases de Paul Éluard qui m’accompagnent depuis des
années, c’est parce que l’œuvre de Olga de Amaral est de
celles, rares, qui permettent de ne pas vivre « que comme
un mort, comme une pierre ou comme du fumier ».
Acceptez que si cette lettre a commencé par une
confidence, une autre tienne lieu de conclusion. Vous
n’avez pu que le constater comme moi, depuis quelques
années les écrans se sont multipliés. Je m’en méfie. Et
que m’importe si vous pressentez que cette méfiance
introduit un propos ringard, acerbe ou aigri, lequel ne
peut être que celui d’un vieux schnock ou schoque ou
chnoque, à votre guise. Ecrans… Qu’y puis‑je si un mot
trimballe avec lui des significations anciennes quand bien
même son sens a évolué ? Il se trouve qu’avant d’indi‑
quer, dans le domaine de l’optique, une surface sur la‑
quelle se reproduit une image, ce qu’il ne fait que depuis
1859 me précise un dictionnaire historique de la langue
française, ce mot écran a d’abord désigné un panneau
qui servait à protéger, à dissimuler, à cacher. L’expression
« faire écran », me précise le même dictionnaire, date
elle‑même de 1866. Pour « faire écran », un « écran de
fumée » a pu – et peut toujours – fort bien faire l’affaire.
Comment donc ne pas se méfier de ces écrans ? Et
comment ne pas se méfier des images qui paraissent sur
ces écrans ? Comment ne pas redouter que la vigilance,
l’acuité et la lucidité que le regard se doit d’exercer en
soient atteintes ? Le très cynique PDG d’une chaîne de té‑
lévision ne s’est pas privé d’affirmer que son boulot consis‑
tait à livrer aux annonceurs « du temps de cerveau humain
disponible ». « Disponible » est l’adjectif pudique pour si‑
gnifier conditionné, engourdi, abruti, stupide. Comment
un regard usé par les images diffusées en rafales pourrait‑
il encore être capable de la patience qu’exige la peinture ?
Comment un regard fatigué par ces images qui imposent
l’immédiateté pourrait‑il être encore capable de prendre
son temps pour voir ? Je ne peux me satisfaire de la pi‑
teuse (et douteuse) consolation qui m’assure que, parmi
toutes les images qui passent sur ces écrans, les seules qui
vaillent sont celles qui les crèvent.
C’est pourquoi, vous le comprendrez, ces surfaces
que propose Olga de Amaral me sont essentielles. Elles
conduisent à un recueillement, à une méditation néces‑
saires. Elles permettent de prendre rendez‑vous avec ce
qui est « sensible, réel, utile ».
Pascal Bonafoux

My dear ***,
If I have said this all to you before, forgive me
for repeating myself. These words have been
with me for years, because they will have been
a beacon to me, and will no doubt have defined
a requirement —they are essential (to me). For
all this time I have kept a slip of paper, folded
n two, in my wallet. In forty years, the onion skin paper
has become a bit weathered, torn, and held together
with tape. I had typed a few sentences by Paul Eluard on
t: “I am not of those who try to lose their way, to for‑
get themselves, by loving nothing at all, by cutting down
their needs, their tastes, their wishes, and by leading their
ives, that is to say life, towards the loath‑
some conclusion of their deaths. I am not
willing to subject the world to myself by
the mere virtual power of understanding,
I want everything to be tangible, real, use‑
ful to me, because it is the basis on which
I can conceive my existence. A man can
only be in his own reality. Otherwise, he
only appears to others as dead, as a stone or as a piece
of trash.” This is how Eluard began a text that he wrote
about Picasso’s painting.
At times I would only read it every now and again. At
times I felt that I had to read over it quite often. Regard‑
ess, I always come back to it when I discover a piece
of art, and after having gazed at it for a long time, sur‑
prised, confounded, lost, what else? A bit worried per‑
haps, my only certainty being that I understand nothing
of it at all; I have to ensure myself that what I am looking
at is “tangible, real, useful” I did not have to reread Elu‑
ard’s words in Olga de Amaral’s studio. Because what she
showed me was obvious.
And necessary.
The surfaces spread out in front of me were what
they should have been. And they were nothing else than
what they had to be. It was “it”. And “it” could only be
“it”. The word “surface” that I have chosen to use may
disturb you... What other word could I use? They are not
canvases... Not paintings either. Nor are they tapestries, a
word that would relegate this piece of art to who knows
what basement or attic where, obsolete and out of style,
it would belong to nothing else but dust. Let us agree
that I stick to “surface” for lack of a better word. At least
this lets me attempt to give an (imperfect) description of
what it is: irregular, unbalanced and rough, uneven as
much as fluid and undulating. At least this word allows
me to invite you to see for yourself that the light seems
to scrape the surface, and graze it in one place, then in
others to burst forth and sparkle... Unlike on any other
material, unlike on any other “surface”. What can I do if
this ordinary word is the only one that can describe what
is incomparable in this artwork? All the more incompa‑
rable that it remains detached from any manifesto or any
theory in order to be singular.
The acrobats, authors of these theories and mani‑
festos that have always been around, which has not
prevented them from becoming increasingly numerous
over the last few decades, should have read Epictetus’s
Discourses. Book III, Chapter XXI, to be precise, entitled
To those who undertake the profession of teacher with a
light heart. They would have found this sentence: “The
carpenter does not come and say, Hear me discourse
on carpentry, but he undertakes a contract and builds a
5
Letter to *** regarding Olga de Amaral

house and so shows that he has acquired the art.” Olga
de Amaral never talked about the art of carpentry with
anybody. What she assembles, weaves and sets up cre‑
ates a trap in which the regard becomes aware of its own
power and of what it is (perhaps), of its weakness faced
with the incomprehensible, and it must admit that what
it encounters and perceives imposes silence. And if there
is no need to quote Epictetus, it is because the following
statement —an essential comment by Cézanne— mat‑
ters to her (that is a hypothesis) more than anything else:
“Sensation is the basis of everything”. Read it again,
please: “... of everything”. Which includes the sensation
that he could experience and the one that he offers to
arouse —because an artwork is a matter of sharing, oth‑
erwise it is nothing at all.
What sensation do these surfaces inspire? The answer
lies within you.
It should not keep you from thinking about these
words by Matisse: “All art worthy of the name is reli‑
gious. Be it a creation of lines, or colors: if it is not re‑
ligious, it does not exist. If it is not religious, it is only a
matter of documentary art, anecdotal art…which is no
longer art.” Or those by Mark Rothko: “The people who
cry in front of my paintings have the same religious ex‑
perience I had when I painted them.” Do I need to point
out that this experience does not need any sacred text
just as it does not need any cult or liturgy?
Do not misunderstand me. If I insisted on quoting
Paul Eluard’s words that have accompanied me for years,
it is because Olga de Amaral’s work belongs to those rare
people that make it possible to live not only “as dead, as
a stone or as a piece of trash.”
Kindly accept that if this letter started with a confi‑
dence, it will also end with one. You must be aware like
me of the multiplication of screens in recent years. I do
not trust them. And I don’t care if you sense that this
mistrust introduces some old‑fashioned, caustic or bitter
thoughts that can only come from an old schmuck or
shmuck or schmo, whichever you prefer. Screens... What
can I possibly do when a word carries old meanings even
when its definition has evolved? In the field of optics,
the word screen, before standing for a surface on which
pictures are shown (its meaning since the 19th century,
according to my etymology dictionary), used to desig‑
nate a board whose function was to protect, to hide, to
conceal. Hence the expression “to screen off” . In order
to “screen something off”, a “smoke screen” has always
managed to do the trick.
So how can we not mistrust screens? And how can
we not mistrust the images on them? How can we not
fear that they could affect the necessary vigilance, acuity
and lucidity exercised by looking? The very cynical CEO
of a French TV channel once allowed himself to con‑
firm that his job consisted of selling “periods of time of
available human brain” to advertisers. “Available” is the
modest adjective meaning conditioned, dulled, dazed,
stupid. How could looking, worn out by the flurry of
broadcasted images, still be capable of the patience re‑
quired by a painting? How could looking, tired by these
images that impose immediacy, still be capable of taking
its time to see? I cannot be satisfied with the pitiful (and
doubtful) consolation which guarantees that, among
all the images passing on these screens, the only ones
worth watching are those with a great presence on it.
That is why, you will surely understand, these surfaces
that Olga de Amaral proposes are essential to me. They
lead to a necessary contemplation and meditation. And
it is here that one can come and see what is “tangible,
real, useful”.
Pascal Bonafoux

7Strata aqua i, 2010.

eMorias i, 2

9Resonancia 2, 2009.

Vestigio Azul, 2002.

11Estudio MagEnta, 2007.

Pueblo F, 2010.

13

Pueblo e, 2010.

15Umbra 51, 2007.

MeMento, 2000.

17Segmento 8, 1999.

Lienzo 25, 1988.

19Bosque i y ii, 1988.


21nudo Magenta, 2011.

MeMorias ii, 2010.

23AlquimiA 95, 2005.

Strata 14, 2009.

25Strata 15, 2009.

Strata 18, 2010.

27Strata 20, 2010.

Pueblo P, 2012.

29

Olga de amaral
1932 naissance d’Olga de Amaral à Bogotà en Colombie
expOsitiOns / Exhibitions (1990-2012)
2012 Olga de Amaral, Nohra Haime Gallery, New York, NY, USA. • Boundaries, Latin American Masters, Los Angeles,
California, USA. 2011 VII Pueblos VII Policromos, Bellas Artes Gallery, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA. 2010 “Entre Pue-
blos” & oeuvres récentes, mise en scène par Juan Montoya, Galerie Jean-Jacques Dutko, París, France. 2009 Plus
Ultra al di La’ del Barocco, Museo Della Citta’Di Santa Giulia, Brescia, Italia. • Estructuras y Esculturas, Jim y Olga
de Amaral, Galería Club El Nogal, Bogotá, Colombia. • Jim y Olga de Amaral, Corpbanca, Caracas, Venezuela. 2008
Golden Fleece, Eretz Israel Museum, Tel Aviv, Israel. 2007 Strata, Centro Cultural Casa de Vacas, Madrid, España.
2005 Resonancias, Centro Cultural de Belen, Portugal. 2004 Threaded Words, The Colombian Embassy in the United
States, Washington D.C. 2003 Glyphs, Bellas Artes Gallery, Santa Fe New Mexico, USA. 2002 Tiempos y tierra, Museo
de la Nación, Lima, Perú. • Museo de Arte Moderno, Barranquilla, Colombia. 2001 Mes de Colombia, Museo Nacional
de Bellas Artes, Buenos Aires, Argentina. 2000 Bellas Artes Gallery, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA. 1999 Galería Diners,
Bogotá, Colombia. • Hillside Terrace, Tokio, Japan. • Kreismuseum, Zons, Dormagen, Germany. • Textilmuseum Max
Berk, Heidelberg, Germany. • Olga de Amaral. Woven Gold, The Albuquerque Museum. • Albuquerque, New México,
USA. 1998 Cranbrook Academy of Art, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, USA. • Indianapolis Museum of Art, Indianápolis,
Indiana, USA. 1997 Museo de Arte Moderno La Tertulia, Cali, Colombia. • Art Museum of the Americas, Washington
D.C., USA. • Cleveland Institute of Art, Cleveland, Ohio, USA. • Bellas Artes Gallery, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA. • Ré-
trospective, Musèe de la Tapisserie Contemporaine, Angers, France. • Olga de Amaral: Seven Stelae, Federal Reserve
Board, Washington, USA. • University Art Museum Downtown, The University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, New
Mexico, USA. 1996 Galería Diners, Bogotá, Colombia. • Peter Joseph Gallery, New York, New York, USA. • Museo de
Arte de Pereira, Pereira, Colombia. • Nine Stelae and other Landscapes, Fresno Art Museum, Fresno, California, USA.
• UNM Center for the Arts, Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA. 1994 The Allrich Gallery, San Francisco, California, USA.
• California State University, Todd Madigan Gallery, Bakersfield, California, USA. • Galería Pérez-McCullom, Guayaquil,
Ecuador. • Bellas Artes Gallery, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA. 1993 Lost Images, Inherited Landscapes, The Allrich
Gallery, San Francisco, California. • Elite Fine Arts, Miami, Florida, USA. • Cuatro tiempos (retrospectiva), Museo de
Arte Moderno de Bogotá, Bogotá, Colombia. • Centro Cultural Avianca, Barranquilla, Colombia. 1992 Lost Images,
Inherited Landscapes, Johnston Community College, Overland Park, Kansas, USA. • Bellas Artes Gallery, Santa Fe,
New Mexico, USA. 1990 Bellas Artes Gallery, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA. •
prix et remerciements / AWARDs AnD ACKnoWLEDGMEnts
2010 Membre de l’Académie Nationale des Beaux-Arts, Buenos Aires, Argentine. 2009 Prix attribué à Olga de Amaral
pour la Vème Biennale Internationale des Arts de la Fibre, Art Textile Mondial, Buenos Aires, Argentine. 2006 Le Prix
Olga de Amaral est créé au Costa Rica et le premier prix de 2006 est remporté par Olga de Amaral lors de la IVème
Biennale Internationale des Arts de la Fibre, Art Textile Mondial, San José, Costa Rica. 2005 Visionary Artist 2005,
décerné par le Museum of Art & Design, New York, USA. 1989 Présidente, UCLA, Los Angeles USA. 1973 Guggenheim
Fellowship Arts Créatifs/Beaux-Arts, New York, USA. 1972-1974 Premier Prix 3ème Biennale des Arts de Coltejer,
Medellin, Colombie. 1971 Premier Prix du XXIIème Salon des Artistes Nationaux, Bogotà, Colombie.
cOnférences / ConfEREnCEs
2003 Conférence “Le lieu de mon imaginaire” Metropolitan Museum, New York, USA. 1978 Conférence à l’Université
de Californie, Berkeley, USA. 1972 Palais de la Légion d’Honneur, San Francisco, USA. 1971 Olga de Amaral participe
avec Magda Abakanowicz, Junius Bird, Sheila Hicks, Boris Kroll, Glen Kaufmann et Jogoda Buic au symposium "La
fibre comme moyen créatif", organisé par l’ UCLA, Los Angeles, USA. 1970 Ecole des Arts Appliqués, Bâle, Suisse.
1968 World Crafts Council, 3ème Assemblée Générale, Lima, Pérou. 1967 Université de Californie, Berkeley, USA.

31
cOllectiOns publiques et privées / PUbLiC AnD PRiVAtE CoLLECtions
American Craft Museum, New York, New York, USA. • Ararat Gallery, Australia. • Arthur Young Company, Houston,
Texas, USA. • Banco Comercial Antioqueño, Medellín, Colombia. • Banco de Comercio Exterior, Bancoldex, Bogotá,
Colombia. • Banco de la República, Bogotá, Colombia. • Braniff International Airways, Kansas, USA. • Chicago Art Ins-
titute, Chicago, Illinois, USA. • Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Ohio, USA. • Clínica Santa Fe de Bogotá, Bogotá,
Colombia. • Club El Nogal, Bogotá, Colombia. • Colgel the Clinton Exchange, Syracuse, New York, USA. • Coltejer,
Medellín, Colombia. • Cranbrook Academy of Art Museum, Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, USA. • Charterhouse Interna-
tional, New York, USA. • Chicago Art Institute, Chicago, Illinois,USA. • Denver Art Museum, Denver, Colorado, USA.
• De Young Museum, San Francisco, California, USA. • Dreyfus Corporation, New York, New York, USA. • Embajada
de Colombia, Madrid, España. • Embajada de Colombia, México D.F., México. • Embarcadero Center, San Francisco,
California, USA. • Federación Nacional de Cafeteros, Bogotá, Colombia. • First National Bank, Forth Worth, Texas,
USA. • First National City Bank, Chicago, Illinois, USA. • First National City Bank, Miami, Florida, USA. • Flagship Bank,
Miami, Florida, USA. • Florida National Bank, Jacksonville, Florida, USA. • Forth Worth National Bank, Houston, Texas,
USA. • Four Seasons Hotel, Hong Kong, Japan • Hilton Hotel, Chicago, Illinois, USA. • GBC International, London,
Great Britain. • Hotel Santa Clara, Cartagena, Colombia. • Hyatt House, San Francisco, California, USA. • Hyatt Re-
gency, Chicago, Illinois, USA. • Hyatt Regency, San Francisco, California, USA. • IBM de Colombia, Bogotá, Colombia.
• Interamerican Development Bank, Washington, USA. • International Trade Mart, Bruxelles, Belgique. • John Nuveen
& Company, Chicago, Illinois, USA. • Kunstendustrimuseum, Throdheim, Norway. • Macquarie University, Sydney,
Australia. • Marriot Hotel, San Francisco, California, USA. • Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York, USA.
• Miami International Airport, Miami, Florida, USA. • Museo de Arte Moderno, Bogotá, Colombia. • Museo de Arte
Moderno La Tertulia, Cali, Colombia. • Museum of Modern Art, New York, New York • Musée cantonal des Beaux Arts,
Lausanne, Suisse. • Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto, Japan. • Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, Paris, France.
• Musée Bellerive, Zurich, Suisse. • Musée Jean Lurçat et de la Tapisserie Contemporaine, Angers, France. • Museo
de Albuquerque, Albuquerque, Nuevo México, USA. • Museo Nacional-Cancillería, Bogotá, Colombia. • Museo del
Instituto de Arte Contemporáneo, Lima, Perú. • Museum Bellerive, Zürich, Suisse. • Omaha Public Library, Omaha,
Nebraska, USA. • Omni West Hotel, New York, New York, USA. • Palacio Antonio Nariño, Bogotá, Colombia. • Park
Hyatt, San Francisco, California, USA. • Peachtree Plaza Hotel, Atlanta, Georgia, USA. • Phillip Morris Collection, New
York, New York, USA. • Prudential Life Insurance Company, New Jersey, USA. • Regency Hyatt House, Chicago, Illinois,
USA. • Regent Hotel, Hong Kong. • Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, Rhode Island, USA. • San Antonio Mu-
seum of Art, San Antonio, Texas, USA. • Seguros Skandia, Bogotá, Colombia. • Sofitel. Hotel Nicolás de Obando, Santo
Domingo, República Dominicana. • The Renwick Gallery of the National Gallery, Washington, USA. • Toledo Museum
of Art, Ohio, USA. • The Landmark Group, Atlanta, Georgia, USA. • The Denver Art Museum, Denver, Colorado, USA.
• The Renwick Gallery of the National Gallery, Washington, USA. • UCSD Medical Center, La Jolla, California, USA.


