Federico Herrero

Playground

2018

541,67

Lithograph on paper

60 × 80 cm

Edition of 20 copies, signed and numbered by the artist

In stock

This edition is published by South London Gallery

Pick up at / ships in 5 to 10 business days from London (UK)

over dit werk

This edition was produced following Federico Herrero’s public commission for the Guggenheim exhibition Under the Same Sun: Art in Latin America. Herrero created a mural on the playground of Pelican housing estate which backs onto the South London Gallery.

For his residency Herrero worked with residents on the estate to create a site-specific artwork for the children’s playground. The residency was punctuated by a series of informal social events for Pelican residents, involving painting, music and food.

During the late 1990s and early 2000s, the practice of painting in Latin America was neglected as artists turned increasingly to more conceptual strategies. Costa Rica-based Herrero was one of the exceptions to this rule, developing an original pictorial language rooted in imagery of physical and mental landscapes.

over Federico Herrero

Federico Herrero’s practice stands outside Latin America’s Conceptual, muralist, and geometric abstraction traditions, yet his work references all of these styles. Herrero’s images are often populated by patches of colour, alien-like figures, and disembodied eyes, and reveal a fascination with crossing boundaries. The artist blurred the line between public and private, for example, in an intervention titled Fictional Publicity (2000), in which he hung small paintings all over his native city; some remained in place for days, others vanished after just a few minutes. For the Havana Biennial (2003), Herrero transgressed national borders by painting Mappa Mundi at the bottom of a public pool, allowing Cuban swimmers to imagine themselves roaming the globe.

Herrero also questions the spatial boundaries of museum and gallery interiors, taking an installation-like approach to the presentation of his work in such contexts. The artist’s 2008 exhibition at Kunstverein Freiburg, Germany, for example, paired conventional paintings on canvas with stripes and patches of colour painted directly onto the interior architecture. The artist’s fascination with limits is evident, too, in the canvases—small bubbles of bright colour sometimes peep from behind the primary subject, as in Blue Mountain (2008), or seem to stare curiously at the viewer, as in Green Landscape with Nine Circles (2008). Herrero’s work is essentially a study of liminal spaces—gaps between figure and background, canvas and wall, private and public, and (perhaps most significantly) between work and viewer. The forms and colours in his paintings also capture the energy of urban Costa Rica and its vibrant tropical setting.

(courtesy of Guggenheim Museum)

 

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