Hombre del Barroco by Maribel Portela, Mexico
Regular price
$950.00
Sale
Hombre del Barroco
by Maribel Portela
Mexico City, Mexico
ceramic with porcelain slip, metal stand
17” high x 6.5” wide x 6.5" deep
Maribel Portela was born in 1960 in Mexico D.F. She obtained her degree in fine art at the prestigious Escuela National de Artes Plasticas at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM). Portela’s clay sculpture, while unmistakably within the genre of contemporary fine art, maintains its roots in the pre-Columbian figurative works of Mexico. The rich flavors of these magical figures form a substantial presence in Portela’s ceramic works.
Portela brings a primal, subtle and sophisticated body of clay objects inspired by the richly colored and highly adaptable flora of Mexico. Portela’s sculptures, in various media, combine elements of traditional, religious, and pre-Hispanic symbols taken from sacred cultures, to create art that is relevant in our modern world. As an artist, Portela has stayed clear of political agendas, social pronouncements, and religious or anti-religious statements which have characterized much of Mexico’s contemporary art. Instead, she remains nonpartisan, content to express and give form to the mystical energy which she perceives around her. Portela is dedicated to art’s capacity as an expressive vehicle, yet one that is unburdened by dogma or rhetoric. Free of ulterior agendas, Portela’s work becomes a uniquely pure expression of the joy and wonder which are such integral parts of her personality.
“I had a friend who used to say that our body’s wrinkles, creases, shape, color, etc. spoke. I fell in love with those words, which for me contain a lot of truth, although maybe I don’t have what it takes to understand the body’s language. For instance, the sculptures I do of tattooed men tel a story. We are all tattooed on the inside, we have wonderful and terrible tattoos. Imagine that your life story began on your forehead and ended on your big toe. You would not be able to deceive me, nor could I fool you.” - Maribel Portela, excerpt from the exhibition catalogue Earthly Bodies, 2003