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Toward the middle of the 1950s, abstract art became a dominant
trend in the Latin American cultural scene. Many artists
incorporated elements of abstraction into their rigorous artistic
vocabularies, while at the same time, the representation of
geometric lines and structures filtered into everyday life,
appearing in textiles, posters, murals, and landscapes. The
translation of a field-changing Spanish-language book, Abstract
Crossings analyzes the relationship between, on the one hand, the
emergence of abstract proposals in avant-garde groups and, on the
other, the institutionalization and newfound hegemony of abstract
poetics as part of Latin America's imaginary of modernization. A
profusion of mid-century artistic institutional exchanges between
Argentina and Brazil makes a study of the trajectories of
abstraction in these two countries particularly valuable. Examining
the work of artists such as Max Bill, Lygia Clark, Waldemar
Cordeiro, and Tomas Maldonado, author Maria Amalia Garcia rewrites
the artistic history of the period and proposes a novel reading of
the cultural dialogue between Argentina and Brazil. This is the
first book in the new Studies on Latin American Art series,
supported by a gift from the Institute for Studies on Latin
American Art (ISLAA).
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