A Cuban Surrealist for LACMA

Agustín Cárdenas, Couple, 1956 (model) and 1972 (cast)

LACMA has acquired another significant work of global Surrealism. Cuban artist Agustín Cárdenas' Couple is the proof of a 1972 edition of 3 in bronze. Suzanne Deal Booth and the Ducommun and Gross Endowment supplied acquisition funds.

At the age of 19, Agustín Cárdenas (1927–2001) got a single-artist show at Havana's Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes. He was already living in Paris, where he became the first Teen-Age Black Surrealist. Cárdenas wrote that "In Paris I discovered what a man is… what Black culture is… what a Black man is." André Breton said Cárdenas' artistic technique was "efficient as a dragonfly."

The model for Couple dates from that early Paris period. Two entwined chicken-people have echoes of Giacometti, Wilfredo Lam, and the imagery of Cuba's Santería faith. LACMA is showing Couple next to Lam's 1947 painting Tropic.

Cárdenas exhibited widely, and his work is held in museums of Cuba, Latin America, Europe, and Japan. So far, he is rarely seen in U.S. institutions. The Metropolitan Museum has a Cárdenas sculpture, also acquired recently, in 2022. 

Cárdenas' Couple and Wilfredo Lam's Tropic





Comments

From the photo at top I didn't know if the piece was as big as a baby or a bus.
It's kinetic. I've got the vapors! Good get.
LACMA's collection site measures it 17-1/4 × 28 × 10 in.
Anonymous said…
The LA Art Show was held a few weeks ago. The Lucas Museum will open later this year. In the 2 locations, there were or will be displays that show either technical or creative talent. Ideally, sometimes a lot of both. Sometimes neither is evident. Or not evident enough.

Personal taste, cost-pricing and geographical-political considerations enter the formula of what's bought, what's not, who qualifies, who doesn't.

The Cardenas work looks like a mix of the styles that fit modern and contemporary. So it will work well in the Broad building. But if the Resnick is already stuffed with too much contemporary, not so much that location. Which means the reduced exhibit options in the Geffen (but lots of windows that are okay for a "Couple, 1972"!) probably have to accommodate certain new acquisitions the museum already doesn't have enough space for.

There's a nice essay on Cárdenas appearing in the 2018 Christie’s catalog where now the Met's Cárdenas was sold. Scroll to the bottom for the English translation.
https://www.christies.com/en/lot/lot-6149900?ldp_breadcrumb=back