Botero. Via Crucis. La Passione di Cristo
13 February - 1 May 2016

01.02__01.05.2016
Botero. Via Crucis. La Passione di Cristo 13 February - 1 May 20161 February__1 May 2016
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The Way of the Cross.  The Passion of Christ is a cycle of works created by Fernando Botero between 2010 and 2011.  The cycle, which comprises twenty-seven oil paintings and thirty-four works on paper, and which has been shown in numerous countries on the  American continent and in Europe, manifests a theme that has been a feature of Botero's work since his childhood and early youth in Colombia, a world abounding in religious images in both the public and private spheres.

 

Fernando Botero's work offers multiple levels of interpretation.  His work always offers an expansive take – never a purely imitative revisitation – on the art some of the leading players in Western art history such as Paolo Uccello, Peter Paul Rubens, Diego Velázquez, Paul Cézanne and Pablo Picasso, to name but a few.  Botero has always built sensual worlds peopled with beings brimming with immense pleasure and happiness through the tranquil and sumptous abundance of forms that came to maturity in the late 1970s.  What we see here is a crossroads where memories of his city, of his homeland, are strongly criss-crossed by forms of worship deeply ingrained in his culture and in his iconography.  The soft features, the ideas and the forms that seem so stable, are criss-crossed here by the upheaval in which grief and tragedy take shape, adopting the figurative language that is a hallmark of the Colombian artist's work, yet without abandoning his uniquely distorting gaze.

 

We should consider these pictures, in which drama now sweeps into the picture, as a new manifestation in which internal transformations can be identified that enrich and expand his work.  Here irony is replaced by compassion, a reflection on poetry and on tragedy, on the intensity and the cruelty of Christ's Passion.

 

This exhibition was staged in the heart of Medellin, the city in which Botero was born, during Holy Week 2012, in the course of celebrations held to mark his eightieth birthday.  The painter then decided to donate the cycle to the Museo de Antioquia, which has been organising its world tour since then.