Florica Prevenda | |
---|---|
Born | 5 April 1959 |
Nationality | Romanian |
Education | National University of Arts, Iași |
Known for | Painting |
Florica Prevenda (born April 5, 1959) is a Romanian artist, who lives and works in Bucharest, Romania.
Early life and education
Prevenda was born on 5 April 1959 into an Aromanian family, who suffered persecution of the communist regime.[1] She is a graduate of the National University of Arts, Iași (1984). Between (1993–1997) she was an associate professor at the Bucharest National University of Arts.[2]
Artistic style
Florica Prevenda is one of the most innovative artists within Romanian contemporary art space.[3] An introspective spirit, the artist develops an intense studio art work drawing attention particularly through a rich experience of conceptual and artistic challenge and self-discovery. Her artistic and intellectual investigations at the intersection of existing and emerging themes to interpret and critique the world of images are being explored through a series of experimental innovative mixed-media projects in her exhibitions.
From the fundamental theme of the Face (The National Art Museum, 1999) until the anonymous multitude of the silhouettes of the Metropolis (The Shadows of the Present, Simeza, 2004), the painter meditates (approaching the face schematically and in series) on the entire magma of emotions and anxieties that haunt the human condition nowadays, evolving towards the depersonalisation of all the nets and towards the consumist reification. This existentialist pithy message is embodied in Florica's painting exactly in the rind, the leather, the scales, the scars, the imprints and the crust of the tones of white, grey, black and ochre of the wrapping cardboard. Her images do not become simpler from a cycle to another. They become poli-matters reliefs, with cassetons, with the zigzag rhythms of the goffered cardboard, with fields of numbers with schematized eyes and palms, with interweavings and garlands of paper bands or painted cloth. Therefore, the artist neither performs in narrative scripts, nor composes after effects of rhetoric of the proper abstract image.[4]
Prevenda composes, or more precisely she lays down visual-tactile matter, like the ashes of her feelings, over simple urban signs of human presence. The processes of growing of the images and of the matters they wear, the densification of the surfaces – symbolically speaking – build for the artist a niche of introspection. It is a painting of emotional combustion, serious in inventiveness, without falling into the ludic. The technique of the artist produces an extremely rich pictural texture without intentionally recovering the ridiculous. Prevenda manufactures bricolating matters and materials without exalting the poverist non-finite. As the musical form close to her painting seems to be an ample organ tocatta.
Prevenda's great picto-objectural suites assert, invoking paradoxically exactly the shadow of the human, the withdrawal of the artist from the mundane and the passionate abnegation in the material elaboration of the pictorial body and of its stratified density.[5]
Hers assemblage-painting bears a strong presence, striking on a visual and tactile level. With an iconography evolving around the human face and shape, varying between anonymous and autobiographical representations, the artist reiterates contemporary art's main issues: the complex relations between 2D and 3D representation, the physical, hand-operated character of her artistic act versus the almost "industrial" use of technology in other delegated artistic processes, etc. Overall, her work emerges in conceptual series that symbolically address the multi-layered connections between the self/individual and the others/society, between real and virtual identity, in the accelerated, chaotic context of technologically–mediated, globalizing and "democratic" communication.[6]
The numerical codes, the pixelization, the screens, the theme of the shadow suggested the sketched body more and more fragile and fascinated with the virtual world. On the other hand, the theme of the hybridization of the biologicaland the technological allowed the artist to “create a body” for the work of art, continuing a process that she had started in 1990 when she had switched from oil and acrylics to other materials (nails, wire, cardboard, textile, plastic, sawdust etc.) in order to produce collage, assemblage and, in the end, sculpture. The series Time Regained (2005-2008) was announced as an assumed exploration of the self.[7] The human body remained a framework of the artistic works but this time Florica Prevenda staged her own body—deconstructed, broken up, understood as a phantomatic construct connected not only to experiences but also to dreams, expectations, frustrations, wishes.[8] The series Serenity (2009-2010) is the only one in which the artist does not destroy the body but presents it as a total through the outline of the body of a generic child, a beautiful form that is nevertheless empty like a blank page on which life experiences are going to be registered.[9] Facebook Obsession (2011-2015),[10] Ephemeral/Condensation(2015-2016)[11] and Anonymous (2017-2018) are series that problematize the success of the networks of socialization as well as the need for communication and self-representation of contemporary human beings. The impoverishment of identity caused by the new technologies is suggested by sketchy physiognomies to which colour sometimes adds a touch of coquetry and frivolity. In a world in which communication is instantaneous and takes place in a network, the people imprisoned in the image seem to be terminals connected to a central computer which simply cannot establish a real communication.
Exhibitions
Her works have been presented at different locations in Romania and abroad: Hangar Art Center, Brussels (2019), Romanian Cultural Institute, Vienna (2016), Annart Gallery, Bucharest (2016), Arielle d'Hauterives Gallery, Brussels (2016), National Museum of Art, Chisinau (2016), Timișoara Art Museum (2014), Brukenthal National Museum (2017, 2013), AnnArt Gallery (2014), Arthus Gallery, Brussels (1999, 2001, 2004, 2011); National Museum of Art / Contemporary Art, Bucharest (1999); Galerie Het Dijkstoelhuis, Wageningen, Holland (2002, 2004); Mogosoaia Museum, Romania (2017–18, 2008); Galerie Lamber, Valkenswaard, Holland (2000); FNV Kiem, Amsterdam (2002); M.I.A. "One Woman Show", Milano, Italy (2007); Galeria Simeza, Bucharest (2004).
References
- ↑ Ministerul Justitiei. "Rezistenta Anticomunista". Guvernul Romaniei.
- ↑ "Florica Prevenda". Contra Punct. 10: 5. 1999.
- ↑ Romanian Cultural Institute, London. "'Facebook Obsession': An Evening with Artist Florica Prevenda". 25 May 2017.
- ↑ Aurelia Mocanu (September 2008). "Umbra chipului. Exfolieri şi depuneri". LiterNet.ro.
- ↑ Adrian Guta (27 January 2004). "Umbre ale prezentului". Observatorul Cultural.
- ↑ Diana Ursan (12 May 2017). "Florica Prevenda". Creon Art.
- ↑ Dan Breaz (May 15, 2012). "Florica Prevenda. Timpul regăsit". Revista ARTA.
- ↑ Corneliu Antim (June 20, 2008). "Prezentul continuu". Ziarul Financiar.
- ↑ Mădălina Mirea (April 29, 2016). "Florica Prevenda, un spirit solar". Observator cultural.
- ↑ Aurelia Mocanu (October 4, 2014). "Florica Prevenda – Profiling". Revista ARTA.
- ↑ Denisa Cristache (November 1, 2017). "Florica Prevenda: Efemer". Arta in Romania.