Juan Ugalde

Bilbao 1958

By: Beatriz Herráez

Juan Ugalde is one of the major figures of the past few decades in Spanish art. Since the 1980s he has been involved in numerous initiatives that go beyond his career as a painter. Stand-out exhibitions of his work in his early years were held at the Buades Gallery and he helped set up projects such as the Estrujenbank Group, which he founded in 1989 together with Patricia Gadea, Dionisio Cañas and Mariano Lozano. In the words of its members, this group 'pursued the sublimation of the everyday environment as the starting point for various social/decorative and political/cultural operations'. He staged exhibitions and actions with the group until 1993.

In all his output (comprising paintings, photos, drawings and collages), Juan Ugalde reflects from a committed viewpoint on the effects of uncontrolled urban development. His works typically show suburban landscapes, peripheral areas and dormitory towns on the edge of cities. They are scenes that lead observers to think about 'what it means to live in the time of the post-capitalist global village', as curator Dennys Matos puts it. In producing them, Ugalde never loses his sense of humour or the irony that he showed in his early works.

Projects on which Ugalde has collaborated include the SOS Emergen Sumergin Art magazine (2000-2007) and the 143 Delicias video festival, named after the address of the former base of operations of Estrujenbank in Madrid.

Solo exhibitions of his work have been staged at the Patio Herreriano Museum (Valladolid, 2003), the Santander Museum of Fine Arts (2009) and the Amós Salvador Gallery (Logroño, 2011). He has also taken part in group exhibitions at the Museo Reina Sofía (Madrid, 2013), the ICO Museum (Madrid, 2011), the Santander Museum of Fine Arts (2016) and the Esteban Vicente Museum (Segovia, 2016).

Ugalde has received several major grants, including a Fulbright Grant to further his training in New York from 1986 to 1989, the Marcelino Botín Grant (Santander, 1996) and a grant from the Banesto Foundation (1994). He also won First Prize at the 9th L’Oreal Painting Contest (1992) and the Altadis Prize (2000).