Jardín medicinal [Medicinal Garden]

Jardín medicinal [Medicinal Garden]

  • 2001
  • Water-colour on paper
  • 151 x 120 cm
  • Cat. D_292
  • Acquired in 2001
By:
Isabel Tejeda

Federico Guzmán considers himself, both as an artist and as a human being, to be an extension of nature. This approach is patent in his work of recent decades.

His experience in such far-away places as South America and the Western Sahara are evident in his work. The Banco de España Collection contains a considerable number of pieces derived from his time in Colombia: a painting that follows the outlines of photography, Yagé (2000); a scientific drawing with post-colonial overtones, Theobroma cacao (2000); a psychedelic collage The Mistress of the Yucca (2000); and Bacano (1998), drawings and texts scribbled on a background with motifs that are reminiscent of the jungle, referring to a place which for Guzmán was 'bacano' (pleasant).

The Mistress of the Yucca and Yagé are both related to a ritual performed by the Mai Huna tribe to petition the gods for a good yucca (or cassava) harvest: the 'Master of the Yucca' invites neighbours, friends and relatives to help gather in the tubers and is in charge of directing and distributing the harvest. The 'Mistress of the Yucca', plays a similar role — albeit under her husband's supervision — with the female guests. The consumption of yagé (or ayahuasca), a hallucinogenic beverage, also forms part of the ritual. In Theobroma cacao, Federico Guzmán does not represent the cocoa itself, instead reducing it to a single leaf. Cocoa lies at the heart of numerous religious rites. Cocoa beans were once used as currency and cocoa exports now represent a major source of income.

In contrast, an older work, Blackboard Jungle V, XI, I (1994), is related to the use of blackboards, a common feature of the artist's work in the 1990s. It is a participatory, collaborative piece, in which high school students are invited to add phrases, drawings, etc. expressing their concerns. The title is taken from a 1955 film by Richard Brooks which tells how a teacher in a tough inner-city school manages to inspire delinquent teens. The piece takes the form of a sort of cartography of the relationships between the students of that time and place.

With its ecological and a social message, the piece in the Banco de España Collection, Untitled (2001) is a photograph of a drawing of a plant made with mirrors, in which we see the artist himself reflected.

Isabel Tejeda

 
By:
Roberto Díaz
Federico Guzmán
Seville 1964

Federico Guzmán was one of the youngest members of the so-called 'new Sevillian figuration', which revolutionized the Spanish art scene in the late 1980s. A sojourn in New York, followed by another in Colombia, between 1997 and 2000, gave him an awareness of the importance of nature and the social context in which the artist's work operates and confirmed his belief that art must be a tool for changing society and must therefore be public and collective. In his drawings, paintings, sculptures, installations and performances, he uses a variety of techniques and materials, referencing the content of the works themselves. Guzmán returns these materials, transformed by human hands, to nature. Natural elements (plants are a recurring motif), culture and intra-history are intertwined in his work, presented with humour, optimism and irony through unusual associations and games of scale that draw on surrealist aesthetics to restore a harmonious coexistence between people and their immediate environment. His latest projects are closely linked to the Sahara, through ART ifariti, the International Art and Human Rights Meetings in the Western Sahara.

His work has been extensively displayed in Spain, with solo exhibitions at the Andalusian Centre for Contemporary Art (Seville, 2001); Fundació Antoni Tàpies (Barcelona, 2001); La Caixa Foundation (Tarragona, 2003); the Ibero-American Museum of Contemporary Art (Badajoz, 2013); Palacio de Cristal, Museo Reina Sofía (Madrid, 2016); and the San Telmo Museum (Donostia-San Sebastian, 2016). He has also participated in group exhibitions at the Museé d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris (Paris, 2001); the Kunsthalle Bern (Bern, 2002); the Fridericianum Kunsthalle (Kassel, Germany, 2003); and the 'Speed I' exhibition at the Valencian Institute of Modern Art (Valencia, 2007). His work has been displayed at international events, including the Biennale of Sydney (1990), the Johannesburg Biennale (1995) and the Istanbul Biennial (1997). In 2018 the Valencia Institute of Modern Art staged a solo exhibition of his work entitled 'Federico Guzmán. Al borde del mundo' [Federico Guzmán. At the Edge of the World].

Roberto Díaz

 
«Sombra verde. Federico Guzmán y la carrera de las plantas», C3A Centro de Creación Contemporánea de Andalucía (Cordoba, 2023).
Vv.Aa. Colección Banco de España. Catálogo razonado, Madrid, Banco de España, 2019, vol. 2. Metrópolis Federioco Guzmán, Córdoba, Rtve, 2023, www.rtve.es/play/videos/metropolis/federico-guzman.