Paisaje [Landscape]

Paisaje [Landscape]

  • 1974
  • Oil on canvas
  • 60 x 81,5 cm
  • Cat. P_39
  • Acquired in 1975
By:
Julián Gállego Serrano, María José Alonso, Carlos Martín

A renewed interest in the landscape of Castile bore fruit with the establishment of the Free Institution of Education, which sought to emancipate the individual and society through contact with nature, a revolutionary approach to the territory which inspired, among others, the landscape work of Auereliano de Beruete, the serious approach, somewhere between Regenerationist and sinister, of Ignacio Zuloaga, and the Franciscan view of Darío de Regoyos. In this context, the landscapes of Caneja, from a later generation, offer a new appraisal of the lands of Castile from the 20th century. It is not the austere view that the intellectuals of the Generation of 1898 praised as a metaphor of Spanish essence, but rather a look that seeks sensual meaning. As the artist explained: ‘Castile is for me a gentler and tamed landscape, the most feminine landscape that I have observed’. As a follower of Daniel Vázquez Díaz, Caneja expressed himself through a peculiar assimilation of Cubist language, focusing on the broken horizon proposed by the young avant-garde artists at that hotbed for artists, writers and intellectuals, the Residencia de Estudiantes, the student accommodation where Diaz Caneja lived. It was here that he came in contact with Federico García Lorca, and other non-residents such as Rafael Alberti, Maruja Mallo and Alberto Sánchez. The new telluric poets and their interest in the ‘Spanish land’ must no doubt have influenced Caneja’s decision to reinterpret the landscape.

In Caneja, the austerity of the land is made abrupt by the diagonal broken lines, enclosing browns, siennas and mauves, using his highly characteristic dense or fluid pictorial matter. Even though this type of landscape is an ongoing theme in his work, the painter managed to individualise each of his works with nuances that he perfected over the years. Indeed, the works in the Banco de España Collection date from a period when he is considered to have been at the height of his artistic maturity, producing his best work. Juan Manuel Díaz Caneja is undoubtedly one of the most personal of all the painters who reinterpreted the landscape in the 20th century. Along with Benjamín Palencia, Vaquero Palacios and, later, José Beulas (all of whom also have works in the Banco de España Collection), he provides an example of the extraordinary variety of that genre of Spanish painting in the early modernist period.

 
By:
Beatriz Cordero
Juan Manuel Díaz Caneja
Palencia 1905 - Madrid 1988

Juan Manuel Díaz Caneja studied under Vázquez Díaz in Madrid for seven years. He travelled to Paris and his work was exhibited at the Mayo Salon in the French capital. Díaz Caneja mainly produced extremely serious landscapes, based on a certain cubism with Fauve overtones, close to abstraction; in these there is a predominant use of ochres, employed repetitively, as is also the case in his Land of Fields and in the still-lifes. He participated in the legendary Salón de los Ibéricos in Madrid in 1925, and was part of the circle of painters at the Residencia de Estudiantes, the student accommodation that became a hotbed for artists, writers and intellectuals, and the School of Vallecas. His first solo show was at the Madrid Modern Art Museum in 1934, where he exhibited again in 1953. Diaz Caneja was awarded the Third-Place Medal at the National Fine Arts exhibitions in 1954 and the Second-Place Medal in 1957 and took First Place in 1962. He was a prize-winner in the 1958 National Painting Contest and the competition run by Madrid City Council in 1960. He received the National Award for Plastic Arts in 1980. In 1994, an anthological exhibition of his work was held at the Conde Duque Centre of Madrid. The Díaz-Caneja Foundation was opened in Palencia the following year and the IVAM held a retrospective of his work two years later.

Beatriz Cordero

 
 
Alfonso E. Pérez Sánchez & Julián Gállego Banco de España. Colección de pintura, Madrid, Banco de España, 1985. Alfonso E. Pérez Sánchez, Julián Gállego & María José Alonso Colección de pintura del Banco de España, Madrid, Banco de España, 1988. Vv.Aa. Colección Banco de España. Catálogo razonado, Madrid, Banco de España, 2019, vol. 2.