Patchwork 62
- 1998
- Patchwork fabric and acrylic on a frame
- 300 x 250 cm
- Cat. P_637
- Acquired in 2001
Jorge Galindo has been associated with painting since he first emerged as an artist on the exhibition circuit in the 1980s. Photo-montages, collages and the techniques used by cinema poster artists are also among his areas of interest in regard to visual art. His study of pictorial techniques and reflection on the language of painting and its historical problems (those concerning representation such as perspective and the creation of illusory spaces such as anamorphism and visual tricks), of authorship and copying and of the dialectic opposition between abstraction and figurative art are just some of the stand-out issues covered in his output.
Most of the works in the Banco de España Collection are from the early 1990s, when he was exploring the expressive and gestural potential of the medium. Many of them stand out for the use of paper perforated with Braille as a backing. This provocative gesture creates tension by making it impossible to read the pictures by touch. The same idea is found in works in which he uses towels and printed fabrics as backing materials (Patchwork, 1996-1998). More recently he has used paper money scrapped by the Banco de España (Money Painting, 2014).
As a 'joiner of images' who works always with humour and irony, Jorge Galindo builds up his works based on a set of images that can be defined as Baroque, and which is dotted with references to popular culture in the form of films, music and literature. 'Nowadays painting is an act of impertinence' he stated in a recent interview. To quote his own words, he engages in what he calls 'iconographic cannibalism' by appropriating images (postcards, magazines, posters) and putting them back into circulation as part of an excessive, critical universe that viewers must decode.
Other works by Jorge Galindo del Río