Signos y cadenas [Signs and Chains]
- 1965
- Mixed techniques on card attached to canvas
- 66 x 97 cm
- Cat. P_346
- Acquired in 1987
In reaction to the age-old tradition of seeing paintings as windows on the world, from the mid 1950s onwards Antoni Tàpies began to produce works that envisaged a wall as a space for communication. This move was fully consolidated in the 1960s. The two works by him in the Banco de España Collection are from the period when he was gaining international renown. He found a mark of identity in the creation of a blunt, informalist style of painting with a dense use of material including marble dust. This gives his works a heavy, rotund, architectural feel.
He was interested in graffiti and grattage as means of expression that attack walls. In photos of graffiti by Brassaï he found confirmation of the interest that he had felt since childhood in the spontaneous scrawls to be found in the Gothic Quarter of Barcelona. In Signs and Chains (1965) the 'wall' is a hurriedly whitened surface precariously overlaid like a palimpsest on top of earlier scenes and signs, which constitute a physical memory that gives up prominence to new signs, numbers, broken lines and a chain, a symbol of a sort of continuity of existence that runs along the bottom. Tàpies is known for using initials, unconnected letters, signs such as saltires, crosses and, as in this case, numerals in other prominent works such as Composició amb numeros (1976, Antoni Tàpies Foundation, Barcelona).
His choice of the number eight in these two works may seem impossible to explain, but it prompts thoughts of the esoteric and cabalistic in his work. In that sense, and given his liking for mathematical signs and his tendency to play around with the direction in which letters and numbers are read, it is worth mentioning that the numeral 8 can be seen as an upright depiction of the infinity sign. The origins of that sign are unknown but it seems to refer to a concept formed in ancient India, a cultural setting that is of fundamental interest to Tàpies in regard to Buddhism and Hinduism. The numeral eight also appears in the numbering of works such as Eight Crosses (1981, Iberdrola Collection), and the idea of infinity reemerges in Infinit (1988, private collection, Barcelona).
Other works by Antoni Tàpies