Sin título [Untitled]

Sin título [Untitled]

  • 1992
  • Watercolour on paper
  • 21 x 26 cm
  • Cat. D_203
  • Acquired in 1994
By:
Frederic Montornés

Even though José Herrera’s sculptures are unfairly associated with the precepts of Generation 70 and its search for novel, ground-breaking artistic expression during the years of the Transition to democracy in Spain, they are highly personal and are  difficult to fit into any trend.

Using memory, space, solitude, fragility and silence, much of Herrera’s oeuvre seeks to construct interior landscapes where reality is considered to be seriously threatened. His works, including those that he produces in paper pulp, wood, gold leaf, pigments, and such everyday items as pillows, seats and tables, appeal directly to emotion, poetry and intuition. Along with his bulky, spatial and bulky works, which exemplify his attachment to natural light and emptiness, Herrera’s oeuvre is noted for its large watercolours and small works on paper where he addresses themes linked to his feelings and whatever concerns or preoccupies him

The three watercolours from the early 1990s in this collection are an example of his research into space and the mystery of emptiness from an emotional perspective. They are works in which he draws deeply on colour, an element that is widely used in his sculpture, to achieve silent intensities that represent a state of mind rather than something identifiable.

That same love of colour can be seen in the painted wood sculpture. It is a sort of room that the artist invites you to enter through small doors, even though it is completely occupied by that mysterious silence that seems to surround the solitude of the person living there.

Frederic Montornés

 
By:
Frederic Montornés
José Herrera
La Laguna (Santa Cruz de Tenerife) 1956

José Herrera graduated in Fine Arts from La Laguna University, where he majored in Painting. His work also extends to other fields such as sculpture and installations. He started lecturing at the Education Faculty at La Laguna in 1984.

Using memory, space, solitude, fragility and silence, much of Herrera’s oeuvre seeks to construct interior landscapes by working in different materials – paper pulp, wood, gold leaf and pigments – and everyday items (pillows, seats and tables), to appeal directly to emotion, poetry and intuition. Along with his bulky, spatial sculptures, Herrera’s oeuvre is noted for its large watercolours and small works on paper where he addresses themes linked to his feelings and whatever concerns or preoccupies him.

His first solo show was at the San Miguel de La Laguna Chapel exhibition centre in 1984. His works have subsequently been shown in many Spanish and foreign venues and institutions, such as the Galerie für Gegenwartskunst (Bonstetten, Switzerland, 1988); the Atlantic Modern Art Centre (Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, 1990); the Museo Reina Sofía (Madrid, 1994); the Senate Building (Madrid, 2002); La Granja Art Centre (Santa Cruz de Tenerife, 2003); La Regenta Art Centre (Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, 2003); the Galerie Manzoni Schäper (Berlin, 2011); the Torres Hernández Farré House (Güímar, Tenerife, 2013); and the Bibli exhibition room  (Santa Cruz de Tenerife, 2017).

Frederic Montornés

 
 
Vv.Aa. Colección Banco de España. Catálogo razonado, Madrid, Banco de España, 2019, vol. 2.