Traseras del club de tenis con el Monte de las Aguas [Rear of the Tennis Club and Monte de las Aguas]
- 1997
- Oil on panel
- 61 x 73,8 cm
- Cat. P_607
- Acquired in 1998
Juan José Aquerreta has been described as a deeply solitary man, an artist obsessed by the uncertainties of everyday life, by a desire for perfectionism and silence. He is a master of lightness, and seeks to break with theories and definitions just like the characters in Dancing from Fear (1938) by Paul Klee, a painting with close parallels to his works. That break can be clearly seen in his landscapes, portraits, abstracts and sculptures. His obsessively meticulous work hints at an archaic classicism marked by order, control and restraint, but his inspiration is drawn from chaos and from a dizzying space that often places him before an image of himself.
Landscape painting and still life are further cornerstones of his output. Aquerreta is a traditional painter as far as themes and technique are concerned, but is innovative in his results. His works and the human figures in them sometimes feature dreamlike settings halfway between the unreal and the invented. He has a special predilection for landscapes on the edge of towns, with piles of rubbish and rubble that suggest death and decay but also the promise of life in terms of the act of creation. In Rear of the Tennis Club and Monte de las Aguas (1997) he seeks to ensure that the observer can be recognised through the landscape. The drawing is synthetic in style and the colour fields are flat.
Other works by Juan José Aquerreta