Back to All Events

Maru Quiñonero | The Need


  • Voltz Clarke Gallery 195 Chrystie St New York United States (map)

On View: May 12, 2022 – July 2022
Location: Voltz Clarke Gallery, 195 Chrystie Street, New York, NY, 10002
Hours: Monday – Friday, 10 am–6 pm,  Saturday 11-5 pm & by appointment
Contact Info: juliette@voltzclarke.com, 917.292.6921, voltzclarke.com 


Press Release

Voltz Clarke Gallery is pleased to present The Need, a comprehensive solo show featuring new works by artist Maru Quiñonero.

Maru Quioñero’s passion for volume, shape, texture, color and material has driven her to define compositions that visualize her own creative universe. Her Color and Vacuum series has been in development since 2017, serving to facilitate a conversation between color and emptiness. Through these extensive monochromatic studies, Quiñonero explores form beyond plastic expression, tapping into a process of possibility that continually draws from her lived experiences. The Need is the latest iteration of this venture, consisting of a capsule collection of works revolving around red and pink hues.

The need of colour.

Caitlin Moran writes on the fifty-one page of her book ‘How to be famous’ the following quote by Carson McCullers: “The way I need you is a loneliness I cannot bear”.

I wrote it down on October fourteenth, 2020 in order to not forget it. I would probably read it the night before. I am sure that I underlined it and folded the top corner of the page so as to find it easily at any time. Since then, it has been
there. Spinning in my head for almost a year. Moran uses the quote when talking about the relationship that her main young
character has with a platonic love. It is all a matter of feelings. Art helps me to go through my emotions, in an eternal search that I still do not understand. But that is what it is all about. So I want to talk about this unbearable need.

When colour becomes a necessity.

On August eighth, just a few months ago, I wrote: “I need to do something very red and very pink”. And there was the note. On my iPhone notes. Small matter. It was just more a reminder of the colour scheme than anything else. Ten words
without intention. Ten.

A digital colour note that I would need later at my studio. I am always writing down sentences, ideas, concepts, words. I put them together with some concern because lately my thoughts are easily derailed. So much information, so many channels, so many interlocutors and messages create a mental mess and sometimes I am not able to go back to a
simple sentence. “It is really curious to note how fragile the memory is”.

Letter from Marcel Duchamp to Marcel Jean, March 15, 1952, New York. That is why, a few days later, when I wrote down another small thought, I stopped at that sentence. But I did not see the colours, I just saw the need. Why did I use that verb? Where does this state of need come from? Since then, I have not been able to stop thinking about this aphorism of mine. Almost a
judgement, “I need to do something very red and very pink”. A sudden and compelling urge for colour.

I am not here to discover anything new by affirming that artists have always looked outwards to paint, to reflect their reality, their society, their time. And they have not stopped since. All persons, whether artists or not, are beings who absorb what surrounds them.

Whether we like it or not, we are permeable to everything that coexists with our reality.

The intention of revealing the inside from the outside is the recurring idea that haunts me.

I often think about the idea that everything changed with modern and contemporary art. When artists looked inwards to express their surroundings. Until then imitating reality was the norm and, in a way or another, that was what art used to pursue.

But there comes the moderns and the avant-garde and the contemporaries, and they begin to express existence in response to their own reality. They articulate their own language and with their personal codes they are able to interpret
what they see and what they feel. Their individualism defines them. Is it the moment when the artist became a narcissist?

I think it is important to invite people to look at the abstract work without prejudice and simply for pure enjoyment. This is how it should be. Without so much analysis. And it is essential to educate the gaze to achieve it. It would be necessary to appreciate the details of each era, the fragments and the distinctive features of each society and recognize the different modes of expression of the history of humanity. But apart from all this cultural baggage that helps us to contextualize, each reading will inevitably be conditioned by the intonation of the person looking at the artwork. Does the one who watches then become the focus? More than the work, more than the artist? I am a full time artist. And as I am very self-demanding, I believe that I must use all the resources available to understand why I am doing or not something. It is the only way to grow.

I do not like to improvise at work. I cannot leave something so serious to the unexpected. But I care for spontaneity and freshness. The naturalness. I do not want a vice in the line, nor going just to the familiar. I try to execute something that I have previously seen in my mind, but I do not necessarily have to go through the sketch. Not that. Sometimes I hate it. But there are endless days in
the studio that I cannot find any other way. And I bend. It is hard to lose this battle because I have a lot of confidence in my intellectual work, the idea is already inside me but sometimes it is my hand that does not know how to execute it.

Those days of brain-hand disconnection are few and as I like to see the bright side of everything, I try to learn from that break that I indulge myself. This sentence from Bachelard now comes to my mind: “One can study only what one has first dreamed about” The psychoanalysis of fire. But what is the purpose of creating? What for? For whom?

There is no answer or other solution than honesty. I just pretend to be honest. With myself. Looking for honesty to find order. And I find honesty in the blunt forms of colour that I can imagine and build up in my head. I perceive them loaded with meaning and morality. I let myself be carried away by thought and reflection, getting lost in the aesthetic reasoning. Making the words pictorial. And then everything fits. It is not so much about thinking, but about feeling.

 

But do we think with ideas or words? Thinking about thinking, I have to inquire about metacognition. I recently heard Juan José Millás assure that “the word is the organ of sight”. And then I thought, we see the ideas. And then we put words to them. And following this, in my case, I put colour on them. I cannot stop wondering if Robert Mapplethorpe was referring to this when, worried by a mental block, in total lack of inspiration, he told Patti Smith at the Chelsea Hotel in New York, “The old imagery doesn’t work for me”.


Selected Works

Previous
Previous
May 5

Marfa Invitational Projects | Xevi Solà

Next
Next
July 31

Intersect Aspen 2022