Dolores "Loló" Soldevilla Nieto (1901–1971) was a Cuban visual artist primarily known for her role in
concrete art
Concrete art was an art movement with a strong emphasis on geometrical abstraction. The term was first formulated by Theo van Doesburg and was then used by him in 1930 to define the difference between his vision of art and that of other abstract ar ...
.
Biography
Born in 1901 in Havana, Cuba, Soldevilla was an avid painter, sculptor, collage artist and draughtsman.
In addition to being journalist and teacher
["''Loló Soldevilla, November 29th, 2011 - January 6th, 2012"'',she began painting in 1948, and in 1949 traveled to Paris as Cuba's cultural attache, something which allowed her to travel extensively throughout Europe and Latin America, influencing her art style and career immensely.][Latin Art Core: Cuban Fine Art Gallery, ]''Loló Soldevilla,'
accessed October 2018. In Paris, she was influenced by the European avant-garde, most notably abstraction. In 1956, Soldevilla along with her husband and fellow artist
Pedro de Oraá, returned to Cuba and founded Galeria Color-Luz, an artistic space solely focused on the promotion of abstract art, with the contribution of Eduardo Abela,
Amelia Peláez
Amelia Peláez del Casal (January 5, 1896 – April 8, 1968) was an important Cubans, Cuban painter of the Avant-garde generation.
Biography
Amelia Peláez (born-1896) Yaguajay, Cuba, in the former Cuban province of Las Villas (now Sancti Spír ...
, Wilfredo Arcay,
Agustín Fernández, and others. ''Loló Soldevilla, November 29th, 2011 - January 6th, 2012"''.
["Across Time: Cuban Artists...from Vanguardists to Contemporaries"] Oraá and Loló, along with Romanian-born artist Sandu Darie among others, were the pioneers of Concretism or Cuban Abstraction in 1950s Cuba, as well as the founders of the group
Los Diez Pintores Concretos (The 10 concrete painters) or known simply as Los Diez (the ten).
Soldevilla graduated from the Falcón Conservatory for singing and the violin, founding the short-lived group La Orchestra de Loló (Lolo's Orchestra) before taking up painting in 1948.
[Jorge Domingo Cuadriello, ''Loló Soldevilla,'' www.subastahabana.com]
, accessed October 2018.
During the 1930s, she was a seminal political activist, enduring detainment for participation in several political rallies, as well as imprisonment in the Prison for Women in Guanabacoa, in 1935 for her positions against the Machado dictatorship. She also helped found the Partido Aprista of Cuba, along with Enrique de la Osa and Guillermo de Zéndegui among others and integrated the Executive National Committee for this political organization.
[Jorge Domingo Cuadriello] In 1949, she traveled to Paris as a cultural attaché for the Cuban Embassy and enrolled in the
Académie de la Grande Chaumière
The Académie de la Grande Chaumière () is an art school in the Montparnasse district of Paris, France.
History
The school was founded in 1904 by the Catalan painter Claudio Castelucho on the rue de la Grande Chaumière in Paris, near the A ...
, where she started to develop works that would later on that year, encompass her first two shows. Among her returns to Cuba, Soldevilla traveled extensively during her career, she was influenced by the avant-garde of several countries in Europe and Latin America including Spain, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Belgium, Great Britain, Austria, Germany, Venezuela, and Brazil among others. In 1951, she joined the artist workshop Atelier d’Art Abstrait founded by Deswane and Pillet, with whom she collaborated with for two years; she also attended a course on engraving techniques with Hayter and Cochet.
[McEwen, Abigail. ''A Pioneer and Champion of Mid-20th-Century Cuban Modernism,'' Essay]
November 9, 2016.
Soldevilla traveled back and forth from the island exhibiting her works and garnering a group of contemporaries who would soon help her expand the influence of concrete abstraction in Cuba. In 1957, after a stint in Venezuela Soldevilla returned to Cuba with her husband and fellow artist Pedro de Oraá and together founded Galeria Color-Luz, gallery focused on Concrete Abstraction and the Ten Concrete Painters (Los Diez). Although Los Diez and Color-Luz were short-lived, lasting only from 1957-1961, Soldevilla kept painting and collaborated with several magazines and newspapers such as ''Revolución.'' From the revolution in 1959 to the early sixties, she became the professor of Fine Arts in the School of Architecture at the University of Havana. In 1964, she founded the group of painters ''Espacio,''
[Jorge Domingo Cuadriello] and became a member of UPEC, a journalist union and the group UNEAC (La Union de Escritores y Artistas de Cuba) the Union of Writers and Artists of Cuba. Loló Soldevilla died in 1971.
History
Los Diez Pintores Concretos (The 10 concrete painters) were..." a group that established the style of ‘Concretism’ or ‘Concrete’ art in 1950s Cuba and fashioned a whole new, unique language of abstraction."
[Odette Artiles, ''3Concrete,'' "D FINE: Artists and Exhibition in the Rodríguez Collection," Henry Ballate (Ed.), pp. 136–141, 2018, print.] Soldevilla's take on geometric abstraction played an important role in the development of ''concretismo'' in Cuba as well as in the international scene.
Soldevilla's education in Paris and the bonds she formed between her teachers, students and fellow contemporaries led to her producing her most important body of work in the years between 1950-1957. Her collage work from this period is a study of the geometries of circles, rectangles, lines and colors, creating a rhythm with their variation of size and shape. Diagonals, opposing elements, contrasting colors and organic geometric style set Loló apart from her fellow contemporaries, as did her asymmetric metal kinetic sculptures.
[McEwen, Abigail]
The main philosophy of
concrete art
Concrete art was an art movement with a strong emphasis on geometrical abstraction. The term was first formulated by Theo van Doesburg and was then used by him in 1930 to define the difference between his vision of art and that of other abstract ar ...
is that it is an extremely introverted art form, it has no narrative, no basis or reference in the natural world and has no defining qualities except the simple admiration of its colors and shapes. Soldevilla was a principal advocate of this style and movement. Just as Soldevilla's opening of Galeria Color-Luz incubated Los Diez, its closing in 1961 marked the official dissolution of the group after exhibiting together only three times. The last decade of her life would be spent in journalistic and literary pursuits, she worked with several magazines and newspapers and even wrote a memoir about her life in Paris entitled, ''Ir, venir, volver a ir: crónicas (1952-1957)'' (“Going, Coming, Going Back: Chronicles,
952-1957��).
[McEwen, Abigail] An avid writer she wrote novels, plays and even a ballet. Although she exhibited little in the 1960s, she remains a seminal, revolutionary figure in the history of Cuban art and the flowering of concretism and concrete art.
Exhibitions
2018
*''3Concrete,'' Kendall Art Center, Miami, FL (group
ref>''3Concrete,'' Kendall Art Center the Rodriguez Collection, Cuban Abstraction Exhibition
2017
*''Triángulo – Loló Soldevilla, Sandu Darie and Carmen Herrera,'' organized by The Cisneros Fontanals Art Foundation (CIFO), CIFO Art Space Miami
2016
*''Concrete Cuba,'' David Zwirner's 20th Street Gallery, New York, NY (group)
*''Diálogos constructivistas en la vanguardia cubana,'' Galerie Lelong, New York, NY (group)
2015
*''Concrete Cuba,'' David Zwirner Gallery, London, England (group)
*''Soto Voce,'' Dominique Lévy, London, England (group)
2006
[Latin Art Core]
Biography and Exhibition History.
*''Loló: an imaginary world,'' Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, Havana, Cuba (solo)
*''Art of Cuba,'' Traveling Exhibition, Brazil (group)
*''Cuba: Art and Art History,'' Traveling Exhibition (group)
1970
*Casa de la Cultura Czechoslovakia, Collages, Czech Republic
1966
*''Op art,'' Havana Gallery, Havana, Cuba (solo)
*''Pop art,'' Havana Gallery, Havana, Cuba (solo)
*''Moon and me,'' Havana Gallery, Havana, Cuba (solo)
1957–1961
*''A,'' Feria del Arte Cubano, Cuba (group)
*''Homenaje al pequeño cuadrado,'' Galeria Color-Luz, Havana, Cuba (group)
*''El arte abstracto en Europa,'' Galeria Color-Luz, Havana, Cuba (group)
1957
*''Loló: 1953-1956,'' Palace of Fine Arts, Havana, Cuba (solo)
1956
*''Painting Today: The Vanguard of the School of Paris,'' Palace of Fine Arts, Havana, Cuba (solo)
1955
*''Luminous Reliefs,'' Réalités Nouvelles, Paris, France (solo)
1954
*Circle of the University, Valencia, Spain (joint exhibition)
1953
*''Loló/Varela,'' Arnaud Gallery, Paris, France (joint exhibition)
1952
*Sociedad Cultural Nuestro Tiempo, Havana, Cuba (solo)
*Palacio de Sanata Cruz, Madrid, Spain (solo)
1951
[McEwen, Abigail]
*''Art cubain contemporain,'' Musée National d’Art Moderne, Paris, France (group)
1950
*''Loló. Sculptures,'' Lyceum of Havana, Havana, Cuba (solo)
*''Loló 20 oil paintings,'' School of Law at the University of Havana, Havana, Cuba (solo)
1949
*Salon d'art Monaco, France, (solo)
*Academy of Fine Arts, Paris, France (solo)
Notable works in public collections
*''Día y noche (Day and Night)'', 1955.
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
The Museum of Fine Arts (often abbreviated as MFA Boston or MFA) is an art museum in Boston, Massachusetts. It is the list of largest art museums, 20th-largest art museum in the world, measured by public gallery area. It contains 8,161 painting ...
, Massachusetts
*Sin título
ntitled from the series ''Cartas celestiales'' (Celestial Letters) 1957.
Pérez Art Museum Miami
Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM)—officially known as the Jorge M. Pérez Art Museum of Miami-Dade County—is a contemporary art museum that relocated in 2013 to the Maurice A. Ferré Park in Downtown Miami, Florida. Founded in 1984 as the Cent ...
,
Miami
Miami is a East Coast of the United States, coastal city in the U.S. state of Florida and the county seat of Miami-Dade County, Florida, Miami-Dade County in South Florida. It is the core of the Miami metropolitan area, which, with a populat ...
, Florida
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Soldevilla, Loló
1901 births
1971 deaths
20th-century Cuban women artists
20th-century Cuban painters
Artists from Havana
Women's International Democratic Federation people