Carmen Martin |
Madrid (EFE).- The artist Rachel Valdés Camejo (Havana, 1990), famous for her large installations, in which she seeks optical illusion through mirrors, presents “Swimming Pools”, an exhibition that opens this Thursday in the La Cometa gallery, where watercolor prevails, “a technique that has a lot of sensuality and eroticism”.
Rachel Valdés is a plastic artist and her works have revolutionized various corners of the world such as Times Square in New York, the lakes in Utah or the squares in Havana.
Now, from Madrid, he proposes a trip to his hometown, specifically to a sports venue in the 1990s. “Empty pools, without water, that inhabited the landscape of Havana and where he used to go to swim,” he recounted this Thursday in an interview with EFE.
All his work is impregnated with Cuba: “It is part of me, my culture, my idiosyncrasy and I try to take it everywhere; Sometimes I miss that Havana that one day was and is not today. My roots give me a lot of strength”.
First solo show in Madrid
For the first time in the Spanish capital, the artist exhibits an individual show that includes twenty pieces: from watercolors to photographs, including digital drawings that are accompanied by a sound installation “that reproduces the sound of the last downpour I heard in Havana.” .
“They are pieces that invite retrospection, silence, contemplation, dialogue over time,” says the artist whose work caught the attention of the director of the Rockefeller Brothers Fund.
“I usually work with cubes and rectangles and, in this case, I represent many of these pieces as inverted pyramids, as geometric elements; I see them as a kind of monument to oblivion, like temples, they are archaeological landscapes”, he explains.
He considers himself a perfectionist when he works in sculpture, with painting he is “more visceral”, he tries to let himself go “and let the piece itself take its path”.
The color blue, protagonist
In this exhibition, the blue color prevails, “a mystical tone that is everywhere,” says Valdés, who says that he has a notebook on the nightstand: “Before I sleep, ideas come to me, sometimes I write them down, instead of make a sketch and the next morning he materialized them in the studio”.
He works with different manifestations, he points out: “I choose the one that I consider most suggestive based on the idea that I am going to develop. Watercolor is the most difficult technique for me, but I really enjoy it, I love the subtlety it offers, it has a lot of sensuality and eroticism”.
“I am attracted to the idea that the viewer enters my world, I like to share experiences with him”, adds the artist, who likes to leave an open path for “perception and interpretation”.
This artist, who has among her artistic references “Malévich’s minimalism”, has exhibited several times at ARCO, in addition to creating public art projects and participating in the Havana Biennial during the years 2012, 2015 and 2019.
The last work created for this Biennial, “Immersion”, was acquired and permanently installed as cultural heritage of the city.
Passion for art
Rachel Valdés is also known for being the partner of singer-songwriter Alejandro Sanz. “We each have a creative process and it is important to respect that space. Music and painting are two different worlds, I take it individually, I try not to mix anything, ”she explains.
Her passion for painting began as a child. “I was more entertained by watching Renaissance paintings or Picasso’s work with my grandfather than cartoons,” reveals this Cuban who remembers that her grandfather was the first to give her colored pencils and sheets to paint.
“From there, my passion for art began, my mother was clear that I was going to be an artist,” adds Valdés, who won his first painting competition at just seven years old, “a portrait of Fidel Castro in the Plaza de la Revolution”.
Graduated in Painting from the National Academy of Fine Arts in Havana, she came to Barcelona when she was 20 years old after receiving a scholarship to continue studying.
“Spain is my second home, I love this country, I love its culture, its music, history, architecture, flamenco, its people, its flavors; it is a fantastic mix”, says Valdés, who admits that he is passionate about visiting the Prado Museum and the Sorolla Museum.
After this exhibition, which will be open to the public until mid-June, Valdés will inaugurate a civil work in Toledo, “an interactive piece, a cube of mirrors”, and then he will exhibit his work at Art Basel Miami, in the United States.