ALBERT RÀFOLS CASAMADA (Barcelona, 1923-2009).
"Argos". 1984.
Watercolor and acrylic on paper.
Signed and dated in the lower right corner. Signed, dated and titled on the back.
Provenance: Private collection.
Measurements: 75 x 109 cm.
After a brief figurative stage, the 50's gave way to a more schematic and structured conception of reality, with a clearly abstractionist bias, which he would cultivate throughout the rest of his life. During the decade of the 80's, and as his work progresses, it gets closer and closer to plastic poetry, filled with sensations and emotions, possible to observe in signs that refer us veiled to everyday objects. Likewise, there is a clear protagonism of color, which now fills the scenes creating delicate and enveloping atmospheres.
Painter, educator, writer and graphic artist, Ràfols Casamada enjoys great international prestige today. He began in the world of drawing and painting with his father, Albert Ràfols Cullerés. In 1942 he began studying architecture, although he soon abandoned it to devote himself to the plastic arts. The post-impressionist paternal influence and his particular cézannism mark the works presented in his first exhibition, held in 1946 at the Pictòria galleries in Barcelona, where he exhibited with the group Els Vuit. Subsequently, he will elaborate a poetic abstraction, amorphous in its configuration, free and intelligent, the result of a slow gestation and based on environments, themes, objects or graphics of everyday life. Ràfols Casamada works with these fragments of reality, of life, in a process of disfigurement, playing with the connotations, the plastic values and the visual richness of the possible different readings, in an attempt to fix the transience of reality. In 1950 he obtained a scholarship to travel to France, and settled in Paris until 1954. There he became acquainted with post-cubist figurative painting, as well as the work of Picasso, Matisse, Braque and Miró, among others. These influences were joined in his painting to that of American abstract expressionism, which was developing at the same time. When he finally returned to Barcelona, he embarked on his own artistic path, with a style characterized by compositional elegance, based on orthogonal structures combined with an emotive and luminous chromaticism. After showing an interesting relationship, in the sixties and seventies, with neo-dada and new realism, his work has focused on purely pictorial values: fields of color in expressive harmony on which gestural charcoal lines stand out. He has received many awards, such as the National Plastic Arts Award of the Ministry of Culture in 1980, the Creu de Sant Jordi in 1982 or the Arts Award of the CEOE in 1991. In 1985 he was named Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters of France, and is an honorary member of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts of San Fernando in Madrid. In 2003 the Generalitat awarded him the National Visual Arts Prize of Catalonia, and in 2009, just two months before his death, Grup 62 paid tribute to him at the National Art Museum of Catalonia. His work can be found in the most important museums around the world: the Reina Sofia in Madrid, the Guggenheim and MOMA in New York, the Museum of Modern Art in Los Angeles, the Picasso Museum in France, the Georges Pompidou in Paris and the British Museum and the Tate Gallery in London, among many others.