Abstract
This article explores the relations between painting and poetry through the
analysis of a work by the Peruvian artist Fernando de Szyszlo entitled
Piedra de sol (1974); this painting takes its title from the poem of the
same name by Octavio Paz, published for the first time in 1957. The article
offers the reader a rigorous analysis of the plastic dimension of
Szyszlo's work, since in that delimited-textual surface the inherent
association with Paz's poem comes to be questioned. A “visual
hypothesis” nourished by several different observations of the painting
Piedra de sol attempts to reveal a complex task of translation through
which the painter accedes to tradition via modernity, or what Paz called
“modern tradition”. In this way the painter manages to distance himself
from the homonymous poem and thus create his own figures. From this
perspective, the painting overcomes all associations inherent to poetry and
proposes as a center of discussion the transforming nature of the plastic
language.
Downloads
Download data is not yet available.