Roberto Gil de Montes: Temporada de Lluvias

Roberto Gil de Montes: Temporada de Lluvias

kurimanzutto

October 25, 2022
Roberto Gil de Montes
Temporada de Lluvias
October 22–December 15, 2022
kurimanzutto
Gob. Rafael Rebollar 94, Colonia San Miguel Chapultepec
11850 Mexico City,
Mexico
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Friday–Saturday 11am–4pm

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“The sea has grown and the water changes from blue to grey to brown. The beach is strewn with pieces of tile, sticks, hats, rubber tyres, branches, mangled corn sacks and clumps of foliage, washed up like messages. The ocean shapes them all, brushes off their edges, moulds and crashes into them, brings them into land and sends them back out to sea again, moving matter everywhere. An old sofa has been dragged out toward the shoreline, children’s toys beside it in the sand. Behind this, graffitied walls hold up unpredictable washing lines, and rain puddles or whole rivers of road reflect the sunlight cracking through cuts in the bruised clouds.”

kurimanzutto presents Roberto Gil de Montes’ first solo exhibition in Mexico, Temporada de lluvias. Evoking high summer in Nayarit, this series of oil paintings explores the hidden images and forgotten or imagined stories of life in the tropics in rainy season, when almost every afternoon an aguacero drenches the landscape and places a sheen between the observer and what they see. 

Born in Guadalajara in 1950, Gil de Montes moved to the United States at the age of twelve and spent his teens and early career in Los Angeles, where he became involved in the Chicano art movement. He moved to Mexico City in the 1980s, before returning to California and eventually being drawn back to Mexico. He is now settled in the rural fishing town of La Peñita de Jaltemba on the Pacific coast of Nayarit. 

Gil de Montes’ artistic practice is guided by disciplined attention and playful experiment. Whilst being marked by the eclectic influences of artists including, among many others, Marsden Hartley and the figurative painters of the Bay Area in the 1950s, there are also frequent references to pre-Hispanic artistic traditions. His paintings are often populated with lush, varied forms from dreams and daily experience alongside the iconography of Huichol art: the canvas, for him, is a space to redefine the relationship between the real and the imaginary. 

While bearing witness to border crossings and transgressions—geographical and cultural—these new paintings also evoke a powerful sense of the local peculiarities of the place in which they were created. Rainy season is an invitation to stay inside, the artist’s gaze turning inwards. The images, inflected with the Gil de Montes’ acute sense of the absurd and his characteristic lightness and generosity of spirit, are the embodiments of an inconclusive search for meanings behind ideas, incidents, the mundane and the deadly serious. 

Boys lie in pools of water, ambiguously testing the distance between languid repose and deathly calm. Hybrid and non-binary figures are partially submerged and at the same time affirmatively exposed. Searching faces look out from behind veiled coverings, verdant foliage, TV screens, masks, headdresses, returning our gaze, waiting for answers. Five deer dancers have been caught in a heavy downpour or are bobbing far out to sea. Bodies reach out for other bodies. Two men think about a swim among the broken tombstones, unearthed and rearranged by a hurricane. And a boy in a guayabera stands before the scorched red of his imagination with an owl and together they scrutinise us. 

When the clouds lift and separate and the sun breaks through, Gil de Montes reminds us that the seething damp heat brings everything to new life in crawling, glistening assemblages. And the search begins again. —Lucy Foster

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