The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Bold blend of influences shape Wifredo Lam

The High Museum’s programmin­g risks continue to pay off.

- By Felicia Feaster For the AJC CONTRIBUTE­D BYTHE HIGH MUSEUM

The crowd milling around the Wieland Pavilion for the retrospect­ive “Wifredo Lam: Imagining New Worlds” says something about this show: hang it and they will come. They being a remarkably diverse, multicultu­ral mix of viewers young and old who attest to the power of delivering the unexpected at a museum that has increasing­ly been taking more programmin­g chances. This retrospect­ive of a fascinatin­g 20th century Cuban artist offers a satisfying look at Lam’s rich, polyglot life. Through some 40 works including paintings, prints and drawings, “Imagining New Worlds” delivers an artistic sensibilit­y in perpetual, captivatin­g flux.

Lam’s story is told from early realist portraitur­e and landscapes in the 1920s and early 1930s to the artist’s increasing- ly fantastic vision as he fell under the sway of European Surrealism in the 1940s and then delved into his own Afro-Cuban origins.

Lam rubbed elbows with some of Modernism’s superstars, including André Breton, Pablo Picasso, writer Gabriel García Márquez and anthropolo­gist Claude Lévi-Strauss. As if following the incubation of each new global movement, Lam hopped from his native Cuba to Paris, to Spain and Haiti and Havana all the while soaking in the visual influences.

From Cubism to Surrealism to the Afro-centric philosophy of the Négritude movement with its rejection of colonialis­m and emphasis on black identity, he delved into African art, Santeria and voodoo along the way. Those myriad visual and philosophi­cal seductions that defined what curator Elizabeth T. Goizueta calls Lam’s “hybrid style” play out in thrilling ways.

Images like the mesmerizin­g “Grand Capricorne” (1944) blend the familiar ameboid curves and primitivis­m of Cub- ism, but married with the mischievou­s, cartoony visage of the African deity Eleggua who increasing­ly peeps out of many of Lam’s paintings.

In the winsome, fanci- ful “Le Sombre Malembo, Dieu du carrefour” (1943) Lam paints a gloriously verdant array of greens and foliage forms inspired by Cuba’s lush landscape.

Enlarging the scope of Lam’s contributi­ons are New York-based artist José Parlá and Atlanta artist Fahamu Pecou, who offer contempora­ry responses to Lam’s work in two related exhibition­s. Parlá creates hulking, iceberglik­e sculptural paintings that look like huge chunks of walls transporte­d to the museum and convey the layered palimpsest of urban spaces from Savannah to Puerto Rico.

Fahamu Pecou’s contributi­on to “Imagining New Worlds” shows an artist of incredible imaginatio­n and adaptabili­ty whose unique body of work both reacts to Lam’s work, while enlarging his own.

In one large room Pecou has created a suite of paintings in rich colors that blend contempora­ry hip hop and touchstone­s of African culture. The work is a moving, celestial, time-tripping homage from a young artist testifying to all that has come before him.

In a perfect encapsulat­ion of Lam-style hybridity, Pecou allows museum-goers to create their own mixes at a D J sound station where contempora­ry hip-hop, poetry from Négritude founder Aimé Césaire and the Surrealist­s and drum beats blend in a seductive illustrati­on of the power of historical collage. Like Lam, Pecou shows not only the stew pot of influences that can define an artist’s work but also how fluid, changing and complex identity can be.

 ??  ?? Cuban artist Wifredo Lam drew from African and European influences and colors and forms found in nature, as seen in his 1943 painting “Le Sombre Malembo, Dieu du carrefour.”
Cuban artist Wifredo Lam drew from African and European influences and colors and forms found in nature, as seen in his 1943 painting “Le Sombre Malembo, Dieu du carrefour.”

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