Carlos Capelán
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Carlos Capelán is a Uruguayan and Swedish contemporary artist, educator and curator, born in
Montevideo Montevideo (, ; ) is the capital city, capital and List of cities in Uruguay, largest city of Uruguay. According to the 2023 census, the city proper has a population of 1,302,954 (about 37.2% of the country's total population) in an area of . M ...
,
Uruguay Uruguay, officially the Oriental Republic of Uruguay, is a country in South America. It shares borders with Argentina to its west and southwest and Brazil to its north and northeast, while bordering the Río de la Plata to the south and the A ...
, in 1948. After two years hitch-hiking across South America, he returns to Montevideo in 1970 and opens a weaving studio. In 1971, his studio is raided five times by police and military. In 1972, he moves to the island of Chiloé in
Chile Chile, officially the Republic of Chile, is a country in western South America. It is the southernmost country in the world and the closest to Antarctica, stretching along a narrow strip of land between the Andes, Andes Mountains and the Paci ...
where he works with peasant
cooperatives A cooperative (also known as co-operative, coöperative, co-op, or coop) is "an autonomous association of persons united voluntarily to meet their common economic, social and cultural needs and aspirations through a jointly owned and democr ...
as a weaving technician. In 1973, he is detained and
disappeared An enforced disappearance (or forced disappearance) is the secret abduction or imprisonment of a person with the support or acquiescence of a state followed by a refusal to acknowledge the person's fate or whereabouts with the intent of placing ...
during the military coup. He reappears in the Estadio Nacional among a group of 54 Uruguayans rescued by the Swedish Ambassor to Chile, Harald Edenstam. As a result, he ends exiled in Sweden and settles in
Lund Lund (, ;"Lund"
(US) and
) is a city in the provinces of Sweden, province of Scania, southern Swed ...
where he still keeps a studio. He starts studying at Grafikskolan Forum in 1978 and opens his first solo show at Andres Tornberg Gallery. Between 1980 and 1981 he lives in Mexico where he leads courses at the studio of Uruguayan artist Anhelo Hernández. In 1981, back in Lund, he opens a print-making studio together with Carl Gustafsson and Stefan Sjöberg. In 1986, he receives one of the awards at the third
Havana Biennial The Bienal de La Habana was a traditional Latin, Caribbean event, originated in Havana, Havana, Cuba, that aims to raise awareness to promote contemporary art and giving priority to Latin Americans, Latin-American and Caribbean artists. The eve ...
. He returns to Havana in 1989 to hold several seminaries and lectures at the Instituto Superior de las Artes (ISA) and again in 1994 as celebrated artist of the fifth Havana Biennial. In 1996 he discotinues working with his galleries in Germany, Colombia, Spain and France, and moves with his family to Costa Rica where he will live until 2001. During tha period he starts a close collaboration with Virginia Pérez-Ratton, at the time the Director of the Museo de Arte y Diseño Contemporáneo and later founder of th
Fundación Teorética
From Costa Rica he moves to Santiago de Compostela, Spain where he will live until 2006. He moves back to Lund and then, in 2010 to Montevideo. Capelán moves back to Lund in 2013, where he still resides. From 2000 to 2006 he is Professor at the Bergen Academy of Art and Design, Norway. In 2007 he is artist in residence at
Auckland University of Technology Auckland University of Technology ( AUT; ) is a university in New Zealand, formed on 1 January 2000 when a former technical college (originally established in 1895) was granted university status. AUT is New Zealand's third largest university i ...
. Capelán has participated, among others, in the biennials of Venice (Italy), São Paulo (Brazil), Kwang-ju (Korea), Johannesburg (South Africa), Site Santa Fe (USA), Auckland (New Zealand), MERCOSUR (Brazil), Bienal del Barro (Venezuela) and Bienal Paiz (Guatemala). He has been awarded the prize of the Third Havanna Biennial, the Guggenheim Fellowship in 1995, the National Prize Award in Uruguay in 2013 and The Swedish Royal Academy Prize among others. Professor at the Art Academy in Bergen, Norway, between (2000-2006) and a guest professor at the Art Academy in Oslo teaching as well in New Zealand, Italy, Cuba, Spain, China, Sweden, Colombia, China, New Zealand, Australia, Germany, Mexico, Spain, and Uruguay.


About Capelán's work

Among those who have written on his work, are: Gerardo Mosquera,
Thomas McEvilley Thomas McEvilley (; July 13, 1939 – March 2, 2013) was an American art critic, poet, novelist, and scholar. He was a Distinguished Lecturer in Art History at Rice UniversityThomas McEvilley, G. Roger Denson (1996), ''Capacity: : History, t ...
, Paulo Herkenhoff, Ticio Escobar,
Catherine David Catherine David (born 19 September 1954) is a French art historian, curator and museum director. David was the first woman and the first non-German speaker to curate documenta X in Kassel, Germany (21 June – 28 September 1997). David was ...
, Virginia Pérez-Ratton,
Carla Stellweg Carla Stellweg, born in the Dutch East Indies where she lived as well as in the Netherlands, Mexico and New York. Stellweg began her career in 1965 working as an assistant curator to Fernando Gamboa, the renowned museum builder who organized a plet ...
, Fernando Castro Flórez,
Sune Nordgren Sune may refer to: * ''Sune'' (book series), a Swedish children's book series * Sune (''Forgotten Realms''), a fictional deity in ''Forgotten Realms'' * Sune (name), a given name * Lalah Sune This is a list of fictional characters from the ...
,
Jonathan Friedman Jonathan Friedman (born April 7, 1946) is an American anthropologist. He earned his Ph.D. at Columbia University in 1972. He is professor emeritus of Anthropology at University of California, San Diego and Director of Studies at the École des ...

Nikos Papastergiadis
Octavio Zaya, Gavin Jantjes, Ann-Sofi Noring, Jan-Erik Lundström
Victoria Lynn
Maria Lind an
Edward Sullivan
His work has been called
post-conceptual Post-conceptual, postconceptual, post-conceptualism or postconceptualism is an art theory that builds upon the legacy of conceptual art in contemporary art, where the concept(s) or idea(s) involved in the work take some precedence over traditional ...
. Free from specific trends or formal boundaries, he works with structures of ideas with a material and formal diversity operating from the language of representation, referrinig to his identity as an artist as well as the artwork's itself. Capelán's language includes drawing, print-making, painting, photography, installation, sculpture, objects, performance, workshops, lectures and texts, as well as his activity as curator. I am not a modernist. I’m not leaving the past and escaping into the future at all. So I don’t see any complication between body and soul, nature and culture, conscious and unconscious processes. Traditionally an artist dealing with art based on ideas and concepts is not supposed to deal with craftsmanship. And artists dealing with general notions of history cannot personalise it, otherwise they land up with psychology and expressionism. I like to work with these tensions and have them present in my work. I am concerned with pointing to new contexts and transforming concepts into material objects. There is a visual as much as a conceptual dimension in the work I do, and I love dealing with both. I love this complexity (Carlos Capelán in an interview on his installation ''Jet-Lag Mambo'')(Jantjes, G. 2000). Every time Capelan announces the limit of a concept or the insufficiency of one model he is also invoking the question of sufficiency and need to take a step in another direction. There is no ultimate end. Each declaration of opposition is another form of entanglement with the opponent. (Papastergiadis, N 2008) Hooks imply games of irony, one of the fundamental mechanisms that art uses to distance itself from its own setting, observing it, commenting it, as if it were something outside itself. Some of Capelán’s paintings, in which he paints with his hand instead of a brush, constitute a hook because they exhibit manual dexterity but advance concepts that have nothing to do with the art of painting. Threatened on one side, and attacked on the other, the observer is forced to remain on guard, distrusting that which is seen, forced to track meaning where it does not appear. (Escobar, T. 2008)


References

* Arteinformad
"Carlos Capelán"
* Jantjes, G. (2000). Gavin Jantjes in conversation with Carlos Capelan. In Carlos Capelán - Jet Lag Mambo (exhibition catalogue). Hovikodden, Norway: Henie Onstad Kunstsenter. Cited in Marsh, L (2010
"THE TROUBLE WITH BEING A PROUD PĀKEHĀ"

Papastergiadis, N
(2008) i
CAPELAN, Edited by The Olsson´s Art Collection
* Escobar, T. (2008) i
CAPELAN, Edited by The Olsson´s Art Collection


External Links


Carlos Capelán, Artflow

Capelán
website
Carlos Capelán
The Olsson Art Collection
Carlos Capelán, uruguayo nómade
Nelson Di Maggio, 4 de mayo de 2009. Uruguayan painters Uruguayan male artists Contemporary painters 1948 births Living people Artists from Montevideo Artists from Lund Uruguayan male painters {{Uruguay-painter-stub