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Carré Noir

JESUS RAFAEL SOTO

Carré Noir

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Carré Noir belongs to the Ambivalence series, in which Jesús Rafael Soto explores perceptual phenomena generated by the superimposition of colored grids and planes. Through a composition of great formal sobriety, the artist creates tension between geometric stability and optical vibration. The vertical lines create a shifting visual field that alters the perception of forms depending on the viewer's position. True to his approach, Soto thus transforms a minimal structure into a sensory experience, where the work seems to oscillate between material presence and immateriality.

Details

1991

Painting on wood and metal

93 x 62 x 18 cm - 36 3/5 x 24 2/5 x 7 1/10 in

Certificate of authenticity signed by Atelier Avila

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JESUS RAFAEL SOTO

Born in Ciudad Bolívar, Venezuela, in 1923, Jesús Rafael Soto is regarded as one of the greatest exponents of twentieth-century Kinetic Art. Alongside Carlos Cruz-Diez and Alejandro Otero, he helped establish Venezuela as one of the leading centres of international geometric abstraction. He studied at the School of Fine Arts in Caracas between 1942 and 1947, where he met several artists who would go on to shape the history of Latin American art. After directing the School of Fine Arts in Maracaibo, he moved to Paris in 1950, a city that remained the centre of his artistic practice until his death.

Immersed in the European avant-garde, Soto encountered the work of Mondrian, Malevich and the Constructivists, influences that profoundly shaped his investigation into movement and the dematerialisation of form. He soon joined the circle of Galerie Denise René and, in 1955, participated in the landmark exhibition Le Mouvement alongside Yaacov Agam, Victor Vasarely, Jean Tinguely, Pol Bury and Alexander Calder—an event widely recognised as the founding moment of Kinetic Art.

Throughout his career, Soto sought to transcend the traditional boundaries of painting and sculpture. Through his celebrated series Vibrations, Écritures, Reliefs, Virtual Volumes and, above all, his iconic Penetrables, he transformed the artwork into an immersive experience in which the viewer becomes an integral participant. Composed of thousands of suspended rods, these installations dissolve the boundaries between space, matter and movement, allowing visitors to physically enter the work itself.

His work has been the subject of major international retrospectives at institutions including the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, the Centre Pompidou, Tate, the Museum of Modern Art and the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao. Both artist and theorist, Soto devoted his life to revealing a "fourth dimension" of art, founded on time, movement and the active participation of the viewer. Today, he remains one of the most influential figures in Kinetic Art and contemporary abstraction.

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