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Gego 1955-1990 - Brief Article

ArtForum,  Sept, 2000  by Monica Amor

HUNDACION MUSEO DE BELLAS ARTES

Gego, nee Gertrud Goldschmidt, fled Germany for South America in 1939 and became engaged, alongside other artists on that continent, in reinventing the Constructivist legacy in the '50S. Armed with degrees in architecture and engineering, she turned her attention to sculpture in a series of radical experiments that bring to mind the post-Minimalist work of Robert Morris and Eva Hesse. Gego's mature production, based on meshes and cascades of metal irregularly distributed in space, defies conventional approaches to the art object. Curated by the museum's own Iris Peruga, this giant survey brings together almost 400 works, including drawings, prints, watercolors, and sculpture--a timely homage to Venezuela's greatest postwar artist. Oct. 22, 2000-Mar. 25, 2001.

COPYRIGHT 2000 Artforum International Magazine, Inc.
COPYRIGHT 2000 Gale Group