The Playful, Feminist Sculptures of a Member of the Peruvian Avant-Garde

Hyperallergic
17 July 2017

Teresa Burga: Mano Mal Dibujada (Badly Drawn Hand), the Peruvian artist’s first solo museum exhibition in the United States, presents a selection of her work from the 1960s to the present that does not neatly fit within the outlines of modern and contemporary art genres. At times Burga’s style seems akin to Brazilian Constructivism, at others a play on the conceptual underpinnings of naïve art; some of her work looks like Pop Art. Finally, because Burga probes themes of childhood and domesticity — realms of stereotypically female interest — it’s hard not to see feminist undertones in her work.

Educated in Lima and later at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago as a Fulbright scholar, Burga returned to live and work in Peru. Before her time in Chicago, she was part of the group Arte Nuevo, which was instrumental in introducing Op Art, Pop Art, and Happenings to the Peruvian avant-garde scene, while also questioning art-world hierarchies. Miguel A. López, chief curator at the contemporary art institution TEOR/éTica in San José, writes in his SculptureCenter catalogue essay on Burga that during the leftist dictatorship of Juan Velasco Alvarado (1968–75), some former Arte Nuevo artists, like Burga, found themselves out of favor “under a nationalist military regime that privileged representations of indigenous aesthetics as a form of social vindication.” This Peruvian avant-garde therefore existed in a political no-man’s land, out of favor with both the right and the left.

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