Costa Rica News, Daily News in Costa Rica by the Tico Times
January 22, 2008
 
   
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Amodeo Gallery showcases
work of a math-minded painter
By Alex Leff
Tico Times Staff | aleff@ticotimes.net

Alonso Durán, 42, was on track to becoming an engineer but never finished his degree. Born in the Central Valley coffee town of Grecia, west of San José, Durán took up painting and graphic design at the University of Costa Rica, and this time, he finished.

However, despite the switch to creativity, Durán still has a highly active scientific and mathematical side of the brain.

“I've always been inspired by concepts of physics and mathematics,” he told The Tico Times.

Durán's new show, “Palimpsesto” opens tonight at 7 at the Amodeo Gallery – his first exhibition at the venue in the western San José neighborhood of Rohrmoser – and visitors there might get an impression of the science at work inside an artist's brain.

Of the 18 paintings, eight are mixed-media on paper and 10 are acrylic paint on canvas.

Durán was turned on to the “Lissajous figures,” he said, the curves and parabolic forms detailed in the mid-19th century by French mathematician Jules Antoine Lissajous.

“Horizontal waves and vertical waves meet to create a totally new, hybrid form,” he said describing some of the figures in his latest works. “I tried to paint them in one solid stroke, like Chinese writing, based on the continuous movement of the arm.”

In addition to Lissajous, Durán found art in layers, which is where the notion of the palimpsest, the exhibit's title, comes into play. A palimpsest is a manuscript page that has been written on, rubbed off, and then written on again. “But it always leaves a trace of what was there before,” Durán said.

In some cases, the artist took digital prints and brushed over them with a layer of white acrylic paint, only to begin illustrating on top again.

“My work uses a lot of transparency, with layer on top of layer; but still, the original work shows through below,” he said.

Durán has previously showed his work in such San José spaces as the Children's Museum's National Gallery and the National Theater's Joaquín García Monje Gallery, as well as in Cuba, El Salvador and the U.S. state of California.

On show at Amadeo through Feb. 10, the Costa Rican artist's work is going for anywhere from $250, for smaller works on paper, up to $3,000 for larger, canvas paintings.

 
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