Skip to main content
University of California Press

About the Book

Toward the middle of the 1950s, abstract art became a dominant trend in the Latin American cultural scene. Many artists incorporated elements of abstraction into their rigorous artistic vocabularies, while at the same time, the representation of geometric lines and structures filtered into everyday life, appearing in textiles, posters, murals, and landscapes. The translation of a field-changing Spanish-language book, Abstract Crossings analyzes the relationship between, on the one hand, the emergence of abstract proposals in avant-garde groups and, on the other, the institutionalization and newfound hegemony of abstract poetics as part of Latin America’s imaginary of modernization. A profusion of mid-century artistic institutional exchanges between Argentina and Brazil makes a study of the trajectories of abstraction in these two countries particularly valuable. Examining the work of artists such as Max Bill, Lygia Clark, Waldemar Cordeiro, and Tomás Maldonado, author María Amalia García rewrites the artistic history of the period and proposes a novel reading of the cultural dialogue between Argentina and Brazil.

This is the first book in the new Studies on Latin American Art series, supported by a gift from the Institute for Studies on Latin American Art (ISLAA).

About the Author

María Amalia García is a researcher in Argentina's National Scientific and Technical Research Council (CONICET) at TAREA-Cultural Patrimony Research Institute, National University of San Martín. She teaches art history at the University of Buenos Aires.

From Our Blog

Latin American Art On Display at CAA 2020

Following the 2019 release of Abstract Crossings: Cultural Exchange between Argentina and Brazil by María Amalia García, University of California Press is pleased to announce two forthcoming titles in our Studies on Latin American Art series.Praised as “highly insightful and theoretically so
Read More

Designing Book Series: An Art Director’s Tale

By Lia Tjandra, UC Press Art Director, with Jessica Moll, UC Press Senior EditorThere is a special kind of excitement I feel when designing a book series. It’s more challenging than designing a single book and also more gratifying: when united by a coherent design, the books look amazing dis
Read More

Table of Contents

PREFACE TO THE ENGLISH-LANGUAGE EDITION
AND ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS

Introduction
1.Arturo Magazine and the Re-Situating of the Avant-Garde
in the Southern Cone
2.Inventionism’s Projects and Projections: The Asociación Arte
Concreto-Invención (Concrete-Invention Art Association)
3.Buenos Aires–São Paulo: Interconnections between Cultural
Institutions and Art Criticism in the Construction of Abstract Art
4.New Visions of Tradition: The Place of Concrete Art on the
Argentine-Brazilian Map
5.Regional Concretism: South American Interventions on and
Confrontations with the Paradigm of Modern Art and Architecture
6.Art Exhibitions and Policies of Exchange: Argentine Art in Brazil and
Brazilian Art in Argentina
7.Inside or Outside Art’s Transformations?
Conclusion

ARCHIVES AND SOURCES
REFERENCES
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
INDEX

Reviews

"García’s study serves as a model of the ways in which thoughtful and creative archival research can significantly alter the narratives we tell of both individual artists and larger movements. What this author builds from archival sources is a compelling story in which nationalism and internationalism are irrevocably intertwined, and the most genuine desire for the latter can be made to serve the former. It thus presents South American concretism as both an avant-garde project and a tool of cultural politics and argues that the line between the two is not easily fixed."
Art Journal
"A game changer for the histories of Latin American abstraction."
 
Latin American Research Review
“María Amalia García offers original and unique insights into the developments of abstraction in Argentina and Brazil in the mid-twentieth century. This book fills a gap that has long existed in connecting the art historical dots between developments in abstraction on both sides of the Atlantic, south and north. It is an essential reference and an erudite, elegantly written volume.”—Edward J. Sullivan, Helen Gould Sheppard Professor in the History of Art, New York University

"The originality of this rigorous research by García lies in the fact that it offers a history of Argentine and Brazilian abstract art in regional rather than national terms. Each of the highly documented case studies in the book builds on the thesis that modern art, in those countries, was not exclusively created from European referents but also from a history, hitherto invisible, of exchanges, dialogues, and contacts among artists, as well as relationships between local diplomacies. This book is fundamental reading for everyone interested in understanding the ideological and cultural context of the period."—Inés Katzenstein, Curator of Latin American Art and Director of the Patricia Phelps de Cisneros Research Institute for the Study of Art from Latin America, The Museum of Modern Art

"Innovative and extraordinarily documented, Abstract Crossings breaks with the frames of national histories to propose a comparative and regional perspective. Magazines, links between artists, exhibitions, institutional exchanges, and diplomacy reveal the ties between Argentinian and Brazilian postwar art and architecture. Abstract Crossings introduces a new and essential historiography of the abstract art of South America."—Andrea Giunta, author of Avant-Garde, Internationalism, and Politics: Argentine Art in the Sixties