Artist: Omar Rayo
Museum: Inter-American Development Bank (Washington, United States)
Technique: Intaglio
In 1954, Colombian painter and printmaker Omar Rayo rejected a scholarship to study in Spain, instead embarking on a journey across South America. He traveled through the Andes and along the Amazon, learning indigenous artistic techniques and finding inspiration in the patterns and colors of vernacular architecture and popular culture. This experience proved influential in Rayo’s use of color and geometric patterns, which suggestively evoke the embroidery and patchwork of indigenous art. In the 1960s, Rayo adopted a geometric language that allowed him to explore the material qualities of paper and color. His intaglios investigate the tensions that emerge between the flatness of two-dimensional surfaces and the sculptural qualities of the heavy paper that he used. In
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