Beatriz González: A Retrospective
On view until Sept. 1, 2019
Pérez Art Museum Miami
Miami, Florida
www.pamm.org“Beatriz González: A Retrospective” is the first large-scale U.S. retrospective of the work of Bogotá-based artist Beatriz González (b. 1938, Bucaramanga, Colombia). At 81, González is not only an internationally celebrated Colombian artist but also one of the few extant representatives of the so-called “radical women” generation from Latin America. Despite the fact that it spans over six decades of intensive research, her groundbreaking production is, for the most part, unfamiliar to audiences in the United States. One of the most comprehensive displays of the artist’s work to date, this retrospective seeks to remedy this lag by presenting approximately 150 works, with examples from the early 1960s through the present, all of which embody the full scope of González’s oeuvre.Image: Beatriz González. Jackeline Oasis, 1975. Screenprint on paper. 19 13/16 x 19 7/8 inches. Collection of the artist, courtesy of Casas Riegner Gallery, Bogotá
On view until Sept. 1, 2019
Pérez Art Museum Miami
Miami, Florida
www.pamm.org“Beatriz González: A Retrospective” is the first large-scale U.S. retrospective of the work of Bogotá-based artist Beatriz González (b. 1938, Bucaramanga, Colombia). At 81, González is not only an internationally celebrated Colombian artist but also one of the few extant representatives of the so-called “radical women” generation from Latin America. Despite the fact that it spans over six decades of intensive research, her groundbreaking production is, for the most part, unfamiliar to audiences in the United States. One of the most comprehensive displays of the artist’s work to date, this retrospective seeks to remedy this lag by presenting approximately 150 works, with examples from the early 1960s through the present, all of which embody the full scope of González’s oeuvre.Image: Beatriz González. Jackeline Oasis, 1975. Screenprint on paper. 19 13/16 x 19 7/8 inches. Collection of the artist, courtesy of Casas Riegner Gallery, Bogotá