Álvaro Delgado

(Madrid, 1922)

Composición

1960

oil on canvas

89.2 x 116.2 cm

Inv. no. 2102

BBVA Collection Spain


This composition employs an Expressionist idiom characterised by violent distortions and contrasts between dark areas and garish colours.

Álvaro Delgado was involved in the earliest attempts to do away with academicism — he was a disciple of Daniel Vázquez Díaz (1882-1969) and a member of the
 Second
 
and later of the
and to create a new kind of art, embracing new forms of expression without thereby breaking with tradition.

In the sixties his style evolved towards an increasingly heightened Expressionism in which abstract forms asserted themselves at the expense of figurative ones. He developed a gestural form of painting, composing the picture with rapid, spontaneous strokes; his hands acted as a vehicle for transmitting thought into action.

Nevertheless, although Expressionism is a constant factor in his paintings and drawings, to define his work as such would be too limiting, since Álvaro Delgado combined different styles and idioms.

In Composición, matter takes on a particularly prominent role; the work plays with it, achieving a range of textures, from liquid to pasty, so that it acquires an expressive value in itself. Long, continuous strokes run right across the whole composition, while patches of colour construct the space. Its colours conform to a normal range, although the green enables it to gain in intensity and the white helps to give the whole picture a sense of luminosity.