This is a visually striking and expressive Vintage Modern Hard Edge Abstract Minimalist Painting, Pastels on Paper, by renowned Mexican - American Modernist painter and sculptor, Alberto Montano (b. 1953.) This artwork depicts a bold hard-edged abstraction, with a crossed sphere in the center, surrounded by prominent & detailed geometric blocks of primary colors, such as black, brown, gray and red. This artwork was meticulously and patiently created by Montano with pastels, which are a difficult medium to master. Signed and dated at the lower right edge: "Montano '79" in the lower right corner. Additionally, an original, yellowed gallery label on the verso reads: "Lonny Gans...Los Angeles...Art Consultant - Private Dealer...Alberto Montano. Untitled, pastel on paper..." Lonny Gans was a well-respected art dealer and consultant, who specialized in West Coast art movements, such as Light and Space. According to my research, this is the earliest original artwork by Alberto Montano to ever be publicly offered for sale, since the invention of the Internet. Approximately 27 1/2 x 41 1/2 inches (including frame.) Actual artwork is approximately 26 1/8 x 40 inches. Very good condition for age, with some mild scuffing and scratches to the acrylic glass, and light scuffing and edge wear to the original period vintage aluminum frame (please see photos.) Priced to Sell. This artist's prints regularly sell for $8K up on 1stDibs, and in galleries across the world. His work has been exhibited worldwide and has been represented by some of the most prestigious galleries in North America. Acquired from an affluent and swanky old estate collection in Los Angeles, California. Due to the large size of this piece, S&H costs will be unavoidably high. However, Free Local Pickup is also an option. If you like what you see, I encourage you to make an Offer. Please check out my other listings for more wonderful and unique artworks!



About Lonny Gans:

"Lonny Gans, a well-respected art dealer and consultant who I had met the previous summer. Lonny primarily represented the contemporary artwork of the West Coast, with an emphasis on artists associated with the Light and Space movement. At that time, Lonny was operating out of a gallery space on Little Santa Monica Blvd. in a complex that included the James Corcoran Gallery and the Asher Faure Gallery situated near the Margo Leavin Gallery, the Pacific Design Center, and the vibrant arts district in the West Hollywood and Beverly Hills area. She was preparing for a move to a new space at 21 Market Street in Venice and offered to hire me to transport and install work for her corporate and private clients – and introduced me to other gallerists and uber LA framer Jerry Solomon. It was also around this time that I first heard the quote by Ad Reinhardt: “Art is art. Everything else is everything else” – a phrase I would invoke periodically in subsequent years when an unassailable explanation of art was necessary. (Rothfuss, 2005)"


About the Artist:

Alberto Montano Born:  1953
Known for:  Painting

Alberto Montano (Born 1953) is active/lives in Mexico.  Alberto Montano is known for Painting.

MoMA

Exhibitions




Alberto Montaño (1953, México City) studied at the Chelsea School of Art in London from 1974 to 77 and moved to Paris to study at Atelier 17 under William S. Hayter until 1978

Montaño has had museum and gallery solo shows in New York (PS 1, 1987, among others) and Mexico (Museo de Arte de Queretaro, Galería OMR, Galería Ramis Barquet, among others). In 2010, he had his first Museum solo show at the Museo de Arte de Querétaro in México.

He now travels between New York City, working in his studio at Mana Contemporary, and Mexico City. esteban chapital


Portfolio Alberto Montaño

USD $500.00

Portfolio book with the work of artist Alberto Montano, pieces box impressions. With more than 40 images and two DVD’s.

Edition: 25 pieces (NM Contemporaneo Galeria de Arte, Cuernavaca, Mexico)



20 Years of Art: Alberto Montaño Mason
LS/Galería (formerly Lourdes Sosa Galería) opens its doors to maestro Alberto Montaño and presents to the public a compendium of his work from 1984 to 2014.

"The exhibition presents several reinterpretations made by the artist of iconic pieces in the history of art, we see a fountain by Duchamp, a Venus de Milo or a Magritte interpreted under a completely different and refreshing lens. In addition, the exhibition showcases pieces such as México Plomo, which combines a photograph of the city with a lead plaque exposed to contamination. The exhibition presents 20 years of the artist's history and his different interpretations and reinterpretations of the world we live in, spectacular," said Andrea Zapata, Director and Senior Art Advisor of the gallery.

Alberto Montaño was born in Mexico City in 1953. He studied at the Chelsea School of Art and was a pupil of William S. Hayter at Atelier 17 in Paris, France. He currently works and exhibits in New York City. His work has been exhibited in multiple group presentations in our country, and in the United States and Europe, individually.

Montaño is also known for his creations within conceptual photography, installation, and video. "I've never wanted to box my work in. I'm always open to change. But more importantly, the work is always open to interpretation, which makes it independent of me and gives it a life of its own," says the artist about the exhibition.

On this occasion, the exhibition takes viewers on a journey through the use of different techniques that the artist has experimented with throughout his life.

Montaño has used everything from the most traditional ones such as painting, drawing and engraving to digital images modified and combined with video.

Permanent Exhibition

At the same time, the permanent collection of the generation of transition and rupture is presented, with original works by: Rufino Tamayo, José Luis Cuevas, Arnaldo Coen, Pedro Coronel, Manuel Felguérez, among others.

LS/Gallery has been specializing inmodern and contemporary art for more than 16 years, with a plural concept of generations and aesthetic propositions.

The exhibition can be visited from Monday to Friday from 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. and on Saturday it gives space for appointments.




biography

Semblance

Alberto Montaño Mason was born in México City in 1953.

In 1973 he moved to London, England, where he earned a BA degree at Chelsea School of Art 1974-77.

He then moved to Paris where he studied at Atelier 17 under William S. Hayter 1977-78

In 1981 he settled in New York City where he started a career as a painter, draughtsman and sculptor.

Montaño Mason has had museum and gallery solo shows in New York (PS 1, 1987, among others) and Mexico (Museo de Arte de Queretaro, Galería OMR, Galería Ramis Barquet, among others)

And has been included in several museum group shows in New York, Washington, California, Texas, among other states in the US, México and Europe.

After deep personal loss in 1990, Montaño Mason kept on working till the mid 90s, and then went through long periods of mourning, traveling, and study… in a quest for survival and revival into a new way of expression, a process that took several years.

In 2003 he set up a studio in México city and began a second career in Conceptual Photography and Video among other techniques.

In 2010, he had his first Museum solo show at the Museo de Arte de Querétaro in México.

He is now based in the New York City area working simultaneously in his studios at Mana Contemporary and Mexico City on a new body of work, a selection of which constitutes the content of this website.

 

curriculum

Education

1973 Apprentice with Maestro Pedro Medina, Mexico, D.F.

B.A., Chelsea School of Art, London, England.

Engraving Studies at the Atelier Dix Sept, with William S. Hayter, Paris, France.

 

Solo shows

2019 Solo Booth at Zona Maco [NM Contemporaneo Gallery], Mexico City, Mexico

2018 “Black Room White Room”  NM Contemporaneo Gallery, Cuernavaca, Mexico

2017 Solo Booth at Zona Maco Foto, Mexico City, Mexico

2017 “Twenty Years” LS Gallery, Mexico City, Mexico

2016 “How Does Blue Taste?” NM Contemporaneo Gallery, Cuernavaca, Mexico

2015 “Change and Continuity” NM Contemporaneo Gallery, Cuernavaca, Mexico

2010 “Mujer”, Museo de Arte de la Ciudad de Querétaro, Qro. México.

1995 Momias, Exconvento de Tepozotlán, Tepozotlán Morelos, Mexico.

1994 Galería Ramis Barquet, Monterrey, N.L.

1989 Galería O.M.R., Mexico, D.F.

1987 P.S. 1 Museum, Project Room, Nueva York, N.Y., Galería O.M.R., Mexico, D.F. Consulate Gallery, Mexican Consulate en Nueva York, N.Y.

1986 Galería O.M.R., Mexico, D.F.

1985 Centro Cultural Posada, I.N.B.A., Mexico, D.F.

1983 Martin Molinary Gallery, Nueva York, N.Y.

1981 Galería Mollet, Mexico, D.F.

1980 Galería Mer-Kup, Mexico, D.F.

 

Selected Group Shows

2017-18 Brooklyn Rail's "Occupy Mana" Curated by Phong Bui & Rail Curatorial Projects, Mana Contemporary, Jersey City, NJ, USA

2017 "Each state of mind is irreducible: Spanish & Latin American Artists", The Hudson County Community College Benjamin J. Dineen, III and Dennis C. Hull Gallery, Jersey City, NJ, USA

2005 “Mirrors-Espejos”, Mexican Cultural Institute, Washington, D.C.

2001 “Mexico – Nueva York”, Mexican Cultural Institute, Nueva York, N.Y.

1993 “10 Artistas de Mexico”, Grace Borgenicht Gallery, Nueva York, N.Y.

1993 “Europalia”, Contemporary Mexican Art, Provinciaal Museum von der Moderne Kunst, Oostende, Bélgica.

1990-92 “Por el Camino de Ecos”: Contemporary Art in Mexico. Itinerario:
– Archer M. Huntington Gallery, University of Texas, Austin, Texas.
– Museo del Barrio, Nueva York, N.Y.
– Tedman Art Gallery, Camdem, Nueva Jersey.
– Western Art Gallery, Western Washington University, Bellingham, Washington.
– Art Museum of South Texas, Corpus Christi, Texas.
– The Art Museum at Florida, International University, Miami, Florida.
– Grand Rapids Art Museum, Grand Rapids, Michigan.
“The face of the Pyramid”, The Gallery, Nueva York, N.Y.
“Parallel Project”, Contemporary Abstract Art in Mexico, Nueva York, N.Y.

1989 Ruth Siegel Gallery, Nueva York, N.Y.

1987 “Abstract Visions”, Contemporary Abstract Art in Latin America, Museum of Contemporary Hispanic Art, Nueva York, N.Y.

1986 “Raices Populares en el Arte Contemporáneo”, Galería O.M.R., Mexico, D.F.

1985 “17 Artistas de hoy en Mexico”, Museo Rufino Tamayo, Mexico, D.F.
“El Retrato”, Galería O.M.R., Mexico, D.F.
“Pintura joven mexicana”, Galería Metropolitana, Mexico, D.F.

1984 “Image Pilgrimage”, Court Gallery, Nueva York, N.Y.

1983 Court Gallery, Nueva York, N.Y.

1981 Galería Mer-Kup, Mexico, D.F.

1980 Galería Misrachi, Mexico, D.F.

1979 “Contemporary Drawing”, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, California.




Christian Viveros-Fauné

continuity and change

For personal and professional reasons, Alberto Montaño-Mason quit making art sometime around 2001. Nearly a decade of travel and study later, Montaño-Mason took to his studio like a man possessed. Residing presently in Mexico City—his earlier art studios were located in Paris and New York— Montaño-Mason’s new workshop traded in many elements from his previously successful practice for a new set of high tech tools. Gone were the paintbrushes and stretchers. In their place appeared 27’ iMacs, digital plotters and LCD video projectors.

Changes that signaled an important shift in this artist’s creative process, these advances continue the investigation of subjects Alberto Montaño-Mason has consistently made his own. Among these subjects are the themes of life and death, the commingling of art and life, the confrontation of real history with subaltern art history, as well as—finally—a deep-seated affirmation of this particular artist’s freedom to visualize alternate realities and harness personal misfortune to a restless, personal artistic vision. 

old obsessions, new signatures

FManifested variously in what amounts to a second career for Montaño-Mason—he now also uses his mother’s last name and refers to work made after 2001 as his “21st Century work”—the cardinal themes of life and death recur in the different bodies of work this artist has confected since returning to active art making. Consider, for example, the images contained in this folder. Works that take as their starting point the pictorial and sculptural minimalism of the 1960s and 70s, Montaño-Mason’s 21st century art employs multiple media to refresh an image bank conjured in equal parts from art history and personal obsession.

In a first case, for instance, Montaño-Mason turns a perfect circle—that recalls, among other works, a canvas by Robert Mangold—into a three-dimensional live seedbed or planting, as he calls it. Appearing as a digitally produced photographic image in its final state, Montaño-Mason makes use of this planting as an artistic signature. With it he prods tradition and, quite literally, bring the hermeneutics of minimalism down to earth. 

Other tropes of classic pictorial minimalism come in for similar treatment. Presented here in the shape of circles and stripes—invoking, alternately, prehistoric symbols (i.e., the veritable circle of life) as well as minimalism’s predecessors and practitioners (i.e., Barnett Newman’s zips or Sean Scully’s lines)— Montaño-Mason rescues them from their perishable planting via the immortalizing power of photography.  

Further experiments with seedbeds decant into actual three-dimensional sculptural objects with which Montaño-Mason refers, alternately, to Dada (think of Meret Oppenheim’s fur-lined teacup), Duchamp’s canonical urinal as well as to fetishes like women’s shoes, men’s hats (after the artist’s dead father) and the veritable bedchamber that is the cradle of life, death and procreation.

icons and repetitions

As with the images in the previous folder that actively quote the hermetic codes of minimalism and playfulness of Dada, in subsequent art works Alberto-Montaño Mason casts back to older, more canonical artistic sources in order to establish a dialogue between tradition and his own contemporary artistic practice. In these and other series, his repetitions of familiar art historical images serve to underscore—while remaining indebted to the documentary nature of conceptualist art practice—the importance of his sources and also to establish a working method with its own organic and aesthetic order.

Using the silhouettes of artistic icons like Botticelli’s Venus and the Venus de Milo, Montaño-Mason embarked on a series of plantings whose subsequent photographic record present highly aestheticized images of a naturally dramatic process. This process is made up, quite simply, of the cycle of life of Montaño-Mason’s plantings themselves: Green shoots give way—in Montaño’s diptychs and triptychs—to images of dry verdure, then eventually to images of vegetal residue floating fleetingly atop scarred earth that resembles nothing so much as a the craquelure of old paint. 

Other icons Montaño-Mason submits to this circular process of bloom, wastage and death are Duchamp’s stool (sans bicycle wheel), Magritte’s bowler-hatted everyman and, most poignantly for a non believer, the Virgen de Guadalupe, possibly Mexico’s single most emblematic and revered image. Photographic records of the transitory nature of monumental achievements as well as testaments to the devotion they inspire, Montaño-Mason’s photographs of living and dead icons query belief independently of source, orientation and intensity.

on women and their representation

A Continuing in the same elfin, Dadaist vein Montaño-Mason employed in his previous three-dimensional sculptures, a third body of work highlights this artist’s preoccupation both with real live women and their historical representation. Made up of photographs that appear essentially straightforward yet conjugate eroticism and its conventional opposite—namely, the cycle of reproduction—Montaño-Mason’s pictures of women prove at once images of a highly personal nature and try on various artistic influences, including, among others, that of Edouard Manet and the contemporary photographer Nobuyoshi Araki.

Pictures that feature the same dark-haired model in various stages of dress and undress, these photos flout traditional taboos against reproducing beauty and menstruation in the same image. The fact that Montaño-Mason frankly presents images of both recalls a rhetorical question posed by Titian’s friend, the poet Pietro Aretino: “Why should I be ashamed to describe what nature was not afraid to create?” Montaño-Mason’s photographs—like Aretino’s famously erotic writings—clearly display no such compunction. 

For example, one such work from this series arrays two images of Montaño-Mason’s topless model atop the same white stool, dressed in a skirt, bobby-sox and patent leather shoes. A nod toward the aforementioned Japanese photographer, this diptych alternately hides, then brazenly displays what popular culture has long referred to as “the female curse.” Another work from this series features Montaño Mason’s model reclining on a bed like an odalisque. A picture that recalls Manet’s Olympia far more than it does Matisse’s decorative maidens, Montaño-Mason arranges his model in act of splay legged sexual candor with rivulets of blood included. 

A final diptych provides a potent colophon for this series: an image of the seated model revealing her blood stained panties is paired with a fertile outline of the model in soil and grass.

tombs

“Guilt,” the philosopher Elizabeth Kubler Ross said, “is perhaps the most painful companion of death.” Words that haunt the series Montaño-Mason’s prosaically calls “Tombs,” Kubler Ross’ utterance describes works whose photographic support this artist employs differently to remember the departed. Photographs that mine a mixture of public and private sorrow, such images are elegies to the dead and dying, be these actual people, forgotten ideas or passing life events like childhood and youth.

Take several images Montaño-Mason made of a prone woman lying head down on a cracked cement floor. No nonsense pictures of a crumpled model with her hair and clothes in a state of disarray, the subject’s facelessness effectively evokes las caidas de Juarez—the countless, largely anonymous women who have been murdered in that infamous Mexican border town. A second image, in which Montaño-Mason blindfolds and ties his model’s hands behind her back only to figuratively “bury” her under a sheet of yellow latex, makes these connections stand out even more poignantly.

FA heightened sense of mortality and loss informs Montaño-Mason’s photographs of broken dolls and children’s toys buried among grown grass and actual soil. Pictures that at once literally enter childhood, these images inhabit a special place in Montaño-Mason’s artistic universe: they raise creative life from the images of ambiguous “tombs” in a manner similar to the way this artist’s plantings grow shoots from dead earth.

beyond the studio

Montaño-Mason’s next series can be seen both as a progression of and an amplification of the process-oriented work involving his signature plantings. These processes, on the one hand, harken back to the earliest technologies know to man—namely, agriculture and the raising of livestock. On the other, they require sophisticated digital tools to be turned into this artist’s 21st century photo and video–based art.

Starting with a planting whose long, dried-out grasses describe the outline of a single sheep, Montaño-Mason moved on to work with an actual herd of live sheep which he led into conforming the shape one of the central symbols of visual postmodernism: a Robert Smithson-type spiral. Another work in this series required this artist to corral hundreds of Monarch butterflies into a perfect circle. The videographic documentation of these few fleeting moments recalls the words of the 17th century British classicist John Stuart Blackie: “creation is the production of order.”

Works like these and others drove Montaño-Mason out of the studio and into the world, where he was able to establish his own, evidently more modest version of land art with the use of animals. A significant move beyond his previous artistic practice, this series additionally afforded Montaño-Mason the possibility to incorporate video technology into his creative arsenal, an opportunity he would use to full advantage in subsequent art works.

from video to installation art

Alberto Montaño-Mason’s most recent series of works acquire significant new dimensions for an artist who for many years worked exclusively with paint and canvas. Having established an entirely new artistic idiom for his ouvre, he has actively and continually developed relations between his art works. These relationships take on a whole new complexity where his sculptural and video installations are concerned.

Beginning with his work “Muro,” which consists of bibles stacked end to end and mortared like bricks, Montaño-Mason has sought to expand his particular artistic language into the realms of popular culture and culture at large. An impulse he has followed by making complex interactive video works that—in several instances—present young lovers literally interrupted by the presence of the viewer (thanks to a motion detector), Montaño-Mason has clearly accepted the challenge of working with new media and new subject matter while, at the same time, mining concerns that have been at the source of his art for decades.

One especially sophisticated video installation is the work “Cinco Generaciones.” A multi-channel piece that confronts the viewer with a cacophony of women—who are all related to the artist by blood—their images and voices speak through various generations of a single family to the basic universal fact of being, as it were, representatives of the family of woman.

change and continuity

Since 2004, Alberto Montaño-Mason has made of the principle of stylistic variability a working method. A changing practice that embraces both manifold tools as well as a core set of concerns that provide a continuous thread for his changing work, this artist has harnessed low-fi means of constructing artistic meaning (his plantings) as well as the latest technology to power his multi-channel video installations.

Art that challenges notions of both continuity and discontinuity, Montaño-Mason’s plantings, two dimensional objects, three-dimensional sculpture and video installations shape-shift a creative imagination that doggedly pursues elemental and personal questions about the role of artist. What place does humor play in the making of art? What form can we give our obsessions? What does sorrow look like? What new elements can be brought to bear on the artistic imagination and what results will they produce? 

OThese are just some of the questions Montaño-Mason brings to his capacious art. He has developed these and others throughout at least two art careers and several lives. As viewers, we should count ourselves lucky just to follow along.



Through the Path of Echoes: Contemporary Art in Mexico

Curated by Elizabeth Ferrer


By constantly referring to and borrowing from aspects of a shared history and tradition, these artists present Mexican history as a force so rich and vital that it visibly shapes not only the culture, but each individual within it. And while the work of this generation continually reveals a deep indebtedness to Mexico’s past, the artists neither romanticize nor fully embrace their complicated heritage. Rather, they frequently transform aspects of the culture into emblems of personal identity, at times revealing cultural forces as sources of hope and strength and sometimes, as obstacles to personal freedom.

Mexican art has a long history of community involvement, from publicly funded murals to the celebration of its rich indigenous and adopted culture. Since the 1980s, however, there has been a break from the influence of culture. At times intentional and rebellious, and other times simply a desire to expand in subject matter, Mexican art has become a labyrinth of global, philosophical, and artistic commentary. Through the Path of Echoes documents the profound changes and growth of Mexican art through beautiful and deeply intellectual artworks by celebrated Mexican artists such as Eugenia Vargas Daniels, Julio Galan, Flor Garduno, Sergio Hernandez, Estela Hussong, Ruben Ortiz, Ray Smith, Alberto Montano, among others.

Accompanying this exhibition is the catalogue, Through the Path of Echoes: Contemporary Art in Mexico, with essays by Elizabeth Ferrer and Alberto Ruy-Sánchez.

TOURING LOCATIONS
Archer M. Huntington Art Gallery
Aug 31, 1990 – Oct 17, 1990

Nov 1, 1990 – Dec 16, 1990

Jun 28, 1991 – Aug 11, 1991

University Galleries, University of Massachusetts
Feb 1, 1992 – Mar 16, 1992

Jul 3, 1992 – Aug 30, 1992

Sep 15, 1992 – Nov 8, 1992

Nov 20, 1992 – Jan 3, 1993