ART CITIES:Brussels-Josep Grau Garriga

Left: Josep Grau-Garriga, Porta oberta (Porte ouverte), 1974, Hemp, wool, and synthetic fibers, 220 x 165 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery. Right: Josep Grau-Garriga, Nova imatge (Nouvelle image), 1973, Wool, cotton and synthetic fibers, 82 x 80 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech GalleryBy abandoning the classical approach to tapestry Josep Grau-Garriga revolutionized the genre. Thanks to him, tapestry, which was until then static, became dynamic, active even, since it was founded on movement. His experiments on new materials, relief, and textures allowed him to revolutionized tapestry to a new, decidedly contemporary textile art. A true sense of presence emanates from his work: it is life itself, at once harmonious and exalted.

By Dimitris Lempesis
Photo: Galerie Nathalie Obadia Archive

In the first solo exhibition in Belgium with works by Josep Grau-Garriga, are on presentation a group of tapestries, spanning the artist’s long career, with the earliest dating from the 1970s and more recent works dating from the 2000s and a series of drawings by the Catalonian master, whose pictorial work is relatively unknown, in comparison with his woven work. The joint presentation of these two bodies of work, a rare event indeed—reveals the fertile emulation between the two media. When Josep Grau-Garriga was born, in 1929, in Sant Cugat del Vallès, near Barcelona, his village was small and rustic. Marked by the village’s customs and touched by the pastoral landscapes that surrounded him, he soon developed a taste for drawing. He recalls a happy, bucolic childhood, until the Spanish Civil War broke out in 1936. Three years later, he witnessed the defeat of the Republican army, then Franco’s rise to power and the establishment of his dictatorship. These traumatic events would deeply influence his work. Despite the vicissitudes, Grau-Garriga was able to graduate, in 1952, from the School of Fine Arts of San Jorge, Barcelona. In 1954, influenced both by Catalan Romanesque art and by the art of inter-war Mexican muralists, from David Alfaro Siqueiros to Diego Rivera, he made frescoes for the Sant Crist de Llaceres Hermitage. This marked the beginning of his recognition. In 1957, Josep Grau-Garriga was commissioned to make his first tapestry for the Casa Aymat, the local producer of carpets and tapestries that employed looms, based on a technique developed by the Gobelins Manufactory. Encouraged by Casa Aymat’s new owner, Miquel Samaranch, the artist traveled to Paris for the first time, to study gothic tapestry and familiarize himself with the latest trends in contemporary French tapestry,. It was also in Paris that he underwent his first profound aesthetic shock, by discovering, in particular, the informal painting of Jean Fautrier and the “Art Brut” of Jean Dubuffet, along with abstract works by his fellow compatriots, Antoni Tàpies and Antonio Saura. Equipped with all these visual experiences, he joined the atelier of Jean Lurçat, in Saint-Céré (Lot, France), in 1958. His time with Lurçat marked a decisive turning point. It made him realize that tapestry could be something beyond a merely decorative object. Armed with this certainty, Josep Grau-Garriga returned to Catalonia with new ambitions that he would apply without further delay, by taking over the artistic direction of Casa Aymat, which had supported him from the beginning. To modernize the production, he invited artists to make tapestry cartoons. These first collaborations laid the foundations of the new Catalonian school of tapestry, with Sant Cugat del Vallès at its epicenter and Grau-Garriga as its inspired leader. Over the course of nearly thirty years, a number of artists would come to experience his new conception of textile art, including Josep Royo, Joan Miró, Pablo Picasso, Antoni Tàpies, Josep Guinovart, Ràfols Casamada, and Joan-Josep Tharrats. The studio he directed soon became a laboratory for research that inexorably led him away from the legacy of Jean Lurçat. While the latter still preferred to have clear lines in his drawing compositions, Josep Grau-Garriga headed in the opposite direction, by exploring the possibilities of three-dimensionality. Thus, his tapestries increasingly resembled sculptures. Grau-Garriga often claimed that he wove like a sculptor, working textile in relief and attempting to give the fibers an exceptional variety of textures. Two particularly rich and technically and stylistically audacious decades ensued. One of the innovations consisted in progressively abandoning the tapestry cartoon in the early 1970s, with the artist tackling his composition directly on the loom. This new attitude, which favored spontaneity, unleashed Grau-Garriga’s imagination. The total freedom he acquired allowed him to abandon the exclusive use of “noble” fibers (silk, wool, gold and silver thread), in favor of all other materials, whether natural or artificial. Thus, he began to mix in, without hierarchy, cotton, hemp, jute, spart grass, iron and copper wires, and even plastic cords. This transgression echoes the research conducted by his contemporaries, including his fellow countryman, Antoni Tàpies, or Italian artist Alberto Burri, who incorporated “non-academic” materials in their work. The use of these new “poor” materials, combined with increasingly complex visual solutions, contribute to the rugged topography of Grau-Garriga’s tapestries.  The 1960s and 1970s, decades that were so fertile in artistic research, are also when the artist showed himself to be particularly sensitive to the contemporary political and social context. Repression ran rampant. Freedoms were attacked from all sides. One had to fight to live and even more to express oneself, especially as an artist. In reaction to this, Grau-Garriga wove, painted, and drew some politically engaged works that denounced the many violences perpetuated at the time. On an allegorical level, his tapestries, with their red stains, pay homage to the blood of Republican martyrs, while the gaping holes and the crevasses incarnate the assaults against fundamental human rights. The jute sacks and clothes that are incorporated amongst the fibers are the tangible proof of the sweat spilt by laborers and factory workers in their daily fight for survival. Some of his works on paper—drawings and collages of press cuttings—directly reference Franco’s oppression. In May 1968, he was in Paris, where he witnessed the protests. The following year, he was in New York, where he discovered Pop Art, and in the wake of this, produced works that denounced the Vietnam War, the Israeli-Arabic conflict, or the consumeristic society. Like Andy Warhol and Robert Rauschenberg, Grau-Garriga inserted manufactured objects and promotional packaging into the compositions of his drawings and paintings. In 1991, Josep Grau-Garriga moved to Angers, in France. The works produced after this date are no longer particularly political in nature. They focus, rather, on an exploration of visual and chromatic effects that reach their peak, at the turn of the 2000s. By presenting his works on paper the gallery aims to recreate the fertile connection that exists between Josep Grau-Garriga’s pictorial and woven works. While tapestry certainly allowed him to familiarize himself with three-dimensionality, it is the visual findings that appear in his paintings and drawings that led to the innovations he introduced in his tapestries. One of these, and a remarkable one at that, is the addition of heterogeneous fabrics: canvas bags, sheets, or even clothing, that he mixed into his paintings and drawings before integrating them into his tapestries. Surprisingly, it is when his style has become properly abstract that the reality of everyday life bursts into his work, in the shape of objects and second-hand clothes. They invade the compositions and are often the key to deciphering the work’s iconography.

Info: Galerie Nathalie Obadia, 8 rue Charles Decoster, Brussels, Duration: 9/1-16/2/19, Days & Hours: Tue-Sat 10:00-18:00, www.nathalieobadia.com

Left: Josep Grau-Garriga, Diàleg de seda (Dialogue de soie), 2000, Wool, cotton, jute, silk, cotton ribbon and cotton and silk trimmings@, 170 x 190 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery. Right: Josep Grau-Garriga, Sense títol (Sans titre), Circa 1990, Wool, cotton, jute and synthetic fibers, 140 x 104 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery
Left: Josep Grau-Garriga, Diàleg de seda (Dialogue de soie), 2000, Wool, cotton, jute, silk, cotton ribbon and cotton and silk trimmings@, 170 x 190 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery. Right: Josep Grau-Garriga, Sense títol (Sans titre), Circa 1990, Wool, cotton, jute and synthetic fibers, 140 x 104 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery

 

 

Left: Josep Grau-Garriga, Porta d’hivern (Porte d'hiver), 2003, Cotton, synthetic fibers and silk, 180 x 130 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery. Right: Josep Grau-Garriga, Record d’estiu (Souvenir d’été), 2008, Wool, cotton and jute, 76 x 50 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery
Left: Josep Grau-Garriga, Porta d’hivern (Porte d’hiver), 2003, Cotton, synthetic fibers and silk, 180 x 130 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery. Right: Josep Grau-Garriga, Record d’estiu (Souvenir d’été), 2008, Wool, cotton and jute, 76 x 50 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery

 

 

Left: Josep Grau-Garriga, Sense títol (Sans titre), 1997, Acrylic paint, gouache, spray paint, furniture fabric and cardboard mounted on cardboard, 54,4 x 44 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery. Right: Josep Grau-Garriga, Papers de consum (Papiers de consommation), 1975, Acrylic paint, spray paint, gouache, flyers, sales receipts, theatre tickets and coffee bags mounted on paper, 78,2 x 63,2 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery
Left: Josep Grau-Garriga, Sense títol (Sans titre), 1997, Acrylic paint, gouache, spray paint, furniture fabric and cardboard mounted on cardboard, 54,4 x 44 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery. Right: Josep Grau-Garriga, Papers de consum (Papiers de consommation), 1975, Acrylic paint, spray paint, gouache, flyers, sales receipts, theatre tickets and coffee bags mounted on paper, 78,2 x 63,2 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery

 

 

Left: Josep Grau-Garriga, Els imperis del paper (Les empires du papier), 1975, Indian ink, gouache, paper tape and newspaper mounted on paper, 83 x 63 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery. Right: Josep Grau-Garriga, Malson (Cauchemar), 1978, Indian ink, gouache and newspaper mounted on paper, 83 x 63 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery
Left: Josep Grau-Garriga, Els imperis del paper (Les empires du papier), 1975, Indian ink, gouache, paper tape and newspaper mounted on paper, 83 x 63 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery. Right: Josep Grau-Garriga, Malson (Cauchemar), 1978, Indian ink, gouache and newspaper mounted on paper, 83 x 63 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery

 

 

Left: Josep Grau-Garriga, Sense títol (Sans titre), 1993, Indian ink, gouache, spray paint and cardboard mounted on paper, 83 x 63 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery. Center: Josep Grau-Garriga, Nova imatge (Nouvelle image), 1973, Wool, cotton and synthetic fibers, 82 x 80 cm Sense títol (Sans titre), 1996, Indian ink, ink, gouache and cardboard mounted on paper, 78 x 44,8 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery. Right: Josep Grau-Garriga, Sense títol (Sans titre), 1987, Indian ink and ballpoint pen on paper, 113,2 x 83,2 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery
Left: Josep Grau-Garriga, Sense títol (Sans titre), 1993, Indian ink, gouache, spray paint and cardboard mounted on paper, 83 x 63 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery. Center: Josep Grau-Garriga, Nova imatge (Nouvelle image), 1973, Wool, cotton and synthetic fibers, 82 x 80 cm Sense títol (Sans titre), 1996, Indian ink, ink, gouache and cardboard mounted on paper, 78 x 44,8 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery. Right: Josep Grau-Garriga, Sense títol (Sans titre), 1987, Indian ink and ballpoint pen on paper, 113,2 x 83,2 cm, © Josep Grau-Garriga, Courtesy Almine Rech Gallery