Estratos. El puente (2019)

Concha Martínez Barreto

Photograph on Hahnemüle Baryta 350 paper containing original vintage photograph

4.800,00

93 x 110 cm
Unique piece
The estimated delivery time to addresses in Spain (except Balearic and Canary Islands and Ceuta and Melilla) will be from 2 to 5 working days, in the rest of the European Union countries from 5 to 7 days and for shipments to USA it will be from 7 to 15 working days. These delivery times are service estimates and are not linked to specific delivery times. For international shipments outside the European Union and the USA, a transport cost estimate will be made and a quotation will be sent to the buyer upon request. View our terms and conditions

About the artist

The work of Concha Martínez Barreto (Fuente Álamo, Murcia, 1978) is an intense reflection on the fragility of memory and, at the same time, on identity itself, intergenerational connections, death and oblivion.

Through different techniques and media, he investigates the past, but not by attempting the impossible reconstruction of what has been lost or an arid cataloguing work, but as a task that precisely shows the difficulty of all remembrance, the importance of showing the fragments, the traces left by time.

The encounter with some old family photographs leads her to propose The Names, a polyptych of twelve pieces conceived as an intense reflection on the fragility of memory and on identity itself, intergenerational connections, death and oblivion.
Meticulous and at the same time fragile drawings (as is the case of the series El viaje) that serve to account for the effort to remember and the failure of that attempt; how the inherited memory is full of ellipses, questions and doubts.

His is a work about his own identity, relationships, time and its traces. A work that speaks of the need for balance, of the dichotomy ballast / debt: of wounds and reproach, but, above all, of love.

El viaje is a series of drawings in which childhood is shown as a starting point but at the same time as a center around which we always move. The desire to leave is joined in these pieces to the fear of shipwreck in spaces of crossed looks in which the differences of scale speak of the flexibility of time and the different speed with which it seems to run for adults and for children.