Enrique Castro-Cid: Protocol Pressure

Enrique Castro-Cid: Protocol Pressure

[NAME] Publications

Enrique Castro-Cid, Working drawing, 1981. Printed rendering. Courtesy of [NAME] Publications/Migrant Archives.

September 27, 2022
Enrique Castro-Cid
Protocol Pressure
October 1–November 20, 2022
[NAME] Publications
[NAME] Publications
6572 SW 40th Street
Miami, FL 33155
USA
Hours: Wednesday–Friday 11am–3pm,
Saturday 12–5pm

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[NAME] Publications presents, Enrique Castro-Cid: Protocol Pressure, an exhibition of works and archival documents by the late Chilean-American painter Enrique Castro-Cid (b. Santiago, 1937; d. Santiago, 1992).

Protocol Pressure is the first in a two-part exhibition and open research project centering around Castro-Cid’s work and investigations. This first exhibition focuses on work produced in Miami from the late 1970s through the 80s, during which he experimented with computer aided design software as an integral part of making paintings. His works from this period take classically proportioned human or animal figures, oftentimes directly referencing historical painters such as Paul Cezanne or Eugene Delacroix, as their starting point. Then, through a process that employs differential geometry, computational conformal mapping, and multilinear perspective, Castro-Cid transforms a two-dimensional space into a composition of multi-dimensional planes and morphing corporeal forms. The results are canvases and prints where the figures are suspended in a process of transformation, pulled and sucked into becoming mathematical singularities. At this point, the figures and the compositions start to misbehave: limbs are contorted, poses exaggerated, and figures are gutted altogether. As if they were buckling to some greater mathematical force unperceivable to the human eye, the canvases start to show the effects of the calculations lurking beneath the surface, with centers that bloat, and corners that subtly go askew.

To Castro-Cid, the move away from the rectangular surface was as much experimentation as a correction in the history of painting that accounted for advances in the field of math and science after Einstein, and that prioritized the topological experience of the world (with magnitudes and intensities) over the Euclidean perspective. His was not a visual analogy of the science of the times, but an attempt at applying to create what Ricardo Pau-Llosa referred to as “four dimensional episodes of visual thinking.” To the contemporary eye which has been trained to see in a world that can image complex phenomena such as black holes, the paintings seem almost rudimentary in their technological aptitude. The work’s breakthrough, however, is not in its loyal depictions of what we see, but in being evidence to a speculative drive that haunted Castro-Cid throughout his career to reveal, test, and push on the pictorial boundaries of painted space and the real by way of rational math and a canvas.

A central component of this exhibition includes an archive of Castro Cid’s documents and ephemera for the public to engage with that has been placed in the care of [NAME] Publications as part of their Migrant Archives project. This archival material includes notebooks, correspondence, terminal printouts, photographs and press, as well as never before seen sketches of Castro-Cid’s works. This material tells the many adventurous plot lines that cross-cut Castro-Cid’s practice during his latter years in Miami where he attracted and gravitated toward an orbit of characters and supporters, many of whom are an integral part of the Miami art community that has been in the making ever since. This latter part of Castro-Cid’s life and work reads like a sequel to the nearly-fantastical years in New York City, where after arriving there from Chile in 1961 makes his way into a scene of influential figures in art’s high society, including Andy Warhol, Richard Feigen, Leo Castelli, and the heiress and his ex-wife, Christophe de Menil—a period of his life which will be the subject of the second exhibition in this series.

Protocol Pressure builds on [NAME]’s fourteen year history of producing books and programs that tell the story of artists, designers, curators, and scholars in the Americas whose practices have been forgotten or overlooked in dominant art and design histories. It is made possible through the generous support of the Knight Foundation, and the Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs and the Cultural Affairs Council, the Miami-Dade County Mayor and Board of County Commissioners.

About the artist
Enrique Castro-Cid was born in 1938 in Santiago, Chile and died there in 1992. He studied in Chile until the early 1960s. Castro-Cid was awarded two Guggenheim Foundation Fellowships and won the William Copley award. He later served as a Fellowship juror for the Guggenheim Foundation. The University of Illinois appointed Castro-Cid visiting artist in 1968. His work was exhibited at the DIA Art Foundation (NY); Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum; The Jewish Museum (NY);  among other institutions. His works can be found in the collections such as Pérez Art Museum Miami (Miami); The Museum of Modern Art (NY); Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (NY); The Menil Collection (Houston); the Lowe Art Museum (Miami), among others. 

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