Bertina Lopes “I know the mystery that mother suffers”

Andrew Kreps Gallery

poster for Bertina Lopes “I know the mystery that mother suffers”
[Image: Bertina Lopes "Io so mistero che madre soffre [I know the mystery that mother suffers]" (1960)]

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Andrew Kreps Gallery presents I know the mystery that mother suffers, an exhibition of paintings by Bertina Lopes (b. 1924, Maputo, Mozambique, d. 2012, Rome), spanning three decades of the artist’s career. The exhibition marks the first solo presentation of Lopes’ work in New York.

Beginning in the 1950s, Bertina Lopes developed a singular body of work that intimately reflected her own political activism and social criticism. Born in Maputo to a Portuguese father and Mozambican mother, Lopes left to study in Lisbon where she was first introduced to Modernism. This exposure to contemporary European art movements had a deep impact on her work, as she would begin to meld these international styles with African iconography. Returning to Mozambique in the early 50s, Lopes became an influential professor, while simultaneously engaging with the country’s poets, writers, and political activists. As her anti-fascist and anti-colonialist views strengthened, and the country’s political situation became more tumultuous, Lopes was forced to return to Portugal in 1961. Prosecuted by the PIDE (Portuguese International and State Defense Police), Lopes soon after fled to Rome, where she would spend the rest of her life. Here, Lopes’ work took on new meanings, reflecting a desire for independence, and an end to colonialism, while also demonstrating an acute awareness of her own African Identity. Lopes’ work would remain tied to current events in Mozambique, from the country’s independence in 1975 to the subsequent civil war, lasting more than a decade. Her final works made after the war’s end in 1992, denoted a newfound freedom, characterized by gestural abstract marks, and bold color.
While it was difficult for Lopes to gain recognition for her work in Italy, she became a vital figure within Rome, as a cultural attaché to Mozambique’s embassy. She would additionally represent her home country in important, international exhibitions, including two editions of the Venice Biennale. In spite of the barriers she faced, Lopes had several significant exhibitions of her work during her lifetime, including two exhibitions at the Gulbenkian Foundation in Lisbon, in 1972 and 1979, an exhibition at the National Museum of Modern Art of Baghdad, 1981, as well as major retrospectives in Rome at Palazzo Venezia, 1986, and Palazzo della Cancelleria Apostolica, 2002. Following her death in 2012, Archivio Bertina Lopes was founded in Rome to preserve her legacy, as well as her home and studio.

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Schedule

from January 13, 2023 to February 18, 2023

Artist(s)

Bertina Lopes

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