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Introduction: Grediaga Fifty years' work by 

To our luck, a retrospective exhibition has just been inaugurated under the succinct title Grediaga: Fifty year's work. Upon walking through the indoor and outdoor spaces of the Universal Art Building of the National Museum of Fine Arts and coming into contact with this exhibition by the universal Spaniard Kieff Antonio Grediaga is, one understands such sobriety. The key word is work. Paintings and sculptures of various dimensions fill the available spaces and display a noteworthy variety of modalities, which is evidence of intense and sustained laboring on the part of the artist.

In some outstanding pieces, charcoal and red ocher cover the vast canvases; in the others, metals, marbles and wood are the elements with which the skilful hands of the artist, trained since an early age in cabinet making, have succeeded in giving expression to a high-flying creative spirit

The canvases, covered the length and breadth of their vast dimensions by energetic strokes, reveal a structuring in which the geometric elements set the tone for the composition. The latter becomes seemingly over-filled with linear elements and shaded areas, which, in a sort of horror vacui, convey their expressiveness. The strokes move with a seeming freedom, though constrained by the geometric structuring which marks the composition of space. 

In a recent piece titled "El amor brujo II", the abstract images emerge at the rhythm to which our eyes travel over the large surface of the canvas.

I believe that this piece, due to its being constrained, is one of the most accomplished among other similar ones, as, for example, "El grito de la nave", whose lines tend to project themselves beyond the canvas, perhaps totally intentionally, in keeping with the meaning of the title given to it by the artist. 

These charcoal drawings were made the current year and are accompanied by several examples of pencil drawings on paper, which are generally sketches of what would later be sculptures, many of them on display in this exhibition.

I now underscore the title of the canvas - "El amor brujo"- for its allusion to one of the great Spaniards to whom Grediaga repeatedly returns. Memories of and allusions to Falla and Lorca permeate the work of the sculptor, symbols of that Spain for which his father, the militant cabinet maker, suffered prison and exile, and who named his son after the city where the tank in which he fought for the Republic came from. Kieff Grediaga is a Spanish artist to the root, though his life has taken him to various latitudes, the most recent Old Havana. Here, his Artistic Foundry Teaching Workshop of Havana is also the site from which pieces emerge to restore colonial works which have suffered the ravages of time, pieces forged by young hands under the wise teachings of the Master. Parallel to this, Grediaga has continued making his personal sculptures, many of a monumental format, and which now breathe the air of the Plaza Vieja and of the small square in front of the Museum of Havana; or have been exhibited for long periods in open spaces in Holguín or Santiago de Cuba; or are placed in more intimate settings.

When Grediaga arrives in Havana, he has already gained international renown. Six decades of an intense and peripatetic life have taken him from his native Madrid to Portuguese America, to Hispanic America, to Canada, and now to the Caribbean archipelago. His dedication to the arts has been none the less agitated: he has been a successful cabinet maker in Madrid and in other cities, a restorer of antique furniture in several European countries, a professional tenor at the Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires, a set designer and a luthier in Argentina, an enthusiast of architecture, and, always, one who works with tactile materials to reach the expressive volumes and planes enclosed in metals, wood, marbles. As I have mentioned, once and again throughout his life, the persistent memory is present of two grandees of Spain: Lorca and Falla, who significantly represent landmarks in Grediaga's aesthetic search: music, the stage, the word. The one murdered, the other exiled --both compatriots of the sculptor--, were alienated from Spain during the reign of fascism, but who, like Grediaga, have always been symbol and voice of true Spain.

Chronologically, one of the first works exhibited is "Jerga", dated in 1969. It is a large-scale piece --201 x 198 x 48 cm-- made on California red pine. An abstract work of a geometric nature, its mass, monumental and light at the same time, is cut by a central cleft which reminds us of the ones made by Fontana on his canvases. Such a cut in the surface of the large circle made on exquisitely polished wood provokes two immediate reactions on the viewers. One the one hand, its tactile condition motivated by this reduction of the surface of the wood to absolutely smooth planes makes it difficult to resist the temptation of caressing those surfaces. On the other, this central cleft not only divides the piece into four subtle curves, but also --and this will have further development in later pieces of diverse spirit-- establishes a sort of communication between the frontal and the rear spaces --or are they just the contrary? This piece, like almost all the ones exhibited --not to be absolute and say that all-- allows, or still more, provokes a multiple vision. Even when, like in this case, the artist tends to use planimetric elements, their handling and blending invites the viewer to move around it so as to have a dynamic view of planes and angles.

The execution of this piece is preceded by others of smaller proportions. The small-scale bronze "Tres torres" was made in his young years as an artist. It was made in 1956, when Grediaga was studying architecture; he then made a project for some buildings of the future. "Tres torres" was born from this project and is considered the first sculpture by the artist. The towers are variations on a theme and already point at what would become constant features in his later work: a respect for the potentialities of the material used, a rhythm of volumes, a presence of communicating spaces, a monumental nature in the conception of forms (which is not necessarily the result of the actual volume of the piece). 

In "Reelección" (1968), for example, one can see how bronze becomes ductile in his hands, when he creates a form that ascends revolving upon itself. Other small-scale sculptures constitute a significant corpus of the handling of form which appears to move on a central axis, while the maximum possibilities of the material used are an important element for their appreciation. I now think of the various examples titled "Génesis" (1972), also in bronze, and of "Angelus Miserere" (1973), whose black marble not only seems to undulate along a vertical axis but also that, in the virtual trajectory, various pierced points create veritable communication among the spaces that surround the sculptures.